Importing Video Games in the 1990s

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  • Опубликовано: 28 июн 2024
  • There's been bits and pieces of this information in a bunch of my videos so I decided to put it all together in one place for those curious. I hope you enjoy it!
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    Opening "Sega" jingle is from Astal for the Sega Saturn.
    Ending Music during the credits is from Batman for the Sega Genesis.
    SLX Logo
    By: Jan Neves
    RUclips Page - / jan3d
    Intro by Evan S.
    portfolio.tsestudios.com/
    Outro Animation by Kevin Bhall
    RUclips Page - / nigh11
    Episode Notes:
    1. Most of the pictures you see in this episode were taken from EGM magazines released in 1989/90/91.
    2. Aside from importing various games, I also imported the Supergrafx, the Game Gear, the Mega CD, and even a Super Famicom, briefly. I never dabbled in the PSX import scene during its life. That didn't start until the 2000s. I did have a friend who imported the N64 but I did not chase it down, myself.
    3. I didn't start buying PS2 import games really until after PS3 was out.
    4. I stopped collecting around 2008. Many of the games and consoles I owned at that point were sold off.
    4.
  • ИгрыИгры

Комментарии • 299

  • @GameSack
    @GameSack 2 месяца назад +240

    Good video. My first experience with "importing" was a shop called Power Play Games. I went in one Saturday in late 1989 I believe and RENTED Japanese versions of Herzog Zwei and Curse. I was blown away. They had filed down the cartridges to fit people's Genesis. They also sold JP games and I eventually modded my cartridge slot to fit games like Gaiares, Batman, Thunder Force 3, and others. It was a grand time. I eventually did get a region converter for my TurboGrafx-16, but I only had Shinobi and Legend of Hero Tonma (before it was released in the US). However I did import Dracula X from Die Hard Gamer's Club not long after it came out. Even though it was easy, I never imported anything for the SNES in its time. I eventually modded my Saturn with a region switch so I could import games. I may have gotten a few from Die Hard, but I recall getting most of them from Tronix. I also region modded my PlayStation and played Dracula X Nocturne in the Moonlight and R-Types. My friend Dave imported the Dreamcast, but I never did. I played it a little and thought it was cool but he didn't have many games for it. He eventually bought a US Dreamcast from Target, swapped out the console and put the JP one in the box, returned it to the store and got a refund(!) I think he sold the few JP games he had. Like you I also imported heavily during the early eBay days. Man was that awesome, a true renaissance in retro gaming!

    • @Arv-6969
      @Arv-6969 2 месяца назад +8

      Lol didn't dave say that story in a episode

    • @C3phoe
      @C3phoe 2 месяца назад +3

      Dave is a legend! My brother uses this tactics with wall mart to this day, in goes the broken and back to the shop 😆

    • @orderofmagnitude-TPATP
      @orderofmagnitude-TPATP 2 месяца назад +5

      My first experience of import was via my late friend who was killed via overdose. He had one of the first megadrives in the country (uk) due to import...
      So forever I tie memories and games to him. Sega Lord x showing the strider cartridge really did give me goosebumps and flashbacks to that time period playin a megadrive on a small 13 or 14 inch crt before it was here in the uk.
      Later his addiction caused him to sell me many of his games for dirt cheap...sigh... like I say he died of overdose.

    • @orderofmagnitude-TPATP
      @orderofmagnitude-TPATP 2 месяца назад +3

      ​@@Arv-6969no it was Joe here with the story aka a broken modem swapped out lol

    • @OneLifeGames
      @OneLifeGames 2 месяца назад +1

      Haha that dreamcast return is too good :)

  • @liublanka3925
    @liublanka3925 2 месяца назад +72

    I didn’t care about importing till I saw a basically arcade perfect version of x men vs sf was on Japanese Saturns. I will never forget putting that 4mb ram cart in my Saturn and playing it. It felt like cps2 was in my house. One of the most magical gaming experiences I had easily

    • @tonberrymasta
      @tonberrymasta 2 месяца назад +12

      This was a magical experience for me too. I remember taking in my Saturn to have it modded at a local import shop, and bringing it back home to play Xmen vs. SF at home for the first time. Was one of those moments that made you proud to be a Saturn owner.

    • @steelcurtain187
      @steelcurtain187 2 месяца назад +9

      That was basically the first time I was really interested in it too

    • @sega_kid4288
      @sega_kid4288 2 месяца назад +3

      Wow this was exactly my experience. Saw it in a magazine and went out and immediately bought a Saturn. I actually used an import shop in video game magazine and got the game, the 4mb ram, and the region key cart. I became a cart hot swaping pro. I still have that same Saturn and it still works like a champ.

    • @alexojideagu
      @alexojideagu 2 месяца назад +1

      Same here I got Marvel V Street fighter 4mb imported in the UK and a modded Saturn. It was Arcade perfect basically

    • @alexojideagu
      @alexojideagu 2 месяца назад

      ​@@sega_kid4288I did exactly the same ordered it from an advert Marvel V street fighter and modded Saturn.

  • @RoyAlWhicheez
    @RoyAlWhicheez 2 месяца назад +16

    You were the friends "cousin" that I never thought existed...

    • @felixfranzen7318
      @felixfranzen7318 2 месяца назад

      I was under the impression that the "friends cousin" nobody thought existed was that hot model chick you totally slept with last summer and not a chubby guy with lots of video games. No offense by the way Sega Lord. I was a chubby kid too.

  • @joesaiditstrue
    @joesaiditstrue 2 месяца назад +29

    i never grew up with the most expensive toys, but my parents appreciated the fact that i graduated on time in 98 despite the fact that i struggled to get through HS , found a Japanese Dreamcast under the tree the same year, it was the best christmas i ever had. VF3 and sonic adventure, no VMU though 😅😅😅

  • @jaredwhite200
    @jaredwhite200 2 месяца назад +54

    I miss the old Sega days. They made so many great games back in the early & mid 90s

    • @princegroove
      @princegroove 2 месяца назад +7

      Seeeeeegaaaaaah! 😂

    • @timculhane625
      @timculhane625 2 месяца назад +8

      I remember Sonic 2uesday.Great childhood memories

    • @maxxdahl6062
      @maxxdahl6062 2 месяца назад +9

      I miss them having consoles even more.

    • @jaredwhite200
      @jaredwhite200 7 дней назад

      @@maxxdahl6062 same here as well

  • @themanwithnoname5310
    @themanwithnoname5310 2 месяца назад +35

    "The idea here was that together we could trade games amongst ourselves and have more than we could ever have alone." - Sega Lord X

    • @sonicmania9993
      @sonicmania9993 2 месяца назад +10

      This is something that today's digital-only gamers will have a hard time comprehending. My kids still trade/borrow physical Switch games with a few close friends all the time: feels like it almost doubles the number of games they play.

    • @luizkp
      @luizkp 2 месяца назад

      ​​@@sonicmania9993man I live in brazil and I still split my psn acc with my homie from high school on ps5, we've been sharing games since ps2 days lmao
      Games got absurdely expensive over the last 10 years over here, but people always will find a way 😂

  • @AlanAndalon
    @AlanAndalon 2 месяца назад +8

    I was lucky enough to grow up in southern California where most of those import game stores were located like, Japan Video Games, Game Dude, Die Hard Video Games, Gameland etc. My brother, my cousin and I went game hunting in the mid 90's all over southern California to get all the Mega Drive, Super Famicom, Neo Geo, PS1 and Saturn games we could get our hands on. Still have many of the games I didn't trade in to this day! Lots of great memories!

  • @uchusky08
    @uchusky08 2 месяца назад +18

    I was younger, only 14 by the time 2000 rolled around, but importing games from Japan seemed like a mystical thing that you heard about people doing but never knew anyone yourself. At least for me and my circle of friends, must have been so cool to pull out those Japanese carts.

  • @ChannelCortez33
    @ChannelCortez33 2 месяца назад +4

    I was blessed to live 10 minutes away from an import game store. At 17, I had my Saturn modified and was able to play Vampire Savior and Symphony of the Night. Best of times for gaming.

  • @thomaselers7416
    @thomaselers7416 2 месяца назад +7

    This video basically sums up the reason i bought a JP Saturn two weeks after the release in Japan.
    The Saturn is my most favourite console ever. With DC coming in as a close runner up, and PCE on this place.
    The days and night I've spent on the Saturn, are no doubt the video game highlights of my life. (Yeah, it sounds sad, but it isn't, LOL)

  • @noteptp
    @noteptp 2 месяца назад +3

    As a lifelong New Yorker, it's cool to see J&L get some shine! In the 90s and early 2000s, on Elizabeth St. in NYC's Chinatown there were various mom and pop game stores that had import games and consoles, modding services, and hard to find accessories. However, I wasn't familiar with importing games until the arrival of the Saturn. My cousins had got a US console and the first time I got a chance to check it out, they were playing a JP copy of X-Men: Children of the Atom. Great stuff!

  • @PeeNCee
    @PeeNCee 2 месяца назад +19

    I remember a kid at my Jr High that moved from Japan and had a Famicom. He already had Super Mario 3 when we in the US got Super Mario 2. But in a weird twist he said our Mario 2 was different . (This was back before we knew what we know) I got to try it for a little bit and was amazed by it... the next 2 years felt like an Eon waiting for our USA release

    • @lasskinn474
      @lasskinn474 2 месяца назад +3

      smb3 was the only instance of me knowing import games in finland for a long time. it was some pirate version too that some friend of a friend kid had from hk or something.

  • @dorbei
    @dorbei 2 месяца назад +6

    For European gamers like me, getting imports in the 90s was an even bigger incentive than for Americans. Not only were they available months before the localised releases, but they also ran at the original speed (NTSC). Knowing this, retailers would often charge them double the price of the PAL version.
    But honestly, most gamers (myself included) did not care. We just wanted the complete experience, no matter the cost.
    I remember vividly when my Japanese copy of "Ridge Racer: Type 4" arrived right at Christmas Eve 1998 and I felt like the the king of the world.
    The situation did change significantly however around 1999/2000 when PAL releases not only got closer to the Japanese street dates but also because Action Replay/Xplorer codes enabled them to be played at full 60Hz speed.

  • @chrislaustin
    @chrislaustin 2 месяца назад +11

    I grew up in Los Angeles and I graduated HS in 89, and starting working right after, so that summer once I got my Game Boy was when importing began for me. We had a cool Japanese toy shop in Little Tokyo in Downtown LA called
    Pony Toy Go Round, and while they weren't cheap, it was a cool spot all the same. They had a reservation book, so if you wanted something you just put your name and the item, and they would call you once it came in. As that was how me and my friends all got our Super Famicom's at launch, even when they were hard to get in Japan at the time.
    I kind of out grew them, as we needed a better selection with cheaper prices, and that's when I started shopping at Japan Video Games. The owner Jim was cool as hell, and had just moved from the Bay area when we first met, and he didn't even have a shop yet, as he was selling out of his garage at the time. And he was my go to for years, and then after I moved to Vegas in 95, NCSX in New York became my new stop shop. And I used them and a few other places until I stopped importing all together years ago. I imported so may great games over the years, it is hard to remember them all, but it was fun while it lasted.

    • @joesaiditstrue
      @joesaiditstrue 2 месяца назад +3

      NCSX was where my parents bought my JP Dreamcast!

  • @hunter371
    @hunter371 2 месяца назад +23

    This is a great video. It's great to hear from someone who was involved in gaming the way you were (buying magazines, games, imports) and able to talk about what it was like at the time. I often see retro gaming content on RUclips from people who weren't even alive at the time of the game they were talking about, and while that's cool, they lack an understanding of the contemporaneous context of the time.
    I have appreciated your reviews for a while now and definitely enjoy these retrospective type videos. This was an interesting video to watch for a guy who was still in grade school throughout the Genesis years

  • @PabstOban
    @PabstOban 2 месяца назад +6

    I started importing games with the Saturn. I was REALLY big into fighting games at the time, and my local Electronics Boutique carried a few titles and they weren't much more than normal Saturn games. I ordered a few from catalogues, but most of my knowledge was coming from magazines like GameFan. I didn't have a ton... I got Symphony of the Night, Bomberman, Marvel vs Capcom, Marvel Super Heroes, Xmen vs Street fighter and Phantasy Star Collection (which I mainly bought for Phantasy Star 1, which I was JONSING to play again... I managed to complete it by writing notes on what stuff was, and drawing out the Japanese characters they represented).

  • @TSUNAMIPOPPY247
    @TSUNAMIPOPPY247 2 месяца назад +6

    Back in the day there was a hello kitty store next to a toysrus this store had it all, they sold all kinds of American and Japanese hello kitty stuff, they also sold Japanese dragon ball z figures, and they sold all kinds of Japanese games for the saga Saturn and eventually the saga Dreamcast. There was another service they offered which was to modify American video game consoles so that they could play the Japanese game that they sold the games for

  • @MrBirchieBirch
    @MrBirchieBirch 2 месяца назад +4

    There was a shop on Carnaby Street, London, that was pretty much the only source of grey imports in the 80's/90's.
    My mate and I used to go there to look at all the cool new gaming stuff released in Japan.
    Got my first look at the PS1 & Saturn in that shop.
    Vague recollection of first seeing the Mega Drive & PC Engine there, too.

  • @Planag7
    @Planag7 2 месяца назад +7

    My friend Nichole was a big importer with Game Gear. Was very nice honestly

    • @jessragan6714
      @jessragan6714 2 месяца назад

      You guys ever played Ninku Hiroyuki? Pretty satisfying take on Pengo, with anime characters. (Anime characters that never took hold in America, evidently.)

    • @belstar1128
      @belstar1128 2 месяца назад

      the game gear was handy since its not region locked uses batteries and you can get the adapter to play sega master system and the tv tuner to use it as a less than ideal ntsc tv .

  • @jd9119
    @jd9119 2 месяца назад +1

    Around 1990, I had a paper route and I mowed lawns/shoveled snow too. Unlike the other kids at my school, I always had money and I was always buying new games.

  • @danielrecommends
    @danielrecommends 2 месяца назад +1

    Sounds like a pretty awesome childhood for gaming. I am also in Central VA and had some similar experiences with working early and earning money to buy myself games and gaming systems. I still remember the day I purchased my Playstation 1 with money I had from my job as a dishwasher. I never got into the import scene but its cool that you got to do that.

  • @dreamcastninja88
    @dreamcastninja88 2 месяца назад +1

    I imported games for Saturn and Dreamcast in the 90's and early 00's for dreamcast games. I did screen printing and Graphic arts commissions to buy my imports in those days.

  • @Funkysauce
    @Funkysauce 2 месяца назад +4

    I remember in 1995 the first import game I ever played was Yu Yu Hakusho (the fighting game) for Genesis. Followed by Guardian Heroes (Saturn) and Cotton. Then DBZ Budokai 3 for SNES. We used to go to Chinatown (NYC) and get imports there - it was an eye opening experience and really added so much depth to games for me.

    • @fazares
      @fazares 2 месяца назад +1

      no such a thing like dbz budokai 3 on the snes..ure probably meaning dbz super butoden 3..very likely...

  • @duckhive
    @duckhive 2 месяца назад +3

    my first import was the SECRET OF MANA soundtrack (1994)

    • @YudaHnK
      @YudaHnK 2 месяца назад

      Possibly the most atmospheric ost ever made

  • @sonicmania9993
    @sonicmania9993 2 месяца назад +1

    As a shmup and 2D fighter guy, the import collections I pulled together in the 90s were PC Engine and Saturn. Awesome games! I was lucky to live and work in a couple of big cities during that era, so there were cool import shops around.
    Surprised that scanning through I don't see a single comment on here talking about how fun it is again, to import games over the last 6-8 years ... for Switch especially, but also for PS4/PS5. Maybe the viewers of this channel aren't as interested in modern Japanese games as my kids and I are. Our physical Switch collection is like no-one else's -- half our games are either JP/Asian-only imports or small press physicals (many from Europe). It takes a lot of time to keep up with these markets, but we've found and played so many awesome games. Plus, with the world economy the way it is these days, imports cost about the same as domestically-purchased games, sometimes less -- you just have to work your way around expensive shipping.
    That being said ... I feel like the late 2010s-early 2020s boom of this import scene is kind of drying up a bit. For economic reasons, Japan (just like western countries) is starting to make fewer fun games than they were a few years ago ... and when they do make them, they need to release the games worldwide to have a chance of making decent profit. Everybody knows that many very Japanese games sell over 50% of their copies outside of Japan, due to how many of us abroad enjoy JP game design & genres, game history, etc.

  • @simon41978
    @simon41978 2 месяца назад +1

    There was something amazing about getting a game like Chomakaimura (Japanese Super Ghouls N Ghosts) in the mail, never having seen it running or played it. No walkthroughs to guide you.

  • @DavidJohnson-td5ic
    @DavidJohnson-td5ic 2 месяца назад +1

    Man, this video really takes me back, and wishing to relive those early days of collecting videogames. My best friend and I would scour NYC, Long Island, and even CT, tracking down import game stores and just being in awe every single time we'd arrive. I remember some of my first import games being Devil Hunter Yoko, Super Shinobi and Batman, each $100+.
    Seeing some of that old software, like the JPN Strider cartridge and the ST-Key made me smile. Also, the old import shop ads from EGM. I remember each and every one lol.
    What a great video! Thank you for sharing with us!

  • @wigglesarcade8261
    @wigglesarcade8261 Месяц назад +1

    I had a good friend in middle school who was Japanese and much of his family still lived in Japan. Every year, he'd fly to Japan for several weeks to visit them, and always when he returned to the states, he'd bring back a bunch of imports. Needless to say, I frequently wanted to hang out at his house just to play Super Famicom and import N64 and PS1 games. It inspired me enough to mod my PS1, but it wasn't until the late 2000s that I really got into importing.

  • @jessragan6714
    @jessragan6714 2 месяца назад +4

    Ah, memories! I learned very quickly that you just don't have a Sega Saturn if you don't have a means of getting import games. The system's Japanese library is so vastly superior to what was available in the United States that importing, or buying imports from media stores, was a necessity.

    • @grgmcln
      @grgmcln 2 месяца назад

      So so true.

  • @mrnicktoyou
    @mrnicktoyou 2 месяца назад +5

    While your parent's got you a Genesis in 1990, mine got me a Master System because they were so cheap. I remember being thankful because I got something, but also extremely disappointed because it wasn't a 16bit Sega.😂

  • @darkman4811
    @darkman4811 2 месяца назад +1

    Sega Lord X, your channel never ceases to amaze me with the quality of your videos, and this is coming from someone the loves the SNES. It was so cool listening to your experiences with importing in the '90s. I'm going to say it right now, you have the best Sega channel on RUclips. Keep up the great work. 😊

  • @tedsexton5406
    @tedsexton5406 2 месяца назад +2

    Imported Stryder for the genesis. Shaved off the sides of the cart. Cost $80. But I had that shit almost a year before anyone. Coolest kid on the bus-- what is that worth? Priceless.

  • @worldofretrogameplay6963
    @worldofretrogameplay6963 2 месяца назад +1

    I imported games at the same time, Sega Lord X. They were exciting times!

  • @leeg12000
    @leeg12000 2 месяца назад

    In '99 I was in college. Manchester England. It was word of mouth back then. There was a shop in Chinatown that could get hold of anything. Got some great Dreamcast and Playstation games. Awesome memories.

  • @jayesun3420
    @jayesun3420 2 месяца назад +2

    Another completely original episode idea that I love this channel for, nice work again Lord X

  • @videogameobsession
    @videogameobsession 2 месяца назад +2

    It sounds a lot like my own history with gaming. In 1990 I read in an issue of EGM that you could play Mega Drive imports by sanding off the tabs on the cart port. I also read that Sunsoft's BATMAN wouldn't hit the Genesis until 1991, or later, do to Nintendo's 3rd party licensing rules. So that was my first import. bought 08/10/1990, for $89 w/shipping, from Video Game Excitement in NYC. I had never seen a Mega Drive cartridge box before, and since it was using a tiny form factor case (like other Sunsoft MD games), I figured they were ALL like that. Haha.. I kind of wish they were! I would soon realize this, with my second MD import purchase, DJ Boy, in June 1990 from Ultimate Game Club ($75). During the next few months, I would buy few others (Whip Rush, Insector X, FATMAN, Devil's Crash MD, Rainbow Islands Ex, Mega Panel, Ringside Angels, and a handful more). I had to stop importing games because I saved up for a Neo-Geo Gold System in December 1990, and most of my money went towards that, and AES games for it. It would tough being a teenagers, and trying to cover the NES, Genesis, TG16, Neo-Geo, and SNES in 1991! First World Problems.. I know. :) -Matt

  • @markshadows3667
    @markshadows3667 2 месяца назад

    There were ads for import games to mail order in those gaming magazines. I remember i ordered imports of MERCS, The Genesis Sunsodt Batman,Ernest Evans, Alisha Dragon, and the Rocketeer for Super Nintendo.

  • @MisterBigMack
    @MisterBigMack Месяц назад +1

    This was such a lovely video Mel, I never imported any of my sega consoles but my older brother got his Dreamcast on the same date as the JPN release as his import shop got theirs in early - he also got vf3, Godzilla and pen pen - I remember when he brought it home and I was in awe of it

  • @CasperEgas
    @CasperEgas 2 месяца назад +1

    The first time I found some imports was in my local video rental place during the Mega Drive days. I rented them with a cartridge to run them included. First time I imported games myself was for the Dreamcast.

  • @istrasci
    @istrasci 2 месяца назад +1

    This was a good nostalgia trip!! I only ever imported a few games. I got Starfox 64 in Japanese, and the guy at the video game store had to shave the edge of the cartridge with a Dremmel so that it would fit properly. I also got Street Fighter Zero 3 for my PS1. I remember there were two ways to play it: you either had to do this trick by first loading a US game, doing something to make the disk keep readiing while the lid was open, then swap in the Japanese game. It worked, but you had to keep the lid open the entire time. Eventually, I bought a mod chip, downloaded the soldering instructions from the (baby at the time) internet, and took it to an electronics shop down the street. They charged me like $80 to do it, but I didn't care.
    But more than this, I remember buying "exotic" games from these mail-order shops in the back of gaming magazines. It was cool to see so many games listed that you never really saw in the stores, and wondering what they might be like. I frequently ordered from a place called "Chips 'N Bits". I think it was in Vermont or New Hampshire. I only had a SNES at the time, and yeah, games were expensive as balls back then. I remember ordering Final Fantasy 3/6 and Breath of Fire 2, and they were each like $79.99 plus tax and shipping.

  • @zippolova
    @zippolova 2 месяца назад +1

    Crazy how that area grew

  • @albdamned577
    @albdamned577 2 месяца назад +1

    Slx you’d love growing up in Hawaii. There weee physical stores that imported games and quite frequently when the game makers wanted to test an arcade, they just dropped off a Japanese one and saw how well people played it. Think that’s how I first played DDR

  • @Marcus_K
    @Marcus_K 2 месяца назад

    Imports were pretty significant in Europe as well and we used to get some games and consoles even later than americans. The PAL Mega Drive was released in September '90, Super Mario Bros 3 in August '91 and the Turbografx 16 didn't even get a proper Europe-wide release. 1989 was the year when the import scene heated up with the PC Engine and Mega Drive both getting many high-profile releases. Magazines like CVG and Mean Machines had lots of import shop ads and price listings. Aside from the 3DO, every console I bought, from the PC Engine to the Dreamcast, was a japanese model.

  • @Hwi1son
    @Hwi1son Месяц назад

    The good ole days!! Gaming was the thing of dreams. Excitement and wonder abound. It was like the wild west. (I miss it sometimes)

  • @ej86
    @ej86 2 месяца назад

    I was big into import gaming back in the 90's me and my brother collected from SNES, Sega Saturn, PSone, Dreamcast. I still collect imports today like on switch and ps4.

  • @selbyjohnson5986
    @selbyjohnson5986 2 месяца назад

    Batman for the Mega Drive was the first one I got through the mail from one of those game magazine importer companies.

  • @DarDarBinks1986
    @DarDarBinks1986 2 месяца назад

    I never bought games from import shops even though I was aware of them as a kid in the '90s. All the video game magazines I read back then had those ads for import game stores. The games Japan had that we didn't at the time looked so amazing from the screenshots in the ads. I often wondered why we didn't get, say, the old Dragon Ball Z games in the U.S. when they were new. It was sometime in the late '90s that I first read about mod chips that made consoles region-free.

  • @blazingsoulhunter2862
    @blazingsoulhunter2862 2 месяца назад

    Me and my bro started our importing journey around late 2017 at a site called Play-Asia and we like to go there from time to time just like with Right Stuf, which is now a Crunchyroll store. We own a lot of imported games in our game collection from Nintendo, Sega and of course, Playstation with a dash of Microsoft Xbox too.

  • @C3phoe
    @C3phoe 2 месяца назад +7

    Sega lord X has the best gaming origin story on youtube.

  • @paulcampbell8696
    @paulcampbell8696 2 месяца назад +1

    Dude, never stop making these kinds of videos where you tell your stories. I just stare at my TV and nod. I especially appreciate when you talk about your "hard working mother". I had similar experiences.
    Also, is it weird that I NEVER knew there was a gray Saturn until your channel? Am I missing something? Was it a time zone thing?

  • @NEONTRASHPRODUCTIONS
    @NEONTRASHPRODUCTIONS 2 месяца назад

    As an 80’s baby I can’t begin to express how important the year 1989 was for me! Sooooo many prolific video games and movies were dropped that year. It was truly an amazing “swan song” for one of the most notorious decades!

  • @HJRIV
    @HJRIV 2 месяца назад

    My first ever import was The King of Fighters 96 for the Saturn. Then 97 and I moved on to X-Men vs Street Fighter...oh man...how awesome it was to play that at home! I also imported the Dreamcast before the NTSC-U release...I was a hardcore Sega fan 😅

  • @fatherofnothing
    @fatherofnothing 2 месяца назад

    Great video SL! I loved seeing an advertisement from the Game Dude store. I use to drool over all the great titles that they showed. I was a hard-core arcade kid in love with Neo Geo. All the home ports of Neo games were simply not good enough for me. I needed to have that great experience that kept me coming back to the arcade. My first paycheck from my first job was spent at Game Dude to purchase my very own Neo Geo AES and l cherish and play it to this day. Thanks for sharing your adventure. Those were magic times back then.

  • @SEGAGuys
    @SEGAGuys 2 месяца назад

    Brilliant stuff, Mel … some great memories and stories here.

  • @ricardorodriguez-mi2zv
    @ricardorodriguez-mi2zv 2 месяца назад +2

    I am in my mid 40's and I must say the 90's were The Years....

  • @miguelodeon4978
    @miguelodeon4978 2 месяца назад

    Nice story, brings me joy. I'm glad that you got to experience all of this and become who you are today, as well as me being able to hear you and watch your videos. I have been following you for a long time, and I can say you are one of the few channels I care about. Thanks to you and your way of showing us your love for the hobbie, you make me do so as well everyday. Keep up your work and I wish you the best.

  • @J45yu456
    @J45yu456 2 месяца назад

    Love your videos and nostalgia trips! A+ quality content

  • @BurritoKingdom
    @BurritoKingdom 2 месяца назад

    The back of Die Hard Game Fan magazine. There was also an import game shop in the city near me. Super Famicom games for $150 to $200.

  • @darktetsuya
    @darktetsuya 2 месяца назад +1

    great video! I was definitely envious of folks who could import all of that stuff back in the day. in more recent years I was finally able to import a saturn of my own, plus the pseudo saturn kai cart because the mrs. had a couple US titles she wanted to play without really worrying about the language barrier. I'm really loving the scene now because aside from a handful of higher end titles I haven't had to drop a ton of money to get some of these titles off of ebay.

  • @mikebenke123
    @mikebenke123 2 месяца назад

    Awesome vid! I recognize a bunch of those same ads and had imported some things as well. Great trip down memory lane 👍

  • @goranisacson2502
    @goranisacson2502 2 месяца назад

    There was a video game store in Stockholm some 15 minutes away by train where I lived, the mythical TV-spelsbörsen (the videogame market in english) where imported games and traded games existed, a world apart from the regular games found in regular toy and tech stores. But alas- my parents weren't about to pay for that. We DID get to borrow an adapter to play US games and that is how I experienced FF6, but when that loan finished so did my adventures in non-PAL market games.

  • @denniscocks864
    @denniscocks864 2 месяца назад +2

    In 1989 I remember getting a PC engine imported from a shop along Tottenham Court Road, London. The following year they were doing Gameboys.

  • @smlhrrs
    @smlhrrs 2 месяца назад

    Great video. I grew up in Central VA as well (Louisa) and although I'm a few years older than you, I can totally relate to your experience. My first import game was Batman on the MD/Genesis followed up by Wrestle War. Like you, most of my imports were for the same Sega systems, although I dabbled in import PSX games as well (primarily from Japan Video Games which I found through EGM). Babbage's in the Fredericksburg mall was one my frequent go to spots for US games & hardware. Fun times indeed!

  • @AntpoteatX
    @AntpoteatX 2 месяца назад

    Great Sega video keep it coming. I enjoy the content. I was too young to import games at that time, but I knew about the scene and it’s great to have someone who actually was involved in the scene and make a video about it. Great work.

  • @NegativeGamer418
    @NegativeGamer418 2 месяца назад +1

    Dude I'm literally in the middle of buying some games and consoles from Japan and all of a sudden your video shows up lol

  • @jrod75
    @jrod75 2 месяца назад

    Being the same age I traveled the same kind of path. In Denver, I had a master system in ‘88 and a Genesis in ‘90. I stayed exclusively with the Sega machines up to the Dreamcast. I rebelled against Nintendo since everyone had the NES and I didn’t want to buy anything else like the 3DO, Jaguar and PS1. My Genesis days was filled with video rental stores, they eventually expanded with Gamegear and Sega CD rentals along with the newest Genesis releases. I worked in the electronic section in target so I got to see the new games being sold there and dibs on clearance games. In Vegas, I jumped into the Saturn scene, EB and Best Buy filled the gap while going to the mom and pop shops for trade in games while trying them out there at those stores. When the domestic Saturn games dried up, EB was stocking the Japanese games like DOA, marvel vs street fighter, deep fear and others. The price was the same as a domestic game but had to get the instant replay cartridge to make them work. I enjoyed that era of gaming but also liked the Dreamcast short time. They had the best release on 9.9.99 and those two years was golden. To hear them kill off the Dreamcast was shocking and disappointing. I rolled into the Xbox scene afterwards. It wasn’t the same magic 10 years after getting the Genesis now that I was older. Something about those 16 and 32 bit games was wonderful. Maybe being an adult dulled the magic as your playmates moved on. It was still a time to remember.

  • @Vormund
    @Vormund 2 месяца назад

    Love these personal stories. Keep up the good work.

  • @chopdog6563
    @chopdog6563 2 месяца назад

    My first import experience was one of the mail order shops in the back of DieHard GameFan magazine. I wanted Thunder Force V, so I ordered that and an ST Key. Not long after, for some reason, The local mall game store (Software ECT...it's a Game Stop now), carried a small number saturn import games. I picked up the Dungeons & Dragons Collection & Vampire Savior. I did the swap trick with the ST Key and the 4Meg RAM cart till I got one of the early 4 in 1 Pro Action Replay carts. Over the years I picked up several more import games till I sold off my collection in lieu of a Satiator. My original 1995 Saturn is still mine, and is still working. (I do want to get it recapped in the near future.)

  • @oldskoolpaul77
    @oldskoolpaul77 2 месяца назад

    You have some amazing gaming memories! Top stuff!

  • @williamwright9079
    @williamwright9079 2 месяца назад

    Awesome video! Love your story Sega Lord x!

  • @ItalianDDS
    @ItalianDDS Месяц назад

    Great nostalgia thanks! Game Dude is still around been going there since the early nineties. I was a kid too young to drive had to get a ride from my mom.

  • @buckeyechad1
    @buckeyechad1 2 месяца назад

    I had to file down my cart for Batman in 90 then my MUSHA Aleste 91 to fit my Genesis. Good times. Still have them. Lived in a big city, Columbus, Ohio. Feel lucky, some shops had import games. Fantastic video!

  • @jamesbrassfield8409
    @jamesbrassfield8409 2 месяца назад +2

    I miss the og games

  • @Simpyphus
    @Simpyphus 2 месяца назад

    The imported Saturn games at malls were out of my budget as a kid. But I did get my PS1 hacked, so that gave me access to games from different regions.
    My first actual import was a European copy of Shenmue 2 on Dreamcast when it was released.

  • @xKynOx
    @xKynOx 2 месяца назад +1

    In the UK because JP Megadrive games worked with a tiny case mod they were everywhere and dirt cheap a English game was £30 a JP game was about £5/8

  • @z0m813
    @z0m813 2 месяца назад

    That ad at the 6:39 mark sticks out to me I always remember it the most for some reason I was too young to know what importing was at this time. I would just read the prices on some of these and think man that is an expensive game.

  • @JLAvey
    @JLAvey 2 месяца назад +2

    I modded my SNES way back when I was young just so I could play an imported Star Ocean. Dug those tabs out with some clippers. Funny thing is that the used N64 I bought twenty-five or how ever many years ago was already modded and I didn't even know until I plugged in import Zelda into it a few years ago.

  • @Superdimensional
    @Superdimensional 2 месяца назад +1

    Only games I ever imported was DracX Rondo Of Blood, and it was during the UPS Strike and got delayed 😩😩😩 but it finally came and it was WELL WORTH THE WAIT!!
    I got many more important games, but I got them at a shop near me that sold them, ie I got SF II like a month before the US release on SNES, and I loved about an Hour from Die Hard Gaming store and we had a cool store called “High Tech Only” that not only sold import games, they rented them! You could even rent Neo Geo!

  • @user-fq8ec6fk5w
    @user-fq8ec6fk5w 2 месяца назад

    Great story. It seems like I might about the same age as you. I wasn't a big gamer during the 8-bit days, but started to really love gaming with my Genesis and SNES. I started importing heavily for the Saturn and PS1 which turned into importing for the Dreamcast and PS2. I did import some for the Gamecube, PS3, and even a few region free sh'mups for the XB360. I am fortunate to have kept those games in my collection. I still love to play them, and fondly remember having games months before my friends. National Console Support out of New York was my store of choice. Coming from the middle of Indiana, this was a happy accident I found them to get Vampire Hunter for Saturn as my first purchase. Those days seem to be gone now, but I'll always remember them fondly.

  • @halfling_barista
    @halfling_barista 2 месяца назад

    Thanks for the personal narrative and throwback magazine grabs! I overlap with you being intrigued by mystical names like Supergrafx in these magazine ads. Unlike you, I never did anything with them, so this is very interesting.

  • @michaelmcclintick9541
    @michaelmcclintick9541 2 месяца назад

    Great video...esp on the personal history. Takes me back too for my own personal journey of trying to get Sega Saturn games in the late 90s.

  • @michaelpaoletti8588
    @michaelpaoletti8588 2 месяца назад

    Definitely a golden age for me. Searching the ads in the back of Gamefan was awesome. Im still importing today!

  • @zed-xr4353
    @zed-xr4353 2 месяца назад

    Awesome to hear these recollections. The 90's was just an incredible time in gaming and technology in general.

  • @Gaming_since_the_eighties
    @Gaming_since_the_eighties 2 месяца назад

    Gaming in the 90´s was the best era of gaming.
    I started gaming in 1986, but i´ve never had so great momories or gaming experiences as i had in the 90´s.

  • @ParsnipCelery
    @ParsnipCelery 2 месяца назад

    I found this super interesting and look forward to more videos like this.

  • @TheMinchio
    @TheMinchio 2 месяца назад

    A really nice video! And I can relate to many of the things you say, having lived in the same decade, all the video game news came from magazines, selling old games to buy new ones, exchanging cartridges with friends, hanging out in local stores to check what was new..…. things were so much simpler and slower back in those days, but that was not necessarily a bad thing now I look back in memory😔, Thanks for the video!

  • @farben_
    @farben_ 2 месяца назад +1

    That's what I did, with that gray model too, only way to enjoy games at 60Hz in PAL land.

  • @lazarushernandez5827
    @lazarushernandez5827 2 месяца назад

    Down here in Miami there was an import shop called Die Hard Games iirc (no affiliation with the magazine). This shop had started importing hardware and software in the early 90s. That's where I first saw the Supergrafx, PC-FX, Japanese NEO GEO, as well as the Playstation and Saturn.
    They would let play games in store on a paid timed basis. The import system themselves were about twice the price of their eventual North American counterpart (for those that were released here).
    I would check out the place every now and then on the weekends, but never took the plunge with any hardware or software.
    I eventually imported Xmen vs Streetfighter and Vampire Savior( Darkstalkers 3: Jedah's Damnation), from mail order import place.

  • @Zahir658
    @Zahir658 2 месяца назад

    Man. That was really an interesting import journey that you had.

  • @MaidenHell1977
    @MaidenHell1977 2 месяца назад

    I had a friend who did this in the mid 90s. There was a store in Toronto called Video Connections, pretty legendary during it's time, even Ian from the CU Podcast who lived in Buffalo of the time knew about it would visit was when he was in town, anyhow this place specialized in importing games and systems, it was the place where I first saw the Saturn in action. This friend of mine ordered Rondo of Blood for his TurboDuo at about $200 CAD the time which if you think about was pretty whacky, but holy shit what a game!

  • @Redfoot138
    @Redfoot138 2 месяца назад

    I'm about a year younger than SLX (and also from Central-ish Virginia!) and I was a late-comer to non-Nintendo Power gaming magazines. I bought my first MegaPlay and EGM in late summer 1991. I had no clue what a Mega Drive or PC Engine was and drooled over the hyped up ads in the back of these mags for import shops like Game Express, Die Hard, Game Dude, and Japan Video Games. I never even imagined myself importing games as my parents would never go for it and I couldn't get a job as my schedule was booked with academics and athletics. I finally got a little more hip to the scene in late 1996 and early 1997. An Electronics Boutique employee told me about a place in Northern VA that modded PlayStations. I imported Japanese games from GameCave -- Tobal 2, Dracula X Nocturne in the Moonlight, Metal Slug, Capcom Generations 3 and 4, and Einhander. In 1998 I bought a heavily discounted Saturn and had that modded, or "switched" as they called it, so I could play X-Men Vs Street Fighter, and other Capcom fighting games. Also, in summer of 1998, I visited New York and made a pilgrimage of sorts to Game Express. I bought Policenauts for the PlayStation and a Super 8. Some EB and Babbage's stores started selling import Saturn games and I even picked up Radiant Silvergun 25% off with my employee discount at Babbage's.
    eBay was a game changer for me in 1999 and I bought, what was to me, Holy Grail items like the TurboDuo and Dracula X Rondo of Blood.
    Fun times to be a gamer in the 90s.

  • @RuinerXL
    @RuinerXL 2 месяца назад

    Excellent video! I especially loved seeing the ads from old game mags, which I distinctly remember seeing back in the day. Never did have the funds to take advantage of those services back then, nevertheless it's insanely cool that they existed and enabled gamers in the United States to obtain some of the best new games from Japan.

  • @Killbomb
    @Killbomb 2 месяца назад

    I didn't starting importing until the Playstation 1 but I got most of my imports from an online store called Tronix. There was also a game shop called Die Hard Game Club that sold imports here in the St. Louis area. I got Soul Edge and a few Japanese wrestling games from there.

  • @Scott-un7lc
    @Scott-un7lc 2 месяца назад

    Great video mate , It was very interesting to see how different everyones Experience with imports is so very different to my experience in Aus.

  • @kaikiske7436
    @kaikiske7436 2 месяца назад

    We were importing in the late 80s. There was a camera store in Japantown SF that had numerous PC Engine and Famicom games, and MegaDrive a bit after that.
    By the time the MD (and SFC) took off, many little import game shops opened up.
    Bought many many imports at these places.

  • @wesleystewart2709
    @wesleystewart2709 2 месяца назад

    Great video! Thank you for the memories! I remember importing Batman and Dahna for the Sega Genesis as my introduction to Japanese games. I was heavily into importing games up until the PS2 and Gamecube era. Die Hard gaming magazine was a great source for importing, as they dedicated several pages to Japanese games. Fun times and great games!

  • @brandonfarfan1978
    @brandonfarfan1978 Месяц назад

    This was quite an interesting vid. It was nice to hear your experience with imported games. Down here in the tropics, X-men vs. SF was like the hottest import game, from 1996 to 1998. Everyone wanted that game on their sega saturn.👍😄

  • @davidbenzakai8615
    @davidbenzakai8615 2 месяца назад +2

    Thanks!

  • @TheVigLebowski
    @TheVigLebowski 2 месяца назад +1

    Never got a chance to do that but always dreamed of getting them. So many amazing titles locked overseas sadly at the time. Thank God for the end of region locking consoles and titles.

  • @HansBoopie
    @HansBoopie 2 месяца назад

    Great topic for a video, thanks!