Nintendo vs. Sega (and other lesser console wars)

Steevy Maximus

Well known pompous pontificator
Citizen
The Red Ring, as I recall, was resolved within a couple of years. It wasn’t as widespread as LONG as I think some of you are portraying it. I got mine in 2009-ish and never had an issue. And despite that, the 360 was cheaper For nearly its entire run, with a FAR more robust online infrastructure. Sony never charged for PS3 internet access because they really didn’t believe it was going to be as vital as it ended up being.

The PS3 was the “Saturn” of that generation, in terms of design. It was overly complex, and like what they did with the Vita, loaded the system and controller with gimmicks and forced them on developers. The complexity prevented Sony from being able to bring the price down as quickly or aggressively as Microsoft. Microsoft Kept It Simple.
The biggest reason the PS3 managed to win out was because the generation lasted long enough for them to actually put out some quality games, and the Asian markets’ utter disdain for western gaming products.
 

The Predaking

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At launch, the Xbox 360 was available in two configurations: the "Xbox 360" package (unofficially known as the 20 GB Pro or Premium), priced at US$399 or £279.99, and the "Xbox 360 Core", priced at US$299 and £209.99. The original shipment of the Xbox 360 version included a cut-down version of the Media Remote as a promotion.[6] The Elite package was launched later at US$479. The "Xbox 360 Core" was replaced by the "Xbox 360 Arcade" in October 2007[109] and a 60 GB version of the Xbox 360 Pro was released on August 1, 2008. The Pro package was discontinued and marked down to US$249 on August 28, 2009, to be sold until stock ran out, while the Elite was also marked down in price to US$299.[110]

Two major hardware revisions of the Xbox 360 have succeeded the original models; the Xbox 360 S (also referred to as the "Slim") replaced the original "Elite" and "Arcade" models in 2010. The S model carries a smaller, streamlined appearance with an angular case, and utilizes a redesigned motherboard designed to alleviate the hardware and overheating issues experienced by prior models. It also includes a proprietary port for use with the Kinect sensor.[26][111][112] The Xbox 360 E, a further streamlined variation of the 360 S with a two-tone rectangular case inspired by Xbox One, was released in 2013. In addition to its revised aesthetics, the Xbox 360 E also has one fewer USB port, no AV connector (and thus is HDMI-only), and no longer supports S/PDIF.[113]

IMO, it wasn't fixed until 2010 when they released the S model. Every Xbox before that using the old design, no matter what revision, will get the RROD. It's only a matter of time.
 

Pocket

jumbled pile of person
Citizen
According to the Xbox 360 subreddit, it's actually the 2008 "Jasper" revision that fixed the reliability issue, with 2009 models (that use the "Kronos" GPU revision instead of 2008's "Zeus") being the least likely to fail even compared to the S and E.

Ultimately, though, it was a common problem in the industry at the time, caused by cheap solder being used even inside chips. The PS3 had a similar issue that didn't become widely known until several years later because early PS3s barely got any heavy use, and even computer graphics cards from that era are hard to find used in working condition because of their high failure rates.
 

The Predaking

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According to the Xbox 360 subreddit, it's actually the 2008 "Jasper" revision that fixed the reliability issue, with 2009 models (that use the "Kronos" GPU revision instead of 2008's "Zeus") being the least likely to fail even compared to the S and E.
Yeah, I can see why people think that, but my buddy at work bought a Jasper that got RROD. So that is why I personally am calling it at the S revision in 2010.
 

Pocket

jumbled pile of person
Citizen
"I get that a lot of people collectively have reached a consensus about something, but I have a single data point that doesn't perfectly line up with that, so I'm choosing to believe that instead."
 

Princess Viola

Dumbass Asexual
Citizen
Also no one has ever claimed that later revisions of the 360 will never red ring ever.

All the RROD is is just 'general hardware failure', that can happen to literally any Xbox 360 manufactured from day 1 to the day they discontinued it.

The later revisions starting with Jasper are just more reliable than the older models with their very high failure rates, but 'more reliable and less prone to hardware failure' =/= 'will literally never break'.
 

Exatron

Kaiser Dragon
Citizen
Facts don't matter for perception. I mean, I'd hope everyone recognizes by now that joystick drift has been a problem for all the current- and previous-gen systems. That didn't stop WatchMojo from declaring Joy-Con drift specifically to be one of the worst console defects of all time. Even worse than the RRoD...
 

Princess Viola

Dumbass Asexual
Citizen
WatchMojo is clickbait bullshit but also, while yes stick drift is something that can happen with virtually any analog stick (unless they use hall effect sticks) because of just general wear and tear, I think it totally fair to point out that the Joy-Con analog sticks seem to have both a higher chance of starting to drift and seem to start drifting at much earlier in their lifecycle compared to other controllers than you'd expect.
 

LBD "Nytetrayn"

Broke the Matrix
Staff member
Council of Elders
Citizen
There's only one Mojo that's truly worth watching...

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Exatron

Kaiser Dragon
Citizen
WatchMojo is clickbait bullshit but also, while yes stick drift is something that can happen with virtually any analog stick (unless they use hall effect sticks) because of just general wear and tear, I think it totally fair to point out that the Joy-Con analog sticks seem to have both a higher chance of starting to drift and seem to start drifting at much earlier in their lifecycle compared to other controllers than you'd expect.
I struggle to believe that when I had to buy three PS4 controllers to get one that didn't start drifting within a week. The one that came with the console had me convinced that The Last of Us (first game I played on my PS4) had a faulty control scheme since I spent my entire playthrough fighting the camera. My second game proved it wasn't just the game when I could not get the camera to face forward. I did a quick bit of research, learned about drifting, took it apart for repairs, and went back to playing. For about two days, before it became nigh unplayable again. Second controller I bought only lasted about a week before it started drifting terribly.

At this point, by the way, I had four pairs of Joy-Cons (three from launch) and two pro controllers (one from launch). None of them had any drifting yet. Two of the Joy-Cons did eventually start to drift, but they never progressed past irritating. They never reached the unplayable state my PS4 controllers did. This was the point where I started buying hall effect joysticks for all my controllers on both systems.

Yes, it's anecdotal. What's not anecdotal is that there are a hell of a lot more Switches and Joy-Cons out there than there are PS4s or X-Boxes. Statistically, unless the problem is much worse on the other consoles, we should be seeing more drifting Joy-Cons than other controllers, simply due to the sheer number of them. Also, since every article you read will point out that a lot of drift is caused by debris getting into the joystick, I'd point out that the Switch has a much younger user base on average. Watching how my kids are about washing their hands (the younger one especially), I tend to keep a couple controllers reserved as mine. The controllers can sometimes feel downright nasty after they've used them. And that's not even getting into the physical abuse they tend to dish out.
 

The Predaking

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"I get that a lot of people collectively have reached a consensus about something, but I have a single data point that doesn't perfectly line up with that, so I'm choosing to believe that instead."

Way to rephase what I said to make me look like an ass.

But if you want to discuss this subject, that is fine. Every single revision of the original Xbox 360 was said to be better and not as likely to get the RROD. However, they just kept getting it. The Falcon that was in my brother's 360, RROD. My original model was sent back 4 times for the RROD. My back up 360, RROD right now. Even the Jasper revision that my buddy bought a RE5 360 to guarantee getting the new board type( I think it was RE5 but it's been 17 years since then, but it was a special version that was to guarantee it being a Jasper). Still his got the RROD after a few months of daily COD playing. It was like Microsoft was playing Whack a mole with the hardware issues that were causing it. Like I said, it really wasn't until the new design came out that the issue basically went away, and its why any gaming store these days won't take a 360 unless it's a S or E model as they don't want to deal with the reliability issues.

I should note that my model S 360 is still going strong int he kids playroom all these years later. They love playing Rockband/GH and Minecraft on it.
 

Pocket

jumbled pile of person
Citizen
and its why any gaming store these days won't take a 360 unless it's a S or E model as they don't want to deal with the reliability issues
Citation needed. I've been to the Exchange several times over the years and seen not just first-design Xbox 360s, but at least one white one, sitting on the top shelf behind the checkout desk next to the PS3s. If they have one next time, I'll take a picture.
 

The Predaking

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I was born into video games. As a kid in the early 80s, I was born with my family having both an Atari 2600 and a Commadore 64, although I was probably a bigger fan of the Atari than the Commadore since my family used that for a lot in the 80s, like Christmas letters with labels, taxes, and other stuff as well as gaming. So I mainly played the 2600, and the Atari had a lot of good games like Indiana Jones, Combat, ET, Atlantis, and several others. ET was a fun game for me as a kid. I know people hate on it, but it really was a fun Atari 2600 game. Knowing what I know now about how rushed it was, I really give that developer his props for what he was able to do. Later on as I got older, around 8 or 9, I started playing the Commadore a bit more. My dad and brother were hooked on games like Zork and Richard Petty’s Talladega. Forbidden forest was a favorite of mine. We had a tape drive, but mainly games came on the big floppy disks, the ones that were still floppy. Our cousins had a C64 too, and we would swap games around with them a lot. The insane thing is that growing up in South Alabama, there weren’t many stores that carried video games around. Those that did were like Walmart, Kmart, KB Toys, TRU, Walden Software, and they were all 30 minutes away by car. However, the positive side to this area was that they carried a lot of old software for a long time. Even in the early 90s you could still buy commadore 64 games on sale at various places. I once remember seeing a huge bin of them on clearance at KB Toys. While Atari 2600 software was sparse by then, it was still around in various places. I spoke of recently getting a game from my grand parents that owned a salvage yard. In 1991, they were given a fresh case of Atari 2600 games to destroy, and that is how I got my copy of Keystone Kapers.



So, aside from Atari and Commadore 64, there were plenty of Arcade machines around town. In places that you wouldn’t think would have one, there would be an arcade machine. Tire shop, arcade machine. Dentist office, arcade machine. Pizza place, arcade machine. Gas station, arcade machine. People would put these machines anywhere that they thought they could make money with them. Galaga was an early favorite of mine. To this day, it’s still one of my favorites. I remember playing it first at an auto shop that my dad took us to. I don’t recall ever going to an actual arcade until I was much older and after we had moved. There was a mall about 40 minutes away by car that had an arcade, and we loved going there. Eventually discovering some great games like X-men, TMNT, Virtual On, and others. Never really got any of the big prizes there, but I had a lot of fun. The only other arcade I went to was a short lived one down the street from my mom’s shop. It was called John’s arcade and it was in this old former motel in this small town. The lobby was converted into an arcade, and we had a blast there playing Mortal Kombat. Sadly, that arcade didn’t last that long and closed down. Eventually the one in the mall closed down too about the time KB Toys went out of business.
 

The Predaking

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I should mention that we had, for me, a traumatic move from a major city to the middle of nowhere Alabama, when I was six years old, and that really affected me. One thing that made this move bearable was that we had moved near family and within 5 miles of our new place was three sets of cousins that were about my age. One year for Christmas, either 1988 or 1989, they all got the famous NES Action Set that came with Super Mario Bros/Duck Hunt and the orange zapper. I should note, that I didn’t even know that they made a grey zapper until I was a grown man. However, we didn’t get an NES that year, as my dad was an outdoor type of person and I think that he wanted us to be more outdoorsy. In fact we wouldn’t get a NES ourselves until the summer of 1992, when we got the Challenge set bundled with Mario Bros 3. However, I am getting a head of myself here. We would constantly play the NES at our cousins’ houses when we visited. To them it might have been just a game system, but to my older brother and I, it was the best video game system around, loads better than our C64 or 2600 that we were still playing on occasion. One cousin’s house was a very big sports family, like they pushed them into sports all the time and both boys ended up playing baseball at the college level. They, like you would assume, had a ton of sports games, like they had probably 8 games and 6 of them were sports games. The baseball ones were boring and not fun to play, but they did have the best football game of all time, Tecmo Bowl. We loved that game! It was quite fun to play as a kid, and I imagine would be fun to play now as an adult. The other two sets of cousins loved games and had a large mix of games, and that is where I was exposed to most of the games for the NES.



However, one day when I was visiting the sports cousins, they had rented a bunch of games from the local movie place. I should note that the movie place in my town was different from other stores like Blockbuster or Movie Gallery. It was a mom and pop place that rented out for a day, not the weekend or week or any longer period, it was just a day, and it cost $2.50 to rent a game or movie from them for the day. So I was a bit surprised that they had rented several games at once. One of the games was the epic game that got me hooked on a series for over 35 years now, Dragon Warrior! I had a blast playing that game over there. Killing slimes and drakes, discovering all the secrets, dancing to the level up music, it was a fun game!



I can’t say what the sales pitch was for my Mom, but she was Christmas shopping for my Brother and I in 1989, when she came across people going crazy for this new thing called a Gameboy. Now my Mom recognize that it was made by Nintendo, and got it for us as our big Christmas gift rather than the other toys that she was going to get us. Maybe because we were traveling that year to have a big family Christmas and she didn’t want to pack a lot of gifts for the flight, or perhaps she thought that this would sate our need for a Nintendo. Either way, we opened that up in upstate New York and loved it! It came with Tetris, and it was amazing! We played it nonstop on the way home, which really helped when the flight between Atlanta and Dothan was cancelled and we had to take a bus instead. The Gameboy became a family device that was passed around during the evenings, to see who could get the best score in Tetris! Who could get the highest level! How many lines could you get before it became too much? It really was a family sport for a good six months or so. Eventually we got more games for it. Final Fantasy, Megaman, Super Mario Land, and my favorite, Battletoads! I loved that Gameboy! It even got damaged and parents sent it off to be repaired by Nintendo, and that was a long wait for it to return! Eventually, it was delivered to our neighbors by mistake, but they let us know it was at their house, and we got it back and enjoyed playing it again!



While I have told this story before, but I will tell it again since this is my history with gaming post. I took that Gameboy everywhere with me. We even got the AC Adaptor for it as I was burning through too many batteries constantly playing it. I took it to school, and had it in my bag, as I was staying over after school for baseball practice. At practice, I had put my back pack in the pile with everyone else’s but after practice, my Gameboy was gone! Now, I had suspected a teammate of mine for years of taking it, but I actually found out the true story 7 years later in my senior year. I am in music class during a lull, and the guy behind me (Matt) is talking to the guy next to him (David) about the time he ”Found” a Gameboy at school. He was playing with it the next day on the bus and another student that liked to bully him (Michael) threw it out the bus window. I turned around and asked if the Gameboy had final fantasy Adventure 2 in it. He said yes, and I hit him so hard that his chair flipped over. He gets up and square off against me, saying ,”What was that for?” I stand up, being a 6’2” varsity basketball center, towering over him and say, “That was mine!” He sat down and mumbled something, and music class resumes. The teacher later asked me about it, but never did anything as she figured that if I hit Matt, then I had a good reason for it.

However, I mentioned that Final Fantasy Adventure 2 was in the Gameboy, and that was a game we had borrowed from my brother’s friend. So not only did I lose my main means of gaming, I lost $35 of my saved money to buy him a replacement for it. So here I am with a bunch of Gameboy games, ac adaptor, and no Gameboy. Well, my parents decided that it would be a waste to let all that go, and they got me a new Gameboy for my brother and I for doing so well in school. To this day my Mom still blames me for losing the first one though.



Now, I should mention something here. My school was 23.7 miles from my house. It wasn’t a local school, in fact, it wasn’t even in the state. It was right across the state line, in the middle of nowhere where my mother went to school. If you allow me to get a little dark here, I will explain how I started going there instead of the local school in town that was a mere 6 miles away. When we first moved to the little town in the deep south, my brother and I went to the local school in town. My mother was even the head of the PTA (Parent Teacher Association). This caused her to be involved with a messy set of circumstances. Now, I was in third grade at the time and was sheltered from a lot of this story so everything I know is third hand at best. I imagine that my mother and brother could tell us more details. Suffice to say, at the local high school in 1991, a teacher went to the principal’s office and left her class unsupervised for a long period of time. Now from what I was told, she was having an affair with the married principal, and while she was doing so, something really bad happened to one of her students. At that point, my mom being on the PTA called for the dismissal of the teacher and the principal. While they did fire the teacher, they put the principal on paid leave for three months during the summer. So my mother was afraid of the principal taking his revenge out on her boys, and she sent us to her old school, where her friend was the principal and she knew a lot of the teaching staff. Now I told her, years later, that all she had to do was tell her dad about her boys being picked on by the principal at school, and that would have fixed that problem, permanently. Sadly, the principal remained there at the school in his job for at least the next 10 years, maybe even longer. He is not there anymore at least.



So why did I tell you all this? What is the point of it? Well, my older brother was born to be a salesman. He convinced my mother that we would make this move to a new school if they got us a NES for our birthdays that summer. With our birthdays being three weeks apart we could ask for combined gifts like that. So my mom and brother, make the long drive to Toys R Us and gets us the Challenge set bundled with our favorite game at the time, Super Mario Bros 3! Shortly afterwards, I use my Birthday money and get TMNT 2 The arcade game, as I am super into TMNT at the time and this was my favorite arcade game. My brother gets us the epic game Dragon Warrior! Not a bad set of games to have for the NES! Our collection of games grew each birthday and Christmas. Eventually we get some of the best games for it, like Megaman 1-4, Final Fantasy, Ultima, and the Dragon Warrior sequels. At this point, the SNES was coming out that fall, and there were lots of cheap NES games that had been out for years for us to play, as well as us loaning out games with our three sets of cousins to play some of their classic games that they were tired of while we were getting newer games that they didn’t have. That is how I played Zelda, Punch out, and Mario 2. Also, games were cheap enough at that point that my brother and I could ask our grandparents for one as a combined gift at Christmas time. We also started renting games from the local place, with such amazing games like Castlevania 2, Star Tropics(we had the code from a magazine), Zelda 2, Shadowgate, and Solomons key. We eventually discovered this device in a magazine or something, and we got it for Christmas one year. It was called the Game Genie! That thing was a deal breaker! Suddenly, even the most infuriating game was playable and even enjoyable. Playing around with it, trying to find new codes that worked was a lot fun in itself. We even signed up to get new codes sent to us in the mail. That was always fun when they arrived every quarter or so. We liked it so much that we eventually got a game genie for the Gameboy when it was released!

Eventually, my mom came home with a second NES console that she said she found on the curb. It being late into the system’s life cycle, we fully believed her, but she said later on that it was probably someone’s old system that she bought for cheap but didn’t remember whose it was. So then we had two of them, one hooked up to the main tv and one hooked up to a little color TV in my brother’s room. They were great systems that we enjoyed having for years, and it really helped that we also got a subscription to one of the greatest magazines of all time, Nintendo Power. As a kid in the early 90s, this was our sole source of news on games as well tips and guides! Not to mention that they would even rate upcoming NES games to let you know which ones were worth your time to get. The posters were cool, the cover art epic, and I loved the Mario and Zelda comics that they did in each issue. We got in fairly early on the magazine within the first 6 months of it launching, and kept it all the way through the NES era and well into the SNES era.



Eventually though, we got tired of seeing all these new 16 bit games coming out, and we wanted to play them. My brother wanted to get a Super Nintendo. As it was the successor to the NES, and it had Super Mario World. However, I was adamant that we needed to get the Sega Genesis. It had two great games that I wanted to play on it. It had Shanghai 2, which turns out to have also been released on the SNES, and it had X-men. Now I had got addicted to playing these tile matching games on the school’s one and only Mac computer in the library, so I really wanted to play these two games at home. Eventually, my brother conceded, and for my 14th birthday we got a Sega Genesis.
 

The Predaking

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Now, when I say we got the Sega, let me tell you what happened. I mentioned that my dad was outdoorsy right? Well, he wanted his boys to be more outdoorsy like him, but he got two Tech/video game geeks. So my dad tells us no for Sega and instead talks me into getting go cart instead. Now one of my cousins had got a go kart for Christmas, and we had a blast driving that around the track they had around their house. So imagine how much fun we could have driving one around the rural property that we lived at! So my dad and brother went to the big town 30 minutes away, and came back with this huge box. The box was heavy, 6’ tall, just as wide, and about a foot thick. It clanked with metal on metal when you moved it. My dad and brother said that they brought back a kit to put together. Now as an adult, you can imagine that they just found this box, put a Sega in the middle of it, and put some metal pieces inside of it. However, as kid, and with my dad especially, it was 100% feasible that there were parts to a go-kart in that box that we were going to have to put together from a kit. I mean, the guy was a mechanic, had his own 3 bay car shop at the house, and had a hobby of restoring old cars. This is not out of the realm of believability. However, what happened was that my dad and brother found out that a Genesis at Toys R us with Sonic 1 and 2 cost $199.99 and the cheapest go-cart that they could find cost $2000. So a model 1 Genesis it was in the box when I opened it up before my party on my birthday, as my brother said that we should assemble it before everyone got there. A few days later we took a cross country drive to my cousin’s wedding in upstate New York, and we had this Lumina APV van that we hooked up our little AC/DC color TV up to as well as the new Sega Genesis! On the way, we stopped at Walmart, and I used my birthday money to buy X-men! This game was epic and everything I wanted in a X-men game! We loved finding all the secrets, using Nightcrawler to bypass huge sections of the game, having to make that jump on the Mojo level, using Wolverine so we could leave the game on and let his powers and health regenerate, and trying our best to get to Magneto. It was a great trip playing those three games, and we even used the headphone out on the console to play the sonic music over the van’s speakers via the cassette converter that we normally used to play CDs with our Sony Discman. We had a lot of fun playing our Genesis. I got Shanghai 2 for Christmas, probably the only kid excited to get that game underneath the tree. I also got Sonic Spinball from my dad, and that game meant a lot to me, as we all played it and had fun with it.

Unfortunately, my sports cousins never got a 16- bit console, and another one only got the SNES, but one of my cousins also got a Genesis. And we had a blast playing games together. In fact, he had the most epic Disney game of all time, Aladdin! Man that game was fun! We never got the Sega CD or 32X for it,(although I should note that I picked up a 32X at a flea market 15 years later) but we did have a friend that had the Sega CD, and we played some great games on there like Sherlock Holmes and NBA Jam. However, the thing I remember the most about this console was Mortal Kombat. DULLARD, I still remember that code for Mortal Kombat to get to the secret menu. We played the heck out of the first two games. My brother got extremely good at the second game. He was so good at it that he would play as Shang Tsung and turn into random other characters to beat you with. He mastered all their moves and finishes. I tried everything to beat him at this game, even getting a 3rd party controller that let you program in moves to do. Sadly, that didn’t help me beat him. Another favorite of mine was Shadowrun! The storyline was great, the combat was fun, and the hacking was the best in any game I have ever seen to this day!



Now at this point, around 1995-96, my brother had graduated from high school, and was still living at home while working in another town and going to community college in a different town from that. He was a programming major and taught me how to program in Q basic when I was still in middle school. So one day, he comes home from work, and he has a SNES bundled with Zelda Link to the Past! While we had played a little of my cousins’ house of Super Mario World and had a blast with Mario Paint, we really got into Link to the Past! It was an epic game and for us such an improvement on the Original Zelda and a return to form from the sequel. We never got Mario Kart, SMW, or Chrono trigger, or Earthbound, but we did play a lot of RPGs on it and had a blast. One of the neat things about the SNES was its boundary pushing software. Games like Starfox were so fun and exciting! It was a definite must have game! Another game that came out later on in the console wars, was Donkey Kong Country. This is the game that helped finish the 16 bit wars. It was such a big deal that Nintendo sent out VHS tapes of the game and its marketing buzz went through the roof! It definitely worked on us, as we got that game for Christmas that year and took it with us to show the cousins at our Grand parents that year.



Now, I should mention that we didn’t get a N64 or a Saturn during their active times. I got both later on in life, a Jungle Green N64 in 2005 and a Saturn in 2015. While one of my cousins had a Saturn, none of the others were into video games anymore. We did have fun playing the Saturn at his place though. Light gun games were fun on it, but I don’t remember playing too many other things on the Saturn. I played a little N64 at friends’ houses, some Star Wars games, Golden Eye, but what I really enjoyed the most was when I played Mario Kart 64 at a buddy’s beach house at Spring Break 2002. I had only seen the SNES game before and seeing the game in 3D really added something to it. I have been hooked on Mario Kart ever since!
 

The Predaking

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What we played in the next console generation was the PlayStation! Like before we played it at a friend’s house first, getting through such classic games like Resident Evil, Silent Hill, and a few others. My brother got a PlayStation and the newly released epic game that we had seen on commercials, Final Fantasy 7, for Christmas for us. We loved that game! It was the ultimate RPG at the time! The music was iconic, the story was epic, the characters are amazing, and the cut scenes were unforgettable! We got a few more games for the PS1, but at that point I was wanning off of video games myself. I was playing varsity basketball, starting to work a part time job in a different town, and then my brother moved out and took the PS1 with him. Eventually though, I graduated high school, started going to a nearby college, and I got into video games again.



I started hanging out with some friends that were really into wrestling and wrestling games. We had lived out of town for the last decade at this point, so no cable tv, and had just recently got satellite TV, so I was finally able to watch some of the Monday Night Wars, and I got hooked on wrestling too. At that point the PS2 was coming out soon and the PlayStation was in its last gasps. One of my brother’s roommates had left and stolen all of his PlayStation games, but left the console. So I got the PlayStation console back and bought two games that I played the most out of all of them, Smackdown 2 and Resident Evil 3. Those two games were some of the most fun I had that console generation. Nemesis’, “Staaarrrsss” still gets my heart rate up.



But, I went off to University, and I stopped playing games, as I was working 30+ hours a week while going to school full time. Well, several years go by, and one year my mom sees a demonstration of Dance Dance Revolution on the PS2 for the high school she worked at. She thinks it is pretty awesome and goes out to find a copy for me for Christmas. Now, at this point she can’t find a PS2 anywhere, so she actually finds out that her friend is selling their kids PS2 and collection. My mom buys it and her friend drives around 4 hours each way to bring it to her. She got me that and a copy of DDR with the mat. It had some great games in the collection, the Metal Gear Solid games I tried out and didn’t like, Grand Turismos 3 was a blast, and of DDR was a lot of fun. That next year, I got my brother a copy of Star Wars Bounty Hunter as he was finishing up Final Fantasy 10. My hook for the system though, isn’t DDR or MGS, but Dragon Quest 8. I was staying at my girlfriend’s parent’s house one day, and she was playing this in their living room. Hearing all those sounds from my childhood rapidly brought me back to my aunt’s house playing Dragon Warrior on their NES. I had to get my own copy of the game, and I was hooked! I loved that game, and it still stands as one of my favorite games of all time.



This started an avalanche of gaming with me. Not only did I get a new PC to play some amazing games like Quake 4, WH40K: Dawn of War, but I started playing LAN parties with some of my fellow classmates. We had epic LAN parties at college, and had some funny stories from it today that still make me laugh. It is kind of sad that LAN parties aren’t a thing anymore.



I also started getting new consoles to go with my PS2. My buddy had came back from his tour in Iraq and was trying to get his college degree. He realized that the Xbox he had would keep him from succeeding in that, so he sold that to me with a copy of Halo. From there I went to a local Movie Gallery and picked up Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic 1 and 2, as well as Halo 2. I would get a lot more games for this system, as I figured out that when a game is multiplatform, the Xbox version was the best version, so it was my system of choice for non-exclusives.



Let me tell you about the Gamecube and my experience with it. I wasn’t a Nintendo die hard fan, as I had spent the last two generations playing Sony and Sega consoles. However, when I saw Resident Evil 4, I knew that I needed that little cube to play it! I ended up getting it for Christmas from a girl I was dating at the time. I got several other Resident Evil games for it as well as few other fun games. I used to take that to my IT job at the University and play that while waiting for back up tapes to run. I got my buddy hooked on it and introduced him to Metroid Prime and RE4. Speaking of Nintendo though, I was more active GBA fan that generation than Gamecube, as I stumbled upon the GBA SP at my local Gamestop. I got that with a new copy of Final Fantasy 1 and 2. Loved replaying the classic FF1 on that system. It was such an improvement over the original Gameboy with its color backlit screen and rechargeable battery, and the Super Nintendo level power in your hands was so amazing! Got numerous games for it, like Castlevania, Metal Slug, Super Mario 3, and Super Mario World. I remember taking that to a destination wedding and letting my brother play through SMW on it all weekend.



This time in my life I was living in a larger city for University, and it had a Gamestop. This was the first time I had lived in a town with a game store, and back then GameStop was pretty awesome! This was before they went to the dark side. Back when used games were actually discounted, and new games were still sealed. It had used DVDs for a steep discount, tons of clearanced N64 and PS1 games, and lots of neat games for the PS2/Gamecube/Xbox generation. I even played the Xbox 360 kiosk there for the first time and got hooked on Call of Duty 2. I even subscribed to their Game Informer magazine, which had some pretty epic covers, and was really worth the read every month. Game Informer really had a Nintendo Power feel to it and it doesn’t get the love that it deserves. Eventually, Gamestop stop being such an awesome place, and bought out all their competition, but I will always have a fondness for that little game store in my college town that was at the right place at the right time.
 


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