this post was submitted on 23 May 2024
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Oh right I see it's like a quality vs quantity thing. To me I'd pick quality (as that is what triggers my nostalgia).
If I want quantity there are thousands of modern indie games I'd rather play.
Bringing up the topic of nostalgia, I think there are two audiences to talk to here: Those who had those old systems at the time they were relevant and those who weren't.
I mentioned the game Extreme-G. That was a personal favorite of mine. I occasionally set up an old CRT and my old N64 and during my nostalgia trip Extreme-G and Extreme-G 2 both spend some time running. Just hearing the British cyberpunk announcer chick say "mull tee pull miss aisle" makes 25 year old neurons fire. And I also fully acknowledge that it was an above average 8.1/10 game, that it's basically Mario Kart hosed down with Axe body spray, the Forsaken brand of 90's drum & bass cyberpunk is a bit passe these days, and despite the very fast graphics kids these days are going to look at it and go "...okay. Pretty low resolution, isn't it?"
And from that perspective, I don't think the N64 aged well at all. Even Ocarina of Time, hailed for over a decade as the greatest video game ever made...is aging like a potato. It kept for a long time but it's starting to show wrinkles and is distressingly wet on the bottom.
On c/[email protected] or however you do that on Lemmy I answered the question "Was Wizardry a good series?" with "Was. Yes." Because Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord was phenomenal...in 1981. You just couldn't get computer entertainment like that in the Carter administration. Not sure how well it holds up 43 years on.