Nintendo's Famicom Turns 20 44
Warrior-GS writes "GameSpy has been running a weeklong series of articles dedicated to the Famicom, which became the super-console Nintendo Entertainment System in the United States. The Famicom turned 20 on July 15th. The series covers everything from the birth of the console to the hardware to many of the classic games." This massive article is, indeed, both comprehensive and lovingly researched, and is well worth checking out.
Why is it called Famicom? (Score:2)
I'm glad they changed it for the American market: it sounds like the name of a pregnancy test kit.
Re:Why is it called Famicom? (Score:5, Informative)
Thanks (Score:2)
Re:Thanks (Score:1, Interesting)
pasacon - personal computer
pokeberu - pager (pocket bell)
pokemon - pocket monster
etc.
I bought the Sega Master System instead (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I bought the Sega Master System instead (Score:1, Funny)
Same choice, different answer (Score:4, Insightful)
The NES was demoing Super Mario Brothers, the Sega machine was demoing, um, a couple pieces of crap, there was maybe one of the games that interested me, but i forget which. The graphics seemed more impressive on the Sega, but Mario was more fun. I thought about it awhile, and got the NES, and didn't regret it.
A year or two later i got a Master System as well since they'd gotten cheap, and a few games for it as well. However every time i had the chance to get a new game, there was almost always something for the NES that outweighed anything i was contemplating for the Sega. The Master System ended up getting stuck in a corner and got pulled out for a brief period ever six months or so once it got moved into my bedroom.
I'm glad to say that for the most part i've managed to stick with making decisions based on the quality of the games (PS2, GameCube) rather than purportedly superior graphics but only one or two games worth playing (XBox, with Halo and Panzer Dragoon)
Although i wonder if i'd be any different today if i'd grown up with Phantasy Star and Sonic and um, wrestling games? rather than Mario, Zelda, Metroid, Final Fantasy and Dragon Warrior.
Re:Same choice, different answer (Score:2, Insightful)
You wouldn't be any diff
Re:Same choice, different answer (Score:3, Insightful)
Toe Jam & Earl 3 just looks strange, not something i'd be inclined to pick up unless someone i knew recomended it to me and explained why. Gunvalkyrie looks potentially interesting. Something i'd possibly get if i bought the system, but not something that would make it worth buying the system on it's own. As for JSRF, i still haven't managed to find time to play JSR on my Dreamcast.
Which gets straight to the hear
Re:Same choice, different answer (Score:1)
Only some minor phisical incompatability on the cardslot, need an adaptor to play import games.
Re:Same choice, different answer (Score:1)
a super-cd system 3 drive (yes, you can get the cd-rom attachment, but it's like saying a genesis and sega-cd are the same thing).
Come on kids! (Score:3, Funny)
*Cheat enabled: First Post*
/me hides
Re:Come on kids! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Come on kids! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Come on kids! (Score:3, Funny)
Contra?
For Fuck's Sake! (Score:2)
Goddamn geeks!
(Not that I didn't make the SELECT == Friends arguement in that last article...)
Re:Goddamn geeks! (Score:1)
Goddamn geeks!
Yes, I know.. but last time it was moderated funny, so I figured easy karma. Me, I had a Sinclair Spectrum back then, and for most cheats, you had to insert a POKE command between loading and executing, or use one of those handy edit-memory-in-real-time devices.
ah... famicon (Score:5, Funny)
Re:ah... famicon (Score:5, Insightful)
"Cartridge no work! Me shake now!"
My best friend's NES eventually deteriorated to the point that he had to cram a pencil into the deck to keep the cartridges from popping up. Can you imagine the consumer outrage if one of the modern consoles had these kinds of problems? I guess we were willing to tolerate a little more way back when.
DecafJedi
Re:ah... famicon (Score:3, Insightful)
If the internet had been, and people really knew how bad the problems were, there would have been an outcry.
Another interesting question is how did cheats make it around?
Things like the contra 30 lives cheat.
I remember the kid who showed me, but who showed it to him?
Those were the good old days.
Now all you have to do is log on and you can get a list of cheats usually even before the game hits the shelves.
Re:ah... famicon (Score:3, Funny)
I'd imagine that most of the cheats got out to the public through Nintendo Power. After all, everyone knew someone with a subscription to the magazine. I can't imagine Nintendo bothered to publish a how-to on the old "shake and blow" technique of overcoming the limitations of their flimsy hardware in Nintendo Power, though.
Did I just use the phra
Re:ah... famicon (Score:1)
I think you answered your own question.
Re:ah... famicon (Score:2)
River Raid needed to be prong-cleaned every time I wanted to play it. Adventure [homestarrunner.com] always worked. That's a damn shame since I remembe
Re:ah... famicon (Score:1)
Bleh, anyway, at least the Atari still worked long after the NES need all kinds of weird tricks to load a cartridge (careful alignment of the cartridge so that it was in the console as little as possible while still
Re:ah... famicon (Score:1)
Re:ah... famicon (Score:1)
The thing did deteriorate but still works. To get a game working now requires my favorite technique I have seen. After putting the first cartidge in and pressing it down, you cram a second cartidge into the slot. Works just about every time. It is fairly easy to figure out why th
article lacks importance of famicom (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:article lacks importance of famicom (Score:2)
Re:article lacks importance of famicom (Score:2, Informative)
Actually, if you continue reading the series of articles, you get to that point. However, the Famicom really didn't do those things, because Atari didn't crash the industry in Japan. The NE
NES games ported to SNES (Score:4, Interesting)
Multiplayer Mario just keeps the older consoles alive, even with new GFX, mario world is just simple fun for both boys and girls. Nintendo never did reach that same level of non-gender fun for newer consoles. (IMHO)
I'm not saying the new console games arent fun, but they are mostly single player, or gender biased games. Mario party was a good try, but something seems missing.
Wonder how many hours people spent building excitebike tracks, and having friends race them. Seemed to be a popular thing at pizza parties.
Re:NES games ported to SNES (Score:2)
WHIRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEE
whirrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrWHIRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEE E
whirrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrWHIRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEE
Excitebike was great. But one thing that I really loved was Super Mario Kart on SNES. I didn't have an SNES, and never played any other games than that one, but I remember having sleepover's at Steve-Dave's house and playing that game all night and eating chocolate covered pretzels. We called it "Naked-Robber," but most people know it as Super Ma
Re:NES games ported to SNES (Score:2, Funny)
Re:NES games ported to SNES (Score:2)
Ahh the Famicom (Score:2, Interesting)
It was pretty neat to play all the cool games years before they came out in the american Market, all bowderlized and generally edited to nothing.
Super contra was same damn good times. Another interesting part about the Famicom was how many bootleg games were made for it. We all know about the infamous black box tengen game series for the NES, but the Famicom had TONS of illegitimate carts for it.
Check out "Game Over" for a great history... (Score:5, Interesting)
The riveting story of Nintendo's conquest of the interactive entertainment industry offering true tales filled with cocky arrogance, confidence and international intrigue that rival any novel. Whether it is recounting the struggles over the game"Tetris," offering blow-by-blow narrative of Nintendo's bitter legal warfare or its see-saw competition with other companies for market leadership, Game Over is a masterful piece of business journalism and technical reportage - a book both cautionary and hugely entertaining.
Happy Birthday (Score:3)
So long and thanks for all the carpal tunnel synd. (Score:1)