LugNutX wrote:Side note on this topic...
Is anyone running both their retro consoles and newer gen machines (360, PS3, etc.) on the same TV? If so, what do you use? It seems the predicament is that retro games look and play best on older SD CRTs, while the newer stuff obviously likes HDTVs. Though they made widescreen CRT HDTVs (best of both worlds, if you don't mind the light-gun thing), you can no longer buy these in stores. They can also be very tricky to track down locally.
In that situation, do you run two different TV sets - one for retro and one for newer? Is anyone piping everything into a flat-panel HDTV?
I'm looking to consolidate my consoles into one game room and I'm torn on what to use as a display, since the technologies of yesterday and today are so different.
Thoughts?
Mostly because of laziness I run both my retro games and newer games on my HDTV. I don't usually have problems because I have a Panasonic 42'' TV. I'm lucky too because Panasonic plasma panels usually have a great track record with up-scaling content, and I don't perceive any lag on the set either with games such as Waku Waku 7 or Comix Zone.
That said, All my retro connections have to be running through at least a S-Video connection. My Genesis is S-video, SNES & 64 are S-video, PS1, 3DO. Any of my consoles that don't do S-video are hooked up to my Trinitron in the bedroom(NES, 32X, Atari).
Back on the HDTV, I play the retro stuff in 4:3 mode, with all the video enhancements on the TV turned off. The 240P signal being up scaled still gets a small amount of pixel blending/smudging, but for the most part it is very sharp.
With all that considered, I still play my Genesis primarily on the Plasma TV along with the SNES. I wouldn't suggest using composite, and I wouldn't suggest it with anything other than a Panasonic or Samsung plasma (Or a Pioneer if you got one).