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I don't think kids of today get the same satisfaction with games as we did...I mean to START OFF with XBOX 360s and HDTVs just doesn't give you the sense of progression and development of video-game consoles.
I love that I grew up with the Sega Megadrive and Playstation. Makes me appreciate it more and you get a sense of nostalgia.
Comments? Opinions?
(I'm a 90s kid, so I didn't play on asteroids and stuff on those huge coin-operated-type machines in the 80's)
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I get a kick out of how I hear kids/teens pissing and moaning about "lag" or shitty graphics on the 360 or PS3 for that matter. They have NO idea about shitty graphics!
90's kid here as well
Still miss the N64 days...man, if I had a nickel for all the hours I put into the Zelda/Donkey Kong/Mario Kart....
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Born in 2000 for video games so I wouldn't have had to play in arcades or home systems back in the 70s and 80s with blocky primitive graphics and sounds? Since my life has never revolved around being a sloth for hours in front of a video game console I would say no.
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Does any one else seem to remember that games were way harder back in the day? Heh harder...
Seriously though, Patrick mentioned how hard Battle Toads is on the NES in another thread. There hasn't been a game in years that has made me pick up my console and throw it across the room. Maybe it's because consoles today couldn't take that kind of abuse... Also that I found drumming and dealt with my anger in a more positive manner.
They don't build em like they used to that's for sure.
-------------------- Never be bought, never be sold... Posts: 143 | Registered: Sep 2005
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Ah the good old days at the arcade in the mall! Tempest, DigDug, Centipede… the greats. I bought the Midway's Greatest for PS2 & boy does it take me back to 84'.
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Man, if we had cut our teeth playing video games in this era, we'd be nowhere near as good (and some of us...*cough*myself*cough* aren't that good to begin with) without that Nintendo Hard experience us older guys have. Not only that, but it really wasn't that long ago when graphics looked like nothing more than colored squares and consisted of simplistic gameplay goals, as opposed to today's epic, near photo-realistic experiences. Watching video games evolve all those years has been absolutely fascinating, and I just don't think we'll be able to see that much observable progression from this point on.
Posts: 2681 | Registered: Mar 2006
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quote:Originally posted by Flip flop fan: There hasn't been a game in years that has made me pick up my console and throw it across the room. Maybe it's because consoles today couldn't take that kind of abuse... Also that I found drumming and dealt with my anger in a more positive manner.
I still get lose to that...broke more than a few PS2/Xbox controllers and my current Xbox 360's "RB" (right button) is somewhat...fucked
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I think this is the kind of thing that you can only see in hindsight. Yes, the type of console/graphics/whatever is light years ahead of what was around only 10 years ago, but that can be said for any technology. In another 10 years, who knows what kind of advances will have been made; 3D television offers a whole new frontier of gaming for example. Video games, like any other type of technology, has a virtually limitless capacity for expansion and improvement. To say the next generation of gamers will not be 'as good' or 'as appreciative' is probably what 70's kids said when pinball machines were replaced with pacman.
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I was born in 1979, so the first console I remember playing is the Atari 2600. When I talked my dad into getting the NES and then later the Sega Genesis, I thought I was at the peak of game consoles. That being said, in 20 years these game systems will look old too - mark my word. Hell, look at how bad an old cellphone looks just a few years later. Granted these consoles are non-upgradable computers now, there will still be room for improvement. Nintendo was on that road years ago with the Power Pad, Power Glove, UForce and R.O.B. It just hasn't been until recently has the technology been good enough to handle those visions. We still have room to grow.
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What's really interesting is that technology moves faster as time goes on. It's not just a little faster, it's exponential.
I started with the NES, and I stopped with the PS2 like Hal. I'm interested in getting a PS3, of course...I just don't have the funds necessarily to do it.
I loved the N64 as well. It had the reputation of not having a LOT of great games. Yet, the great games it did have were clear improvements over the ones for the previous generation of Nintendo games.
I agree with Patrick that there's room to grow. Not sure what direction it'll go in, but I bet it'll be exciting.
Posts: 2828 | Registered: Jun 2010
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I find that as video games get more realistic, they become less fun. Asides from the Wii, a lot of games seem to be about looking at the graphics and the physics that are more realistic than ever. Resident Evil 5 was much less fun that RE4.
I've not got a new generation console, I never play my PS2, and there's not much that would make me want one especially.
Maybe a new Hitman game...
Posts: 64 | Registered: Jul 2009
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Funny tidbit. My friend bought an N64 the other day with a bunch of old games. One of them was Wrestlemania 2000. We used to play the shit out of that game when it was new. Well, when I played it the other day, we were like, "Wow. Remember when we thought this looked so real." LOL