lemmy.world

ICastFist, do gaming w Feeling old
@ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

World of Warcraft hits 20 this year. I was there (via private servers), starting in 2006.

EmperorHenry, do gaming w Feeling old
@EmperorHenry@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Weird. Old games sell better than new ones. I wonder why that could be?

johannesvanderwhales, (edited )

Don’t think that’s actually true, though. Edit: top selling games of 2023. Pretty sure the idea that “old games were higher quality” is a example of a cognitive bias, too. I say this as someone that’s been gaming since the 80s.

chatokun,

Agreed. I loved and still love Megaman X. Just replayed it recently and it’s remarkably short. I recall it costing near $70 when we got it. People would be rioting if such a short linear game came out at that price point today, which is why it’s bundled with 3 other games for $20 now.

chetradley,

Games people say they want: new IPs, platformers, indy games, local multiplayer.

Games people actually pay for: franchise games, annualized games, live service shooters, online multiplayer.

johannesvanderwhales,

The people who are vocal and discuss games on the internet are a small fraction of the population that actually buys games. Doesn’t mean there isn’t a market for that stuff. Gaming market is bigger than it’s ever been. Direct delivery makes it incredibly easy for small indie devs to get their games out there. But that’s not the stuff that’s making the most money

EmperorHenry,
@EmperorHenry@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Those are new games, right? Okay I actually looked. That article is probably bullshit.

They’re only counting triple-A games and they’re including sports games. Who the hell is actually buying sports games? It’s the same game every year with nothing new really.

I don’t believe that games like Elden ring, mario kart or Jedi survivor aren’t on the top of every chart either.

I just kinds skimmed the article, did they count steam sales? mom-and-pop game stores that sell older games?

purplemonkeymad,

I think it’s like old songs, you remember the good ones, discuss them with people, and preserve them. The crap from then is mostly forgotten, so it only appears that they were all great.

Corno, do gaming w Feeling old

I still can’t fathom that Pikmin is past the legal drinking age in the United States.

Rubanski,

Don’t look up when Pikmin 2 came out

Corno,

Looks up when Pikmin 2 came out

Is a year earlier than I remembered

Turns into dust

Blackmist, do gaming w Feeling old

Went into CEX the other week, and saw PS1 games I’d bought when I was already an adult with a job, being sold second hand for more than I’d originally bought them for.

shadearg, do gaming w Feeling old
@shadearg@lemmy.world avatar

Oh, there you are, Shadow of the Colossus.

2005 (PS2), 2011 (PS3 w/ Ico), and 2018 (PS4 remake)

BluesF,

You can emulate a PS2 on your phone these days. Bluetooth controller with a phone clip and you have a hell of a catalogue available to you.

IcePee,

Forget Shadow, I was there when ICO was first released. Probably even within a month (if not week) of it’s official release. At the time it looked like no other game. Very atmospheric and contemplative.

sundray, do gaming w Nintendo Power's old instructions for taking a "screenshot"

I actually followed this guide back in the day! I never got my photo published in the mag though.

Ep1cFac3pa1m, do gaming w Nintendo Power's old instructions for taking a "screenshot"
@Ep1cFac3pa1m@lemmy.world avatar

I did this for The Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels challenge. If you beat the game without warping you could get to world 9, and if you sent in a screenshot they sent you a patch. I’ve still got it lol

yeather,

Pic of the patch?

Ep1cFac3pa1m,
@Ep1cFac3pa1m@lemmy.world avatar

Took me a minute to find it, but ask and ye shall receive.

Pic of the patch

yeather,

Nice

Sharkwellington,

Good job, truly!

Ep1cFac3pa1m,
@Ep1cFac3pa1m@lemmy.world avatar

It certainly felt like quite the accomplishment at the time 😂

The_Picard_Maneuver,
@The_Picard_Maneuver@lemmy.world avatar

That’s a piece of history!

grue, do gaming w Nintendo Power's old instructions for taking a "screenshot"

Why the quotes in the title? That is more legitimately taking a screenshot than saving the framebuffer is!

The_Picard_Maneuver,
@The_Picard_Maneuver@lemmy.world avatar

Well damn, you’re absolutely right.

FlyingSquid, do gaming w Feeling old
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

I love that Fallout is now thought of as a first-person game, but it started as a turn-based isometric team RPG in 1997 which was, itself, a near-remake of a 1988 game, which I spent hours playing as a kid.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wasteland_(video_game)

And then a few years ago, Wasteland was also revived in the style of the first two Fallout games.

Yes, I know I’m old.

The_Picard_Maneuver,
@The_Picard_Maneuver@lemmy.world avatar

I still want to go back and play the first 2 fallout games. I wasn’t aware of them when they came out, so I wasn’t introduced to the series until 3.

FlyingSquid,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

They’re amazing. I highly recommend it if you like games in that style. The first two Baldur’s Gates were also like that (I haven’t played the latest).

The_Picard_Maneuver,
@The_Picard_Maneuver@lemmy.world avatar

I do! Although I do think I prefer BG3’s turn-based combat vs real time w/ pause.

FlyingSquid,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

They are turn-based, not real time with pause. I prefer the former too.

The_Picard_Maneuver,
@The_Picard_Maneuver@lemmy.world avatar

Oh good! That’s awesome to hear. I think I might even own them from some bundle in steam, but I just haven’t gotten around to playing them.

Willie, do gaming w Nintendo Power's old instructions for taking a "screenshot"

I mean, they're useful instructions. How often at the time did you need to take a photo of the tv? And you were likely not going to know how the photo looked until you got it developed, so it's important that you get the photo right the first time, because there may not be a second chance, since you'll have to run down to the pharmacy, grocery store, or wherever you get your photos developed, and wait for them to come back to see that you messed it up or not, and by then, your parents may have turned the console off.

ummthatguy, do gaming w I've proudly beaten the remake, but the original NES version is even more brutal...
@ummthatguy@lemmy.world avatar

Ah, the days when games were designed to pump as many quarters out of you as possible. The OG micro transactions.

Pronell,

Also you couldn’t let your game be beaten in a single weekend rental, that drives sales down too.

magic_lobster_party,

Also make puzzles so cryptic a strategy guide is needed.

khannie,
@khannie@lemmy.world avatar

Big time. They were also really well designed to allow progression if you came back and started again. They really knew how to design them to extract maximum cash.

There was a very popular game in our local arcade called “Toki”. I once made it to the last level on one credit (unfortunately didn’t complete it). The entire arcade gathered around to cheer me on.

Another time myself and a good friend finished “Time Crisis” on a single credit in two player mode on a machine that was in our college. Again, massive crowd. People really got joy from watching. It was great. :)

Dkarma,

This was a nes game. There were no quarters.

ummthatguy,
@ummthatguy@lemmy.world avatar
steal_your_face, do gaming w I've proudly beaten the remake, but the original NES version is even more brutal...
@steal_your_face@lemmy.ml avatar

These games are so damn hard.

I played Super Ghouls n Ghosts a ton as a child but never got past the second level

otp, do gaming w I've proudly beaten the remake, but the original NES version is even more brutal...

The original NES version?

I’m pretty sure the original was the arcade version…which meant that every restart cost you money!

The_Picard_Maneuver,
@The_Picard_Maneuver@lemmy.world avatar

I think you’re right. I’ve played the arcade version too, and it’s truly brutal, but most of my attempts have been on my NES. I don’t know how similar the port is.

otp,

I’ve heard the NES version is pretty faithful in gameplay, mostly just a graphical downgrade. I’m no expert, though!

khannie,
@khannie@lemmy.world avatar

The arcade version was brutally difficult. Brutally! They took that difficulty to some of the 8 bit ports of it (friend of mine had it on an Amstrad CPC 464) so I never really got much fun out of that game unfortunately.

ramble81, do gaming w I've proudly beaten the remake, but the original NES version is even more brutal...

Let’s not forget the whole “oh you beat it once, but what about twice to get the actual ending?”

samus12345,
@samus12345@lemmy.world avatar

You’ve had ONE playthrough, yes. What about second playthrough?

Sylvartas, (edited )

Don’t you have to beat it a second time with some dogshit weapon too? And if you lose the weapon or die it’s over because you can’t get it back or something. Or am I mixing that up with super ghouls n ghosts?

ramble81,

Nope, that was the OG alright.

Sylvartas,

Man, I remember my best friend and I got pretty good at reaching the first ending, but we never managed to get the secret ending. Trying to beat the latter levels with that weapon was hell

samus12345, do gaming w I've proudly beaten the remake, but the original NES version is even more brutal...
@samus12345@lemmy.world avatar

It’s funny, I generally hate hard games, but I’m very fond of Ghosts 'n Goblins (both the arcade and NES versions) and Super Ghouls 'n Ghosts due to playing them so much in my childhood.

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