Langile CDX

The Langile CDX is a laserdisc player that plays laserdiscs, CD's, prodiscs, and minidiscs including those from Escade Studios. It also had Sega CD, ATBW A64, and Escade Prodisc hardware built into it as well, which can read Sega CD games, as well as ATBW A64 games and Escade Prodisc Minidiscs movies. The Sega CD drive was placed so that the system could play them without hooking up a Sega CD to the genesis. The unit itself is 20 inches wide, 13 inches long, 6 inches tall, and weighs 22 pounds due to the aluminum casing and wood grain front as well as other high quality materials used to make this unit.

In addition, it was also able to play Sega Genesis games as well as 32x games, as well as ATBW A16 games, but since the A16 was already discontinued in 1994, the console had been declared obsolete as it was still made new on this system. The Genesis and 32x cartridges slide in below the laserdisc drive in a single cartridge slot, which was place under the main laserdisc drive. A VCR was added on the other side under the display case beside the A16 floppy disk drive.

It was a crucial failure upon release, mainly for being too expensive and being too big and bulky, as well as being too heavy to place on certain glass tables, being 22 pounds. It was heavier and larger than even the A64 that was released the same year, which was 14.45 inches wide, 8.2 inches wide, and 3.1 inches tall, and only weighed 7 pounds. The CDX was 20 inches wide, 13 inches long and 6 inches tall, and weighed and additional 15 pounds in comparison to the A64.

It also used the modified version of the SEGA CD BIOS screen when there was no form of medium in it, except that this version contains a moving Zach Face logo in 3D alongside the Langile CDX logo and ATBW Logo moving around, and the BIOS music is from the Japanese/European version of the SEGA CD even though this console was released exclusively in North America and in the United Kingdom where it did very poorly there, more so than it did in North America. It was also available in Australia and New Zealand briefly from March to June 1994 only, as it was discontinued 3 months after it became available in those countries, where it did even more poorly than it did in North America or the United Kingdom.

Legacy
Even though the unit in its entirety was a crucial failure, it is still actively collected mostly by Langile enthusiasts who are interested in Langile Corporation electronics, and a unit is up in display in a museum which displays a variety of electronics and gadgets made by Langile Corporation as well as ATBW Label Networks, all ranging from their very early years in 1920 and 1925 respectively to Langile Corporation's last electronics from 2000 to 2003 before splitting into two separate companies. There is also a unit in a game console museum which displays all of ATBW and Langile's old game consoles from the MCA/Langile PCG System in the 1970's all the way to the A4ATBW in the 2010's.