There's a flood of these hacked systems coming out of China these days, often with transparent cases which show off the Saturn's internals. The idea is that by using a Saroo to load games, you don't need the CD drive, effectively making it a "Saturn Mini" due to the reduction in height. Some systems even come with bolt-on LCD monitors.
It's been assumed by some people that the consoles used in these mods have faulty CD drives, but even so, members of the retro gaming community are coming together to voice their concern with the practice, encouraging people to avoid buying them.
Modder @Voultar agress:
I'm going to co-sign this. All of those garbage 'portabilizer" consoles sold on Aliexpress are far more destructive than they are useful. There are far few Sega Saturn units in the wild than say Game Boys so it's not quite the same thing when you take a unit out of circulation.
Aware that many people might compare this to the rampant Game Boy modding scene, @Voultar argues that it's not a fair comparison to make:
Those mods are overwhelmingly reversible. You can keep your stock shells/buttons/components. The IPS/OLED replacement screen is basically a drop in at this point and you can effectively revert recently modded units back to stock form.
Saturn sold just 9.26 million units during its lifetime, so there's clearly a more pressing need to preserve the units that remain in active use.
CD drives fail, sure, but they can be fixed – and given that the Saroo cartridge requires the user to make zero modifications to the base system, it's somewhat puzzling to see this trend of hacking Saturns to use with the cart. You're effectively making the Saturn less useful, as it will no longer have the option of playing physical discs.