RetroGaming

xyzzy , in Finished Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers

I played this again many years ago on Xbox when the Disney Afternoon Collection came out, along with Rescue Rangers 2, DuckTales 1 & 2, and Darkwing Duck.

The music for these fans was really great, owing to Capcom. DuckTales is basically an unofficial mini Mega Man soundtrack at times (Moon Stage, Transylvania Stage, Mine Stage). Many of the themes from Darkwing Duck also sound like they come from Mega Man 3 specifically, like the ending theme (very bluesy).

FlyingSquid , in The cartridge art was always so kickass. You just had to use your imagination quite a bit...
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

VHS covers were the same way.

None of this is in the movie.

Also, it's a terrible movie that was on Mystery Science Theater 3000.

Kolanaki , in The cartridge art was always so kickass. You just had to use your imagination quite a bit...
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

Always so kick ass

Always?

Have you seen the cover art for the first MegaMan game? lmao

https://yiffit.net/pictrs/image/e8596e14-67ef-404c-a606-a284e6f4c5cc.jpeg

Even funnier with the boasting of "state of the art high resolution graphics" at the top. Though to be fair, the actual game looks infinitely better than that cover.

KairuByte ,
@KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Even funnier with the boasting of "state of the art high resolution graphics" at the top.

At the time, this want really that inaccurate. There weren’t many video games with the same quality.

The only reason it’s laughable now is because it’s been 35 years since the claim was made.

AtomicPurple ,
@AtomicPurple@kbin.social avatar

No, it was inaccurate, even at the time. The Famicom was built to cost and and mainly used cheap off-the-shelf components that were already obsolete when the system first released in 1983. The NES released in North America the same year as the Commodore Amiga, a system that actually was cutting edge, and represented a big leap forward in what home computers could do graphically. By the time Mega Man released, the Amiga was on it's second revision and other home computers were rapidly catching up to it's capabilities.
While Mega Man was one of the best games on the NES, it ran at the same resolution as every other game on the system, and was stuck working within the same limited color palette and low sprite limit that were more than five years behind the curve when it released.

HawlSera ,

I don't know which I love better

  1. This isn't even the right color scheme for the character, so it's not like they misinterpreted the sprite
  2. Rock over here looks like he shit himself upon seeing a Mettaur and is trying (and failing) to pretend he didn't.
  3. Mega Man doesn't even use a gun, he uses a Buster. The only time Mega Man has used a gun are instances that parody this boxart or rare occasions like when his internet incarnation uses the Gun Del Sol during crossover events with Boktai
Mythril ,

Looking at this cover art again now, it kinda reminds me of AI-generated art lol

notst ,
@notst@lemmy.world avatar

I love bashing AI art but in AI art it's usually the details that you spot at second glance that makes it fall apart. The Mega Man cover is just fundamentally messed up to a degree where even AI art is miles ahead.

Mythril ,

Yeah true, AI art is more "looks OK at first glance, but smaller details are messed up", while this one is the opposite of that so "smaller details are actually fine, but as a whole it looks quite messed up" haha

ICastFist ,
@ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

On the other hand, the European box art is fucking awesome

https://programming.dev/pictrs/image/b7879244-d6b9-40ee-a11d-a9f7e5e982dc.webp

Kolanaki ,
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

Other than Dr. Wiley lookin' like fuckin' Mark Twain, that is pretty sick. Actually, fighting Mark Twain would be sick, too.

lobut , in The cartridge art was always so kickass. You just had to use your imagination quite a bit...

I remember playing Doom for the first time and I remember thinking that graphics would never get any better than that. Like the arm even moves when he walks!

How horribly naïve I was.

axellenium ,

My peak game i think it was F.E.A.R., my pc couldn’t run it at full but I remember thinking it couldn’t possibly get any better than that

WereCat ,

In some ways it didn't.

axellenium ,

No microtransaccions, no battle pass, just a nice story to tell through a videogame, awesome soundtrack also

Tylerdurdon ,

I remember getting deep into that game, trying to make my own levels with megs of RAM and having things crash. Changing all the sprites on some of the mobs, recording my own sounds and replacing various noises in the game. I learned how to strafe using 100& keyboard (couldn't look up or down in that game), and dominating the evil. Good time to be a teenager. I still think some of the secret rooms in that game were some of the best.

thingsiplay ,
@thingsiplay@kbin.social avatar

@lobut I thought Donkey Kong Country on the SNES was photorealistic and rivaled movies like Terminator 2, which used the same technology behind the scenes. I thought every game would look the same as Donkey Kong Country in future.

ignism ,

I had those moments multiple times. I remember thinking the same about International Karate on the Amiga. Then my mind was blown with Street Fighter II, Max Payne was one for sure as mentioned elsewhere and let’s not forget Carmageddon, which got a little bit too realistic. Graphics technology developed so fast, you can’t compare it to today’s upgrades. As I’m older now 10 year old games still feel “new” to me.

SpaceCadet ,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

As I’m older now 10 year old games still feel “new” to me.

It's not just you getting older, it's also diminishing returns.

It takes more and more effort, both in manpower as in graphical processing power, to make graphical leaps, and the visible returns are getting less.

You can compare it to video formats:

  • VHS => DVD: huge quality upgrade
  • DVD => 1080p HD: yeah that definitely looks better
  • 1080p => 4k: I guess it's a little sharper?
  • 4k => 8k: Well it's ... more. Also: why is everything running so hot?
Mythril ,

I actually liked 3D movies and I even bought the Nvidia 3D kit to play my PC games in 3D, it was amazing (to me)!

But it was an imperfect 3D technology that gave many people headaches, so I can understand why it eventually got scrapped.

I do have a VR headset too, but besides Half-Life Alyx, there haven't really been any VR games I am so hyped for that I keep going back to play in VR.

GenericUsername34 ,

Agreed. I used to be blown away by a game from a technical standpoint 2-3 times per console generation and at a similar clip on the PC side. Now we are getting GTA V and Skyrim re-released for the 10th time. Neither of those games were groundbreaking at the time (IMO) as they both were good but predictable progressions from their previous entries.

Playing DKC and seeing the detailed sprites, Mario 64 (and several others) ushering in 3D, the FMVs in FF VII, and the enemy AI in FEAR, these things felt like monumental leaps forward. Nowadays, the closest thing I can think of is something like Elden Ring or TotK which to me is just taking an existing good game (Dark Souls/BotW) and slapping a mechanic onto it (Open world/crafting). They are both excellent games, but neither compare to the leap forward of FF VII or Mario 64.

Maybe I'm just jaded by adulthood and have my rose tinted glasses on.

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

I remember feeling the same way with Myst. "It even has video!"

funkless_eck ,

grew up with c64, spectrum+3, master system, genesis, nes, snes. So when I bought a ps1 with my paper round money and started up the intro to Soul Blade, that would become Soul Calibur, the graphics jump shook me to my core and brought tears to my eyes. I was like "THIS is the peak of graphics. Nothing can beat this.

Here's the video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Jscuco8zEk

pomodoro_longbreak ,
@pomodoro_longbreak@sh.itjust.works avatar

I mean that looks legit. I've got no nostalgia at play here, having never seen that intro before.

FullOfBallooons , in The cartridge art was always so kickass. You just had to use your imagination quite a bit...
@FullOfBallooons@leminal.space avatar
GreenMario ,

Always loved that they play a Master System.

ChapolinColoradoNZ ,

Not sure, aye. Cartridge slot is on the other side and it's connected to the TV via RCA with stereo audio. hmm, I can't think of another console that meets those prerequisites though.

GreenMario ,
prettybunnys ,

I present Rigby, named after the finest fucking raccoon ever.

I present Rigby, named after the finest dumbest fucking raccoon ever.

Hazdaz , in The cartridge art was always so kickass. You just had to use your imagination quite a bit...

No way would that kid be frowning. If this was legitimately in the late 70s or early 80s that kid would be ecstatic with the graphics.

FatTony ,
@FatTony@discuss.online avatar
Hazdaz ,

perfect

artifice , in Recently picked up Chrono Trigger - Amazing Game!

One of the few games I listen to the music from.

PrinceHabib72 , in Recently picked up Chrono Trigger - Amazing Game!

Chrono Trigger is so far ahead of its time, it's insane. Enemies visible on the field map, battles taking place directly on the field map, character positioning mattering immensely, multi-character attacks, incredible music that holds up today, a compelling story with something like 15 total endings (granted, it's not like they're ENTIRELY different from one another, there are a few major branches with a few variations each)... Most of these things would all but vanish from games for twenty-plus years. I remember when Final Fantasy 12 came out, it was lauded for having the enemies shown on the map and battles taking place on the map as well.

RandomChain , in Help! Can't remember a title of an early CD-Rom game where you fought through the ages and into the future. SOLVED:Time Commando
@RandomChain@lemm.ee avatar

Oh yeah, Time Commando. Had the demo as a kid and I played it so much, thought it was the best game ever. The demo was just some parts of the prehistoric and roman levels, I think. Then years later I suddenly remembered it and picked it up on sale from GOG, and oh boy, did this game age badly. The cutting edge graphics for its time are just plain ugly today, and the gameplay is boring. My advice to you is stick to your memories but don't bother with the actual game.

FriendOfFalcons , in What are your go to games for playing on transit?

I have some great fun playing Pokémon RomHacks like Unbound or GS Chronicles.

Otherwise I started playing the original Mega Man Battle Network titles for the GBA.

009_Sound_System , in (Most of) my handheld collection

Vita deserved better from Sony

aciDC14 , in Metal Gear Solid's E3 Reveal Had The Syphon Filter Team "Despairing" | Time Extension

Honestly, i feel bad for them.

PlasticExistence ,

They got 99 bad guys, but a genome soldier ain't one?

xyzzy , in You Can Now Quadruple The Original Xbox's RAM, But We Wouldn't Advise It Just Yet | Time Extension

It would be nice if we could install the extra RAM and then boot Morrowind from the hard drive. We could disable the game's config flag that forced it to soft reboot the console on load in order to free up leaked memory. Load times for that game would be so much faster.

RawrGuthlaf , in You can now use the Game Boy Camera as a webcam for your PC — 26-year-old camera gets new life with the sleek GB Operator dock | Tom's Hardware

Smile! You're on Gameboy camera! 🎶

Badabinski , in You can now use the Game Boy Camera as a webcam for your PC — 26-year-old camera gets new life with the sleek GB Operator dock | Tom's Hardware

God, I'm so tempted. I do not need to spend $90-100 on one of these and a Game Boy Camera...

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