Pylaxis Interactive Entertainment System

The Pylaxis Interactive Entertainment System (also known simply as Pylaxis) is a home video game console developed by Prism Laboratories and manufactured by various electronic companies. The system was first released in the form of the Emerson FD700 in the United States on October 16, 1994, which was followed by the release of the Ericsson J7A250 in Europe on October 24, 1994, which was then followed by the release of the Toshiba H8760 in Japan on November 21, 1994. It sold collectively 33.76 million units. Production of new stand alone units ceased on December 10, 2012, however, Prism still liscenses new releases for the original CD hardware. All Pylaxis games are compatibe with successor DVDx and MultiSystem Physical Interface units.

Software
See also: List of Pylaxis Interactive Entertainment System games

Software for the system is released in a CD-ROM format. The system is region free. However, depending on where the system was released, there are different formats.
 * NTSC - A (United States, Canada, Mexico, South America, Hong Kong, South Korea, and Taiwan)
 * NTSC - C (Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines, and Indonesia)
 * PAL (Europe and Oceania)

Controller & Peripherals
The controllers packaged with the system varied on the manufacturer. Noteable controllers include: Noteable peripherals include: TBA
 * PC - 11000: Packaged with the Emerson FD700, this controller is the most common, and was packaged with most systems released from 1994 to 1999, and continued to be packaged with system bundles until 2003. The controller resembles the Sega Saturn 3D controller.
 * FZ - 720: Packaged with system releases in Japan from 1994 to 2001, this controller resembles a Super Nintendo controller. The controller was initially made to conform to the Japanese demographic, as the PC - 11000 was deemed too uncomfortable. The controller was exported to the United States in 1996, and packaged with system bundles from 1996 to 2003.
 * Pylaxis Steering Wheel - Packaged with the launch title Screamer, made for racing games.