Marseille Inc. mCable Gaming Edition 3-foot HDMI
$119.95
Price: $119.95
(as of Oct 29, 2024 00:10:09 UTC – Details)
The mcable gaming Edition is an HDMI cable with superpowers for gaming that has a computer inside for a whole new incredible experience. It upscales content, even up to 4K, delivers advanced anti-aliasing, improves depth & detail, and displays vibrant colors from just about any game and Console system. The patented algorithms fix jagged edges and remove shimmering Effect without noticeable blur. Oh Yeah.It does all that in under a millisecond for no lag. All that may sound like an absurd claim, and it is, but it’s true. Once you see how kickin’ The mcable gaming Edition is, you’ll become addicted to a whole new gaming experience and will never go back. Get a much more realistic and immersive game while you play. Its Pixel Processor removes up to 75% of graphics artifacts without sacrificing any game speed. And it processes at wire-speed up to 120 FPS for 1080p games including VR. Includes an automatic movie mode for watching Blu-ray movies with 4K upscaling certified by technicolor. Buy risk-free with a 100. Great for apex legends.
The most realistic gaming experience with enhanced image details, depth and Color from mcable’s built-in computer inside its HDMI cable
Removes jagged edges and shimmering effects without blur through its Patented algorithms and contextual anti-aliasing
Lag-free processing in under 1 millisecond for ultra-high frame rate and VR gaming up to 1080p at 120 FPS
Improves hdmi-enabled game Console content including Nintendo Switch, Xbox and PlayStation
Customers say
Customers like the functionality and image quality of the electronic cable. They mention it works well, looks better on their HDTVs, and offers a visual upgrade to games. Some are also happy with the game quality and anti-aliasing. However, some customers feel the value for money is a little pricey for what it is. They dislike the sound quality and differ on lag and smoothness.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
RIP-Felix –
Not Snake Oil! Great for X-Box 360 and PS3
The only case I found for keeping it was with my PS3, which did perform as advertised.The main reason I bought this cable was to use with my RGB modded N64 through an OSSC. Using the game shark code, I removed the first pass of antialiasing. Then I hoped upscaling from 480P –> 1080p with the cable and adding AA at the last step would result in a cleaner soft image. It did, but it also stretched the 4:3 content to 16:9 instead of integer scaling, which looks bad. I used HD Retrovision SNES component cables to the OSSC in Line Double mode. Also there was no sound. In Line 3x mode it had the correct aspect ratio, but still no audio, and the screen was peppered with graphical artifacts. It’s clear the OSSC has issues with this cable or visa-versa. I would have liked to try it on an UltraHDMI modded N64 with Deblur enabled in addition to the disabled first AA pass. Sadly I’m still waiting on mine.I tried Dreamcast via D-sub 15 to the OSSC. No audio and screen was stretched to 16:9. It did look pretty amazing, if it were not for that aspect ratio. No setting I could find fixed it. The cable must do it on it’s own.***EDIT***I discovered that the audio issue can be resolved by toggling the audio source in the OSSC menu. It seems to be caused each time the game switches from 480i and 240p, so certain games and consoles will run into issues with this combination (N64 for example). That’s very annoying. I don’t have this issue with a regular HDMI cable.The 16:9 stretching can be fixed by toggling the TV aspect ratio to normal, which squeezes the picture back to 4:3. However, be aware that not all TVs are flexible in this regard. My VIZIO P-series is on a power trip and stubbornly reminds me “it’s already in the best mode”, disabling other aspect modes (which is a stone wall slap in the face). A true upscaler like the Micomsoft XRGB mini framemeister has options to crop and scale the image displayed. So I could get around this issue by adding it to the chain. For example, N64–(Component)–>OSSC–(mCable)–>Framemeister–(HDMI)–>TV. Unfortunately, the cost of doing that is prohibitively high with the Framemeister costing over $300, the OSSC over $150, and the mCable around $100. Not to mention that the framemeister is soon to be discontinued, adds about a frame of lag, and is another thing taking up space in my AV setup (not to mention the rats nest of wires).***EDIT***There is no point in keeping the cable Just for movies, as there is a cinema version that is less expensive. I am not willing to keep it just for PS3/X-Box 360, which IMO look fine on a 4K TV without this cable. I was under the impression that it would upscale 1080p content to 4k, but it didn’t work for me…***EDIT***Actually, it does. However, it only does so for 1080p 24Hz content, like movies. I watched a BluRay on my PS3 upscaled to 4K and it does look better than without the mCable. 1080p games don’t upscale to 4K because they run at 60 FPS (Hz) and the mCable can’t do that. For them it adds nothing to the image. It does upscale 480p/720p –> 1080p, with good, lag free, Anitaliasing. You’ll need to change the settings in your PS3/X-BOX 360 to output in 720p instead of 1080p. In the PS3 at least you can change the BluRay video output separate from Games, so both 1080p for games and 4k for BluRay will be handled by the cable. The stretch to 16:9 aspect ratio may be an issue if your TV doesn’t allow you to squeeze it back to 4:3, if you plan on using this cable to play SD era games.***EDIT***Bottom line: If you want to smooth out jagged lines on 720p era games (PS3/X-Box 360) then this will work great. If you only want to upscale BluRay to 4K for a modest bump up in picture quality, buy the cinima cable. If you own a PS3, get the Gaming edition. If you thought of pairing it with an OSSC to handle retro games, they don’t play nice! You may need a frameister to solve aspect ratio issues, it your TV rudely refuses to.
aModelCitizen –
Makes the Nintendo Switch shine.
First of all, I am 99% satisfied with this cable. Build quality seems very good, but (here is my -1%), the TV end of the cable is a bit heavy and i do worry about cable/connector fatigue, but we shall see. So, How does it look? The additional anti aliasing implemented by this cable will eliminate most of the shimmer in BOTW, for example. Of course, all games are affected by this fancy cable and the result is marked improvement in image quality. What else is there to say? Well, it is on the pricey side. But, if you can spend the money, and you’ve thought about it a bit, go for it. I’ve already ordered a second Marsielle Game Cable for my Sega Dreamcast 🙂 Plug and play-ability of this cable makes it a breeze to hook up and get to enjoying the nicer image quality. Of course, once you get used to the image, you WILL want even better!***edit***I bought a second cable. It was faulty so it was returned to Amazon.***edit***Still enjoying the picture from this cable. Used exclusively with Switch, THEN… I found out that this works with my HDMI switch box. With one cable, and the box, I can switch between Dreamcast, Xbox360, and Nintendo Switch and the cable applies it’s magic to each input. Five Stars!You hear that. Buy an HDMI input switch AND the mCable.
ThePsychMan –
An effective and unique cable, although its utility varies wildly depending on the kind of consoles you use it with.
The marseille mCable is a unique HDMI cable that does some extra processing of the incoming image without adding any latency. These additions, which I will go into more detail about below, work nicely and have very few downsides. However, the benefit of these additions varies wildly depending on the kind of content that you give it, which will determine if this cable is worth the price to you or not. This cable really shines at cleaning up games from previous generations, with diminishing returns on newer and more powerful hardware.The mCable does several things to your image. It adds a custom kind of antialiasing to remove those jagged edges on objects, scales content up to 1080p for content that is below that resolution, boosts contrast levels somewhat, makes some tiny adjustments to color levels, and adds some sharpness.The contrast, color, and sharpness adjustments are pretty minor and can introduce some issues. I would’ve preferred to be able to turn those off, but there is no way to choose the effects you want on. The contrast boost created an issue with my setup where it caused come crushed black levels, which meant a loss of detail, which was fixed by setting the HDMI color space to Limited or 16-235.The most notable additions here are the antialiasing and the scaling, and they really make a big difference when both are active. The antialiasing works as a kind of smoothing filter on those rough edges you get in some games. What is interesting about the antialiasing is that it isn’t applied to the entire image evenly, which would create a smeared look that would lose a lot of detail if applied that way. There is very little detail lost and some of those jagged edges get cleaned up, but it is a pretty minor improvement on its own with 1080p content. The antialiasing definitely doesn’t clean up everything, but it does a good job of dealing with especially large and intrusive aliasing. The results are nowhere near the images Maresille is marketing it as, but it is a nice effect that does more good than harm. Sometimes the effect can appear to make parts of the image more “painted” or “smeared” which isn’t a good thing, but the effect is minor and varies depending on game.The antialiasing works best when the scaling is applied. If the mCable is plugged into a 1080p display and the source is 480p or 720p, the cable will scale the image up to 1080p and add antialiasing to it, and those two effects combined can create a massive boost in image quality. The scaling solution used here is far superior to what the consoles can do on their own, and the antialiasing solution here really works well with the larger and more obvious aliasing that 480-720p produce. In these situations, the mCable can effectively eliminate most aliasing artifacts from these titles! The improvement here for these games is massive and well worth the cost of the cable if you really value those games.One thing to note is that since the cable only maxes out at 1080p content, it won’t do any scaling for consoles already outputting at 1080p or scaling to 1080p. This means that for consoles like the Switch or Xbox 360, where games are often rendered at below 1080p and then displayed in 1080p format by the console, you get a better image with the mCable by setting those consoles to the rendering resolution of the game (720p). While it will still work if you keep the console set to 1080p, you get better results here if the cable does the scaling instead of the console.I’m going to finish this review by showing how effective this cable is on different kinds of consoles & content, with the main difference being rendering resolution of the game, which is really what you have to keep in mind when considering a purchase. The cable works well, but its additions will have far more effect on different kinds of game content, so its value will depend on what you like to play.-4K tier (PS4 Pro, Xbox One X) – Skip this cable. The mCable does zero processing of any kind on signals above 1080p. Also, these consoles are capable of high enough resolutions and more sophisticated antialiasing techniques where the mCable doesn’t have much effect on cleaning up the jaggies on these machines when plugged into a 1080p display.-1080p tier (PS4, Xbox One, some Switch) – Unless you are hugely bothered by antialiasing, I would skip it here too. The antialiasing effect can produce some nice results at times, especially with really obvious aliasing, but the overall benefit is pretty minor for 1080p content.-720p tier (Switch, PS3, Xbox 360, Wii U) – This is the sweet spot for the mCable’s boost to image quality. The scaling and antialiasing working in tandem can provide enormous benefits to image quality. On multiple games in this tier (I tested Super Mario Odyssey and Bayonetta on Switch, MotorStorm Pacific Rift and Devil May Cry HD on PS3, and Ninja Gaiden 2 on 360), aliasing was effectively eliminated in every title, producing a much smoother look while losing next to no detail. Best results here if you change the resolution setting on you console to the rendering resolution of the game to disable console scaling, which enables the mCable to do a much better job of scaling the image to 1080p.-480i-480p tier (Wii, Xbox, PS2, GC) – The mCable will provide a nice boost to these titles, although you’ll still run into aliasing because of the low source resolution of these titles. The smoothing will sort out a fair amount of aliasing and make what is left less severe, and the color/contrast changes work well with the more limited color outputs these consoles had. To get the mCable to work with these consoles, you will have to plug them into an intermediary device that accepts analog and will output in HDMI, which is an extra hurdle to getting these to work, and depending on the device you use to do so, your results may vary.-Retro tier (NES up through PS1/N64) – The source resolutions on these devices are just too low for the mCable to work nicely with. The end result you get is a bad mix of overly smooth and overly sharp, like a bad version of one of those obnoxious pixel smoothing filters that retro emulators have. Maybe you could get good results with certain pieces of great retro-focused AV equipment like the Framemeister or OSSC, but I don’t have any of those to test.
Ariel Ribeiro da Silva –
Uso esse cabo da Marseille só para jogos,e notei uma mudança bastante significativa, imagem de 1080p totalmente limpa com os pixels todos organizados contraste aumentado.
Anbu chonx –
First time buying a luxury item for the switch but after watching reviews wow this cable did not disappoint only for the gamers who are willing to pay a high price be warned it is Luxury for the price makes a difference but not a massive one still worth it if you have a switch I would say since it is not yet in 4K
Jaziel –
Si lo usan con el nintendo switch en una tv 4k se ve muy bien si notas diferencia
Albert –
Sin duda mejora la Switch, sobre todo en juegos de mundo abierto Youka lele, Doom, Mario Odyssea, lo único que me llama la atención el calor que genera el cable después de 30 min de uso, pero sin duda es mejor que en videos que habÃa visto por la red, solo un juego se puso lento con el cable El NBA 2k Playgro.., se ve a mi marcados menos de 25 fps, pero si se cambia a cámara fija se resuelve el problema, juntar dos cables el gaming y el Ultraedition mejora mucho la cálida de imagen, ojo no soporta HDR, NI 4K a 60Fps sólo a 30 fps.
Samuel Rivard –
The goal of this cable is to enchance AA without input lag and it do wonder on my nintendo switchBut here just something to consider: if you have a 27-32″ tv 4k monitor the cable will effect will not be that noticable… But on a 50″ + tv (i have a sony xbr55900f) its night and dayMost older console like ps3/xbox 360 or nintendo switch will render the games at lower resolution than even 1080p and without a proper upscale to 4k look very blurry crappy on big 4K tv (mid to high end) or they may be some upscale but the input lag is just terribleThe mcable fix it for me… The image look less blocky without been too blur (zelda breath of the wild)There is no delay or input lag… Or its so minimal that its imperceptible…I need to test it for my ps3 with some games… But i would not really bother with my ps4 pro as it offer either some supersampling or 4k with HDR…In short you wont get much from a xbox one x /ps4 pro for recent title but for wii/nintendo or older gen its really good if you got a big display (and of good enouph quality where you can really see the difference)