Se ve que es la bomba
, lo he visto en foto y tiene muy buena pinta foto:
ATENCION INFORMACIÓN (En ingles)
PS2 Component Video Cable
I bought the PS2 component video cables second, since the PS2 only supports up to 480p, and the rumors said that the PS2 did not support 480p for DVD playback. Fortunately, the rumors about the DVD playback are not entirely correct. Early edition PS2s only support 480i, but new PS2s support 480p.
Finding the Monster Gamelink cables with analog audio was difficult, because the PS2 also has an optical audio port. Eventually I did manage to track some down.
A surprising amount of my PS2 games support 480p and widescreen mode. Very few games actually advertise the capability on the back of the box, something the Xbox games do mention. The difference in detail is not as large with the PS2 as it was with the Xbox, but 480p games are much cleaner and the textures and polygons all look smoother. The cables are definetly worth the investment.
Just like with the Xbox, you need to adjust the PS2 to get the best out of your new cables. In the PS2 setup menu you need to set both the size of your TV (4:3, 16:9, Widescreen) and the format of the cables (Y-Cr-Cb or RGB). Use "Widescreen" only if you have a 4:3 TV, but want your DVDs to play in a 16:9 frame.
Alternates to Monster Gamelink
Sony packages its own component video cables with a six foot cord. The cables looked cheaper to me (more like the cheapo Radio Shack headphone cables, always buy the gold ones), but a friend who owned the Gamelink cables had them fall apart on him (literally), so I can't comment on the quality difference.
The Xbox has its own HDTV adapter with a confusing name, the "High Definition AV Pack". (They also provide the "Advanced AV Pack", is advaced better? No! Its S-Video.) Unfortunately the HD AV Pack only provides component RCA connectors and no cable, which means you have to buy the HDTV adapter and an HDTV cable to go along with it. You do get an optical video port with it though.