ultimately, most of the games for the Game.com ended up being failures in the eyes of reviewers, thus giving the Game.com a pretty bad reputation. this was one of the reasons that the Game.com only ended up selling at least 300,000 units. for these reasons and more, the Game.com ended up being discontinued in 2000.
however, for its time, it was a pretty competitively priced system. the Gameboy Color was to be released in a year for $79.95, while the Game.com was released for $69.99, and its later model, the Pocket Pro, was released in mid-1999 for $29.99 due to the Game.com's apparent significant decrease in value.
in fact, most games never used the wavetable/noise mode of the chip. sonic Jam, for example, uses a sine wave with a software-controlled volume envelope on the DAC channel (see below for more information on the DAC channel).
- a software-controlled D/A register that (potentially) requires all other registers to be stopped to play. due to this, it is currently, it is not implemented in Furnace as of version 0.6pre4.