some people just can't appreciate it...

Anything that is gaming related that doesn't fit well anywhere else
User avatar
BRIK
Next-Gen
Posts: 1449
Joined: Wed Mar 23, 2011 7:20 am
Location: Perth, Australia
Contact:

Re: some people just can't appreciate it...

Post by BRIK »

Kotaku has a pretty good retro section that is updated regularly. The comments can be terribly ignorant as well though because of course anyone can comment- which has never been a good thing anywhere.
Retro Game On's YouTube Channel << Featuring reviews, features and repair videos.
User avatar
retrosportsgamer
Next-Gen
Posts: 5057
Joined: Mon May 09, 2011 9:32 pm
Location: Outside Philly, PA

Re: some people just can't appreciate it...

Post by retrosportsgamer »

Xeogred wrote:Well it's not that surprising honestly. We're in the niche now, gaming went so mainstream this past decade so we could be in the minority against modern gamers who might say they grew up on Halo instead of Super Mario Bros.
The Halo baseline is a good point. There are a lot of comparisons generation and technology jump-wise with those two.

In IGN's defense, their readership and forums are the dumb of the dumb. Good on them for the model they've built and profited from, it just comes with the curse of stupidity.
Image
User avatar
BoneSnapDeez
Next-Gen
Posts: 20148
Joined: Mon May 02, 2011 1:08 pm
Location: Maine

Re: some people just can't appreciate it...

Post by BoneSnapDeez »

It is sad, but keep in mind that IGN is a brogamer site. It's not populated by people who play retro games or those who understand console hardware and what a big deal the AES was at the time (and still is). IGN members are the type of dudes who'll be first in line to sell their "obsolete" Xbox 360s as soon as the 720 is released.

That said, I can almost understand where these folks are coming from. The high price of Neo•Geo hardware/software is irksome, to say the least. Don't get me wrong, I love the AES but all I've ever been able to afford is the system (Japanese version, it's cheaper) and a single game (again, Japanese). I'll add maybe 1-2 more AES games to my stash these year, but that's it. It's just not practical from a collecting standpoint, for me at least. I'm content with SNK compilations for other consoles.
Balasubbie
128-bit
Posts: 605
Joined: Sun Oct 24, 2010 2:15 am

Re: some people just can't appreciate it...

Post by Balasubbie »

It's only really astounding if your gaming circles are as niche as the likes of Racketboy, Retrogamer, HG101 et al. We are the bastions of taste amid a sea of pointless modernity.......Or, just deliberately obscure. Take your pick. It's always the latter.
User avatar
BoringSupreez
Next-Gen
Posts: 9738
Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2009 10:09 pm
Location: Tokyo

Re: some people just can't appreciate it...

Post by BoringSupreez »

AppleQueso wrote:A kinda sad thought: Today's 11-13 year olds most likely played a gamecube or ps2 as their first console.

Your average teenager started gaming at the ps1.
Image

Actually, the first console I ever gamed on was a Genesis, but the PS1 was the first one I owned for myself.

I can't see that that's a bad thing, since I appreciate old stuff anyway. Besides, it's a good thing I have nostalgia for 32-bit stuff because otherwise I might have a hard time stomaching the bad graphics and long load times.
prfsnl_gmr wrote:There is nothing feigned about it. What I wrote is a display of actual moral superiority.
AppleQueso

Re: some people just can't appreciate it...

Post by AppleQueso »

I don't think I'd consider any of the teens on this site an 'average teenager'.
User avatar
Damm64
Next-Gen
Posts: 1592
Joined: Thu Sep 08, 2011 12:49 am

Re: some people just can't appreciate it...

Post by Damm64 »

RyaNtheSlayA wrote:
AppleQueso wrote:A kinda sad thought: Today's 11-13 year olds most likely played a gamecube or ps2 as their first console.

Your average teenager started gaming at the ps1.
They'll never know the magic of sprites like we do. Hell, most kids that grew up with the PS1 don't either. I was lucky enough to have a Genesis and a PS1 growing up.

It is kind of sad. :?
There are some exceptions, i have 19 but I LOVE the sprite based games, there is something about them...
I like the detail and the color you can have with the sprites.
noiseredux wrote:I don't lend shit and I don't borrow shit.
Image
AppleQueso

Re: some people just can't appreciate it...

Post by AppleQueso »

idk by 'teenager' I was mostly thinking 15-16 year olds but whatever
User avatar
BoringSupreez
Next-Gen
Posts: 9738
Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2009 10:09 pm
Location: Tokyo

Re: some people just can't appreciate it...

Post by BoringSupreez »

Damm64 wrote:
RyaNtheSlayA wrote:
AppleQueso wrote:A kinda sad thought: Today's 11-13 year olds most likely played a gamecube or ps2 as their first console.

Your average teenager started gaming at the ps1.
They'll never know the magic of sprites like we do. Hell, most kids that grew up with the PS1 don't either. I was lucky enough to have a Genesis and a PS1 growing up.

It is kind of sad. :?
There are some exceptions, i have 19 but I LOVE the sprite based games, there is something about them...
I like the detail and the color you can have with the sprites.
I do too. PS1 may have been my first console, but I was gaming on PC for several years before I had one. My family's PC was never high end (or even medium end) so I was always playing 16-bit stuff when I was little. One thing I appreciate about sprite-based graphics is that it took actual artistic talent to make them. It's by far my favorite graphical style.
prfsnl_gmr wrote:There is nothing feigned about it. What I wrote is a display of actual moral superiority.
User avatar
o.pwuaioc
Next-Gen
Posts: 8484
Joined: Tue Mar 29, 2011 7:59 pm
Location: I miss NYC.

Re: some people just can't appreciate it...

Post by o.pwuaioc »

AppleQueso wrote:A kinda sad thought: Today's 11-13 year olds most likely played a gamecube or ps2 as their first console.

Your average teenager started gaming at the ps1.
Let's say that someone has to be five to start properly playing a console (or before their parents would buy them one).

To be a teenager today, you would need to be born between 1993 and 1999. Teenagers born from 1996 to 1999, half of all teenagers, would not yet be five by the time the PS2 launched in 2000. So really, "your average teenager" probably started gaming with the PS2 as a new console, and if they played older consoles, they were their older siblings' or had parents looking for the cheapest deal on games. This was the case with me, since we had an Atari before I was born and I remember playing NES a lot when I was 5 and 6. But really it was the SNES and Genesis that I grew up on.
Post Reply