The DreamCast was an embarassment to the gaming industry. Sega's last cash grab. The hardware was terrible, unreliable and fragile, the controller an abomination, the VMU a stupid gimmick- it just happened to be the most powerful when it hit and had a small handful of gems released for it. This was much like the N64. Sure, we all have fond memories of the DC, but take off the rose colored glasses and it was really a bad system that Sega bailed on to noone's surprise.
Total nonsense.
I've owned the same Dreamcast
since launch (that's 1999, btw), and STILL own it to this day. Works and runs just fine. It's currently hooked up between the Wii and 360.
Also still using the original controller and VMU. Aside from the outrageously loud GD-ROM loading, there was nothing anymore "fragile" or "unreliable" about it than its contemporaries. Sorry if you had bad luck, but your experience speaks for no one else. I mean seriously, I've been through
THREE Xbox 360s, 2 PS2s, 2 PSXs and 2 original Xboxes. I suppose because my PS1 drive crapped out, it's a "terrible" system? Please.
🙄
The VMU was indeed a gimmick, but it was just a memory unit at the end of the day, and was no worse than the exorbitantly overpriced PS1 and PS2 memory cards. This one just had an under-utilized screen, but considering pricing was about the same, what's the harm exactly?
You're also conveniently forgetting how it was the first console to truly revolutionize online play, and make it actually accessible and appealing, even in the days of 56k. Playing Phantasy Stay Online or NFL 2k1 with friends online was something no console before did, and truly paved the way for the future.
As far as games go, again,
the Dreamcast's effective lifespan was TWO YEARS. For such a tiny window, the quality and originality of many of the games was astounding. Many of those games were later ported to the PS2, but
during it's heyday the quality of the games was unsurpassed, easily outpacing PS2 offerings of the time, and providing some of the best experiences of that generation.