Sega Game Gear parts and mods, the modder-focused upgrade and repair hub for Sega's 1990 handheld at ZedLabz.
Browse Game Gear parts by upgrade type
- IPS screen kits. Hispeedido and Retro Modding Game Gear options
- Capacitor recap kits, full board recap for tired Game Gears
- All Sega retro parts
- Retro Modding range. Game Gear shells and parts
- Hispeedido range. IPS focus
The Sega Game Gear launched in 1990 as Sega's color answer to the Game Boy. Three things went wrong with age: the original capacitors leak, the screen dims, and the audio crackles, all three are recap-related. Modern IPS kits sidestep the screen problem entirely, and a full recap addresses the rest. ZedLabz stocks Hispeedido and Retro Modding IPS kits, capacitor recap kits, replacement shells and the button parts to finish a build.
Quick picks for any Game Gear build
- If it's your first Game Gear mod: a full board recap kit. Most "broken" Game Gears come back to life after a recap, the original caps fail predictably with age. An evening's project for someone with surface-mount soldering experience.
- The everyday build: recap plus an IPS screen kit (Hispeedido or Retro Modding), the modern picture and a board that runs cleanly for years.
- The dream rig: recap, IPS, fresh shell, USB-C battery mod (where available) and a complete button refresh, the full preservation pass.
The Game Gear mod ladder
- Capacitor recap: the foundational repair. The OEM caps leak electrolyte and most Game Gear faults trace back to recap. Surface-mount soldering, fine-tip iron, patience helps. See capacitor kits.
- IPS screen kit: replaces the dim original LCD with a modern backlit panel. Hispeedido and Retro Modding both ship Game Gear-specific kits. Browse IPS screens.
- Replacement shell: original shells crack around the battery compartment after years of AA loads. Fresh shells from Retro Modding restore structural integrity.
- Button and rubber pad refresh: original silicone pads harden, making buttons mushy. A fresh set restores the click.
- Audio amp / volume mod: modder community projects exist for cleaner audio after recap; check the listings on stocked Game Gear audio products.
Tracked worldwide delivery on every order.
Related collections
Sega Game Gear. FAQs
Why does my Game Gear have no picture or sound?
In most cases, leaking capacitors. The OEM Game Gear capacitors are widely documented to fail with age, and the symptoms range from no display, distorted audio, no sound, vertical lines, or simply no power. A full recap typically brings the console back. Confirm with a visual inspection, leaking caps often show electrolyte residue around their base.
Is an IPS kit worth it on a Game Gear?
For most modders, yes. The original Game Gear screen was dim and slow even when new, modern IPS panels are dramatically brighter, sharper and have a much faster response. The tradeoff is install effort: most kits require some soldering or careful ribbon work, and the kit cost is a meaningful portion of a working Game Gear. Worthwhile if you plan to play it; less so if it lives on a shelf.
Do I need to recap before installing an IPS?
Modder community recommendation: yes. Installing an IPS kit on a board that hasn't been recapped means you've put new optics on aging power circuitry, the audio, voltage and reliability problems caused by leaking caps remain. Most experienced Game Gear modders recap first, IPS second.
How long does six AA batteries actually last?
The original Game Gear is famously power-hungry, the OEM screen and audio circuit pull a lot of current. With alkaline AAs, original-spec runtime is short (modder community reports vary widely depending on cell quality and console state). A modern IPS kit and recapped board typically extend runtime; some buyers also explore Li-Po conversion projects in the wider scene.






























