This is exactly what I was enjoying about those silent era horror films I was watching back in October. I wouldn't have thought 1890s films would be as interesting as they remained.Anayo wrote:The lack of audible dialog forces the actors to gesticulate in a sweeping, exaggerated way, giving it a somewhat otherworldly and surreal feeling.
The only people I know personally who bought a NES or SNES Classic, were either older nostalgic gamers, or older nostalgic gamers who bought the systems for their kids, in hopes said kids would enjoy the games their nostalgic parents did in their own youth.nullPointer wrote:surely it couldn't have only been us crusty old nostalgia codgers that were scooping up systems?
I think that's a little more accurate.Gunstar Green wrote:If something is good popular enough to stand the test of time it will.
Eh. I think if someone truly loves gaming enough, they'll make time. They still find time to watch ludicrous amounts of TV, play golf, spend hours on social media, watch sports, whatever. As for talking about it, maybe not so much. Not everyone enjoys gaming discussion as much as they do gaming, I concur.Sarge wrote:They'd love to play a lot more, but don't actually have as much time to with other obligations, much less spend a ton of time on message boards. That just cuts into that valuable gaming time, amirite?
Anyway, here's hoping some more sub-25 year olds show up and offer their opinions. Although if they don't, I guess that counts too.






