Kneedragger
Golden Member
- Feb 18, 2013
- 1,187
- 43
- 91
As long as you realize the cost savings over a Wii wouldn't be spectacular at all.
Very true.
As long as you realize the cost savings over a Wii wouldn't be spectacular at all.
...or a Wii U. It has Virtual Console with HDMI and Internet library. The miniNES controllers even work with it.
FYI: Most Wii's have GameCube ports. The Wii U needs software hacks but they sell an official USB GameCube adapter for the ports.
I wish this would come with Contra and Super Tecmo Bowl.
I will be buying this.
Nostalgia.
Many of us grew up playing this slew of games. For $60 cheap/easy way to have some memories rekindled and have some fun.
That being said. I wish there was RC Pro Am. That game was addicting as hell
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-mTTcYO_LHY
Oh god yes, there are some questionable inclusions here, but RC ProAm should be on there.
Why no Faxanadu or Battletoads? :\
Licensing. Microsoft owns Rare, developer of R.C. Pro Am and Battletoads.
It does have HDMI.
2 sucked. You'd have to take some ultra obscure clue that doesn't tell you anything and figure out where to kneel for some tornado to carry you to another area. It was as screwball as it gets.
This will be the perfect video game console for grandparents and non-techie girlfriends. Those types of people don't want millions of polygons per second and 20 button controllers. They want simple fun. And they don't want to install emulators and download ROMs from questionable sites to do it.
Nintendo is going to sell a metric asston of these things.
Really? Did you have a hard time with the Mario games?
Really? Did you have a hard time with the Mario games?
Really? Did you have a hard time with the Mario games?
What about Castlevania 3? I'm one of the rare people that actually liked Simon's Quest--it was my first favorite NES game and wasn't really like anything else at the time, but Castlevania 3 was much better in so many ways.
CV3 used a custom high-end "mapper" chip that would have added extra cost. Or maybe not, if this is all purely emulated.
I think everyone kind of did at some point.
I remember those being harder than anything I played on the PC or newer consoles.
Maybe my hand-eye coordination just wasn't developed at the time...
Ninja Gaiden was a bitch. I remember a part involving jumping between platforms while ninja star throwing flying enemies and other shit covering almost every inch of screen real estate and getting hit once basically translates into falling into a pit and losing a life.
My grandmother used to play NES games, Super Mario mostly, back in the late 80s and early 90s. I'm sure she never beat it, but she had fun. I thought that was the whole point of still liking these games with "bad graphics", because they were fun and challenging.
I still hold to my statement that this the perfect system for non-gamers.
My grandmother used to play NES games, Super Mario mostly, back in the late 80s and early 90s. I'm sure she never beat it, but she had fun. I thought that was the whole point of still liking these games with "bad graphics", because they were fun and challenging.
I still hold to my statement that this the perfect system for non-gamers.
Yea, NES games weren't known for being easy....although they seem pretty easy these days, but we've had decades of practice and youtube.
I would say the opposite in my experience. I've become even worse at NES games because I've become so used to fluid animation, responsive controls, and a lot of modern refining to make the whole process smooth that when I play an old game I'm completely out of my element. A lot of games I enjoyed as a kid now feel "clunky" and I don't do nearly as well as I used to. Maybe I'm just getting old.
are these games still gonna look like cancer on a modern HD display?
I actually use a Kazoo for dumping my original NES games without pulling the chips, though
Nah, the great thing about NES games is they have aged wonderfully- better than 16 bit games actually! The big blocky pixels are very easy to upscale properly.
That said I hope it has something other than HDMI out so I can hook it to my CRT where the Atari Flashback is.
That is pretty cool. I did all my dumping back in college (and then Ebayed the hardware I did to do it) but I have been wanting to get back into it so I can dump and play a patched Seiken Densetsu 3.