Inazuma wrote:Just bring a DS Lite with you if you want good portable games. Play the PS1 games on an actual PS1 console at home.
The DS systems are not very portable from my experience. To reiterate, I want to be able to carry a lot of games with me and have a system take up as little space as possible. The PSPgo fits that description.
And when you think about the go's ability to become a home console and emulate many different systems it really makes it one of the most desirable PSP models.
avrame wrote:wololo.net
^This phrase has been posted at least 15 times on this site over the past week.
Inazuma wrote:Just bring a DS Lite with you if you want good portable games. Play the PS1 games on an actual PS1 console at home.
The DS systems are not very portable from my experience. To reiterate, I want to be able to carry a lot of games with me and have a system take up as little space as possible. The PSPgo fits that description.
And when you think about the go's ability to become a home console and emulate many different systems it really makes it one of the most desirable PSP models.
Why not get a flashcart for DS then if space is an issue.
Nutty wrote:After leaving my 2000 series in a seat pocket of a Delta flight, (yep) I blindly went out and bought a Go. That was a mistake as my hands would start to ache after a few minutes of playing anything. I sold it and made back most of the purchase price. At some point I will get a 3000.....
Opa Opa wrote:Discomfort was your only reason for getting rid of it?
Absolutely. The first thing I thought about when I wanted to play it is how cramped my thumbs felt. It's a beautiful piece of hardware but I just couldn't enjoy it.
avrame wrote:I have both a white and black PSPgo. As mentioned by other, hacking the little guy is the best thing you can do at the moment. With that, I'm playing 'UMD-only' games (aka Kingdom Hearts), as well as playing legal backups of my existing PSone collection using the Popstation emulator.
I'm thinking of making the PSPgo my emulation machine while keeping my PSN & UMD stuff on my 2000.
How well is PSone emulation on the go? And how do you handle multi-disc ps1 games?
PSone emulation using Popstation is as good as it has ever been, which is pretty close to the PSN releases of PS1 games. Some gripes I have are the lack of a analog stick (you can have the directional pad or analog stick on the PSP mimic the Analog stick or Dpad on the PS1, but not both at the same time). You have to dedicate the left and right of either the Dpad or A-stick for the L2 R2 buttons, but aside from that, it works well.
The conversion I use is a wrapper that converts ISOs rips of PSX games and turns it into bootable EBOOTs for the PSP. The wrapper allows you to specify multiple ISOs for multidisc games, that way the saves from one game are recognized by the other discs in the set.
If you aren't having a good time, why are you playing?
avrame wrote:The conversion I use is a wrapper that converts ISOs rips of PSX games and turns it into bootable EBOOTs for the PSP. The wrapper allows you to specify multiple ISOs for multidisc games, that way the saves from one game are recognized by the other discs in the set.