irixith wrote:^ At my fellow Canadian. :p
I ignored the 32X/SegaCD when I look at the SNES vs Genesis argument. The SegaCD really started wiping the floor in its time, but you know Sega and their history of wonderful decisions regarding their hardware products. :\ It did have an extra CPU and extra graphics processing power, so it's not really fair to compare it to the SNES.
Yeah, but it still had less colour! Well, with tricks some games did break the 64 and even the 128 colour barriers! I think Eternal Champions was up around 192 colours or so. I don't think the Sega CD could do transparencies, either. One thing I forgot to mention in the last post was that the Genesis can run at a higher resolution than the SNES.

It also relies on the Genesis for sound effects, so it does suffer somewhat audiowise in a way.
Other than colour thing, the Sega CD does beat the SNES from a technical standpoint to the best of my knowledge.
When you start pulling out games like Final Fight CD, Lunar: Eternal Blue, Lunar: The Silver Star, MegaRace, Mickey Mania, Popful Mail, Shining Force, Sonic CD, etc etc -- they compare to the best the SNES has to offer *gameplay* wise, but technically they are far superior because of the hardware boost the Genesis got with the Sega CD attached to it.
MegaRace? Really? haha. I don't think gameplay is the best word to use here. Sonic 1 has great "gameplay". River Raid on the 2600 has great gameplay. Donkey Kong on the Colecovision has great gameplay. Etc.
I do think it's fair to put the Sega CD into the argument. Likewise, I can't think of anyone who would leave the CD add-on out if they were arguing for the Turbografx/PC Engine. I wouldn't put any of those games you listed as being far superior to the top SNES games. Lunar is great, but most people would still pick FFIII or Chrono Trigger over it. Sonic CD didn't display anything that the SNES couldn't do, other than CD sound. In fact, NONE of those games did other than Slilpheed if you don't count the animation cut-scenes. The Sega CD is not a stand-alone unit. It is a tool to enhance the Genesis. Isn't that what the SuperFX chip does? It is not part of the base SNES, but the games that take advantage of it sure do things far beyond what the SNES is capable of. The only difference is the distribution method.
I would agree with you that the bare Genesis is well represented in shmups and sports games, but overall I would still say the SNES has a wider variety of *all* genres. Unless the only genres you liked was shmups and sports! :p
Two of my favourite genres are shmups and sports.

Also racing and platformers, which the Genesis also does well in (the SNES has the edge in racing I think, just because of Mario Kart and F-Zero. Platformers... well, the SNES wins IMO). My other favourite genre is RPGs, which the Genesis is just adequate in.
Either way, I still slightly prefer the SNES... slightly. It's a difference of a $#%% hair or two!
benderx wrote:Sega Genesis had Lunar sega cd, snatcher, the justifer games. Vectorman, sonic, ghostbusters, ghouls n ghosts, mortal kombat, earthworm jim, castlevania, golden axe, Shining Force, Phastasy Star, Crusader of Centy shinobi, Gunstar Heroes, Rocket Knight Adventures, and STREETS OF RAGE!!!
Im wondering why square or enix games weren't on Genesis console, was it nintendo exclusive rules.
WTF? A ton of the games you mentioned are WELL represented on the SNES!!! The Konami lightgun games are on the SNES. Ghouls 'n Ghosts has an AWESOME sequel on the SNES. Mortal Kombat is GREAT on it, except for the lack of blood (does it really matter anymore?). Earthworm Jim is great on the SNES (but not necessarily better or quite as good, but it is still great overall). Castlevania has TWO amazing games on the SNES, compared to one on the Genesis. Rocket Knight is on the SNES and is very good. Streets of Rage is on the Genesis, but Final Fight 2 and 3 are not and they are equal matches to be honest (play them, then play SoR 2 and 3. They really do match up well.). I really am not sure why you used a lot of those choices.

Square and Enix games weren't on it partly, I'm sure, because the Mega Drive sold like crap in Japan, which is their home market. A better question is why they weren't on the PC Engine.