@@digitaldiablo1653 that’s why I like single player games…That’s not the real reason; I don’t have reliable internet, I prefer story driven adventures, and I hate people. But it’s nice not having to worry about online play (Blizzard…)
Yup, Both Breath of the Wild and Tears of the Kingdom I beat the dungeons and never bothered with finishing the game. Just got boring 8 hours in. Classic games are the best
@@chiquita683 botw and totk aren’t my favorite in the franchise. Open world games tend to be pretty bloated, the stripped down story and lack of dungeons was disappointing, and weapon durability and cooking system can eat my ass. But I did have some fun playing them. The exploration was cool, puzzles were neat, and I appreciate the experimentation with the gameplay. Strapping a korok to the front of a rocket cart and sending it cartwheeling over a boulder was satisfying.
Nintendo still makes quality games that are very well polished and complete at launch, and they continue to innovate on gameplay. Also VR gaming is getting a lot more innovation, both hardware and software. Many VR games have fresh and novel gameplay mechanics that are only possible in VR, like The Last Clockwinder, or Eye of the Temple.
I miss when games had a clear beginning and end. You replayed the game if you wanted to, not because the game lured you into it. Now games are designed to be neverending, eternal grindfests. They're designed to prey upon your ego, to be addictive, to make you feel bad if you quit.
@@paulgilbert5278 oh yeah OG for sure, but I'm talking the mediocrity that came out this last year. Disappointing how that game turned out compared to the 2018 game.
From 1997 to 2007 Video Games went from PS1 240p to HD 720P PS3, compare that with the last 10 years and it feels like we've made no progress at all. The jump from PS1 > PS2 > PS3 is monumental. The Jump from PS3 > PS4 > PS5 feels like a minor upgrade at best.
@விஷ்ணு_கார்த்திக் you must be joking. Tell me silent hill 2 remake or horizon fw ps5 or ratchet and clank rift apart or returnal look barely better than a ps3 game
games then and now: 1. cheat codes are replaced with microtransaction. 2. rewards and bonuses are replaced with achievements. 3. local co-op/split screen are replaced with online mode, which means you'll need two consoles, two TVs, two same game and two online pass to play with family. 4. 8mb of ps2 memory card was enough for saving, now you''ll need 1tb to at least install few games
True which is sad. Earlier this yr i was playing a ps1 game on my working ps2 and was looking through my memory cards and seeing my 16mb ps2 memory card and laughed as I thought about the fact I made a backup save of my save data on my ps5, the day before, that was 16gb : /
Each port of the same game had exclusive DLCs, like Soul Caliber in Gen 6. I thought that was cool. Also back during Gen 4 the games played slightly differently and the soundtracks were different too.
@@BeingADik_Jacob Soundtracks fell off when they could use whole tracks instead of relying on chips that only played sounds of a limited bit rate. Some composers, like Hiroki Kikuta on Secret of Mana, even engineered their own sound banks to make sure each instrument sounded the way they intended for it to be heard when generated by the console. Now people just arrange, mix, and export... Not saying that's bad. Having higher quality audio is great. But back in the day any 2 composers would have a unique sound even if they used audio from the _exact_ same synthesizer to generate them. We've lost those technological limitations that forced people to think up unique solutions. Now, those problems just don't exist. It's got upsides and downsides. It's easier to compose and program audio, but overall it stopped being what we recognize as "video game music" and started being just "music."
Just remember, it's not your job to enjoy games. It's the game's job to entertain YOU. If the game has only kept you engaged halfway, that's the game's fault for boring you, not the other way around. Saying no to certain games means saying yes to utilizing your time for better things.
incorrect, the function of the game is not to entertain you, it is also to have your own predisposition before playing a game, watching a movie or reading a book. I'm not saying there aren't bad entertainment products, there are many. But there are a lot of good jobs that you are not enjoying simply because you don't do a little bit of your part to do it, if you are tired, depressed or if you are a guy who doesn't pay attention to anything he is witnessing it is your fault. If you really are your maximum emotional and mental capacity when consuming an entertainment product and then realized that you didn't enjoy it, it's probably because the product is really bad or it's just not for you.
@@Dagon218 I agree. I am the biggest offender when it comes to losing interest when the pay-off was probably worth it. It isn't the game's fault if you lose interest, maybe the game just wasn't made for you.
I feel you. It gets boring having to pick up 200 branches, 100pieces of cloth and 50 beast tooth's to upgrade a sword. Why not give me natural progression? You finish a mission and can select an upgrade of your choice or the boss you kill drops a new weapon. Also the traveling. I want a 45 minutes gaming session after work. First 10 minutes to climbing a mountain to reach a minor upgrade to my health bar. Then 5 minutes going to the nearby marker on the map to get an accessory I will never use. Then 5 minutes traveling to the sidequest. I play the sidequest for 20 minutes and the last 5 minutes I fast travel to town to sell all useless scraps and bits you pickup. My gaming is done for the evening without any progression in the story or feeling of accomplishment.
Modern games lack density. Everything fell apart when people started judging games by how long they take to beat to feel they got their money’s worth. AAA is now bloated with huge worlds and cutscenes, they just take the content of older games and stretch it to be 10 times longer. You can easily make a very fun game without many years of development or budgets in the hundreds of millions. You just need devs with talent that know how to not waste the player’s time with boredom. There’s a reason why indie games fill the void left by AAA. Less is more in this case.
Basically, I came to play games to have fun and escape the stresses of life and work, not to go back into after I just finished a weeks worth of shifts!
Exactly. I don’t mind upgrading weapons and armor by collecting items, I actually kinda like it, but i hate it when they make you collect a million items for a tiny upgrade and they make it do hard to get them, especially with rare items.
I whould rather replay a 1 hour game thousands of times than play a 20 hour game once and never touch it again. I miss when games actually cared about the gameplay and fun mechanics, now every modern game is always the same open world action game with one gazillion dollars in budget, I preferred when games cared about being fun.
ik what you mean, i feel everygame that comes out is hyped but they are basically the same, they either a soul like game or a story based game with hyper realistic graphics, i just wish there where more wacky and fun videogames, that's why i like nintendo because they always try new ideas and make gameplay super fun
@@slowdust9541Exactly. Everyone talking about this being the worst generation of consoles is primarily playing PS5 or X Box Series. The Switch has been an absolute godsend as Nintendo has managed to deliver one fantastic game after another. Tengo Project's reimaginings of some of Natsume's best games from the 16 and 8-bit eras have been fantastic as well.
I agree. All of these clueless consumers claiming they want longer games "to get their money's worth" are fools! I used to be able to play through 3 to 5 games from the 8 and 16-bit era between breakfast and lunch on a Saturday morning. Even if I had already played through them hundreds of times already that was still a lot of variety. I always felt a sense of accomplishment too, as underneath their surface level simplicity was a lot of technical skill that you could always improve on. Too many of today's games are just filled with repetitive padding.
What I miss about older games is the fact that majority of the games back then felt like completed experience for $40-$50, but now for $70 you only get a 3rd of what the game has to offer and the rest are essentially lock via multiple season passes that are around $30-$40 for each… it just makes me sad and a bit angry to see that.
@@sov3cd a lot of the times it feels like you’re spending money on a buggy demo rather than a complete experience that feels polished and high quality.
On top of that, in most games the DLC content you buy it doesn't really seems that different from what was already on base game. So it gets really repetitive really fast.
The biggest problem with anything trying to "go for realism" is it limits the imagination. Back in the 80s and 90s, we had loads of colorful, mascot style characters. Many of them weren't human, and even the ones that were had unique silhouettes and colorful designs. Characters would be able to jump tens of feet in the air. Enemies and bosses could defeat you as quickly as you defeated them. You usually had to learn and master earlier parts of the game thanks to limited checkpoints and lives running out (a good and bad thing about retro gaming). Nowadays you have mostly human protagonists (usually middled aged men or androgynous teenage boys), you jump a "realistic" height (if at all), boss fights usually take over ten minutes (sometimes with no checkpoints if you lose most of the way through), and checkpoints are everywhere with no limits (this varies and isn't necessarily a bad thing). Music has gone from being melodic and memorable to atmospheric and kind of bland. Weapons and methods of attack are often "period-accurate" rather than imaginative or unique (guns, swords, knives Vs. Mega busters, whips, boomerangs). Main point being, realism kills imagination.
I agree with you up to a point, because games like Doom, Splinter Cell, Half-Life, the first Assassins Creed, Ultima, etc all had a realistic approach and attempted a realistic take on graphics as much as it was possible at the time. And they were still amazing.
@@Daniel__Nobre I'm not saying you can't have amazing games steeped in realism. But imagine the possibilities some of those games could have had with more creative approaches. Or more memorable music. Or if some of them didn't feature a human protagonist, or realistic physics (tbf Assassin't Creed's tower dive is very unrealistic), or if they used a large variety of vivid colors and varied environments. Like they were amazing, I agree. But we get so many realistic games these days they feel very same-y.
@@GoeTeeks I completely agree with that part yes. I grew up with 16bit Sonic and Super Mario and Earthworm Jim, Comix Zone, etc so for a long time the idea of reaching realistic graphics was a dream. But I agree the pendulum has tipped way too much into that side now and we lost a lot of innovation and great art direction and indeed crazy design explorations. Given today’s technology it would be great to bring that boldness of the 90s and apply it to what could be achieved now. Indie does it a bit, but it still feels mostly very safe and as such so far away from the diversity of types of ground breaking games we saw in the 90s. And that includes, like you say, crazy weapons concepts, colourful mascots with an attitude, gameplay involving interesting powers.. treating videogames again like fun toys and sandboxes..
Nah the late 80's/90's were the golden yrs of gaming. Then again I guess whatever decade you were a kid old enough to start gaming in would be the golden yrs to you.
@@amyhoard1222the thing is the early 2000s still had that old school feel because the people who made them came from that era BUT now it’s people who don’t even like video games making them
@@amyhoard1222 It's more about 2D vs 3D preference. The SNES vs the Gensis era was the peak of the 2D era while the early 2000s with the PS2, GC and Xbox were the peak of the 3D era. Every poll I find online, these 2 generations are always at the top because they represent the best their era had to offer. Early 2D and early 3D were kind of janky and very limited because of hardware and late 3D has become the slop we all know.
@@Izelor can’t argue with that even tho there was alot of good games that came out in 2011-2013 but after that things starting going downhill it was right after the success of call of duty all these causals came in just to ruin our hobby by buying every DLC/gun skin call of duty came out with
I agree. I loved, even now, the PS 1 and PS 2. The best game moments of my life. I have only a few modern games that give me any real joy. Many modern games feel exploitative, using manipulation to get you to play and raise the engagement time instead of being fun.
entering your credit card cheat code...💀 one of the best comments i ever saw on steam was someone commenting on valve's doomed card game (artifact)...'most overpowered card is credit card'
I remember those days the Xbox 360 and PS3 those were good days of gaming so is the original Xbox and the PS2 I just wish they made more games like that. Well, at least we got indie games because that’s the closest thing that feels like retro gaming nowadays.
Retro games are not dead there just indie now A lot of new games coming out are just remasters, remakes or HD collections. Old games never died and based on what I heard and seen from having an arcade walking distance from me. Kids play their Fortnite and other free to play games but a lot are going back to 90s games
You're dead on. Remember games like shovel knight feeling like an nes game. Now we have games like crow country that feel like ps1 games. It won't be too long and we'll have indie games that feel more like the AAA 6th generation. I'm already seeing games like night runners looking like a black box need for speed underground game. Blows my mind!
@@sumnahlennon5449 Because there is no advertising for them back in the day there wasn't either but they were on the shelf of a game store while you were looking and at least back then they matched triple a games in visuals. Indie games now are hidden away and obviously don't match triple a games in visuals anymore. So I take it a lot of people don't want a $500 console to play a 10 dollar game that has PS1 graphics you want to make the most of your purchase but the industry is in a really weird place where nothing is really lining up anymore and its fact that indie games as fun as some of them are will never carry a generation.
@@Tenacityfromtheglass gonna throw in Lunacid as a honerable mention! That game is basically like Is kings field or shadow tower abyss if was made last year.
I remember reading the manual for Icewind Dale 2 on the way home from the mall with my grandma. And she looked at me and asked "what are you doing?" And I told her that I was learning the rules and the specifics of the game I just bought. And this thing was like a 200 page manuscript. Complete list of spells and descriptions for everything. Everything. And my grandma, being a little ahead of her time, told me she was proud of me. Because she never even learned a game like chess enough to learn the rules like that. Let alone an entire book. She didn't judge me for something that wasn't real or tangible, but I found enjoyment in anyway. It was an awesome time to be a kid.
I miss the old days when you could just pop in a disc and play the full game. Now you got company’s like Activision making games like like modern warfare 1-3 which feels like dlcs for skins for warzone
Things I missed 1. This is the big one. The manual and artwork that used to come with a lot of games including the box art. It gave it so much charm and made me happy to be a collector. Nowadays you just have a generic case with nothing included. Just feels absolutely soul-less. *2. When retro game shopping used to be affordable. Thanks to scalpers and flippers, the market for older games has increased dramatically and just taken all the fun out of collecting. It used to be before 2010 where you could collect really amazing games without hurting your pocket.* 3. When game companies actually cared about their consumers and would do more tie in deals and promotions for their line up. Nowadays you don’t really hear much about a new game dropping, even the more mainstream ones and when they do they just have fixed prices with nothing really included. No incentive. *4. No DLC bullshit that most games used to have. The DLC itself a bad thing, but when it’s attached with an exuberant price tag almost as much as the original game, it boils my blood.* 5. Many sellers and companies taking advantage of the FOMO mentality to make consumers buy their games. Nintendo doing this for the Super Mario All-Stars Release was just dirty *6. Speaking of All Stars, just companies being lazy and uninspired and just releasing HD remakes of their older games with little to no changes for the price of a new game. Donkey Kong Tropical Freeze was notorious for this. $50-60 of the same older 3DS game that cost $20 nowadays.* 7. This is more of a bone I have with PlayStation and Xbox with how they release their games. Instead of just releasing A1 games with other barebone games in between, throw in some love for your lesser known properties in between your A1 releases. *8. GameStop in general. In the early 2000s, I used to love going in and seeing the walls of colorful games and other cool merchandise that decorated the stores. Most gamestops I see now have a generic set up display and sell more crappy merch, funko pops and unnecessary game assessories than actual games*
Most of what you said in your video is what I've been writing about online for like the last decade, and when you share your thoughts like you did on this video, the newer generations don't really understand you, and in the live service games that I used to play, they would often call me a grandpa or make fun of me just because I talked about the issue, but modern gaming which is mostly live service, is just an endless grind that you don't really own, because all the money and time you invest in those games, can be taken away from you any moment that the publishers running the servers want to, or even worse yet if the MMOs you used to play don't go down, they just change so much that they are beyond recognition, and at that point even if the games are still alive, you just don't feel like playing them, because the things that hooked you in or that you enjoyed, were either nerfed or removed because the game decided to go in a different direction, or for the games that used to be subscription based, when they eventually became "Free to play" they were just not worth it anymore, because to pretty much do anything you needed to take out your wallet and spend hundreds instead of the $10-20 you used to pay monthly, and for those reasons and more is that I turned my back on live service stuff, because I want to have fun not have to be enslaved to a stupid game I don't enjoy anymore just so that I stay "relevant". I also strongly agree that developers need to put a pause on the whole Open World game concept, because nowadays every game wants to do it and because of so many assets and crap those games nowadays end up being 100+GB, and sure while you can say that just because those games can give you 100+ hours of playing to collect and do everything, not everyone is a completionist nor do they enjoy having to do that, so for most people when they get bored or want to try something else, it becomes really difficult to get back into the groove they had with the game, which is like you said in order to not be lost with the progress or story, most people start over and then get stuck again on the same points, and that's actually what used to happen in a ton of older RPGs too, because they were designed to make you grind and stuff to lengthen the game times, but I'm the type of person that just enjoys platformers or action games, so I much rather play a game that I can beat between 2-4 hours, but has a lot of replayability rather than spend 20+ hours in a game that I will never touch again. I recently got my hands on an Ayaneo FLIP DS and I'm totally loving this system, because since it has two screens I can pretty much emulate any console even those that have two screens like the DS or 3DS, and since its portable I can take my entire library of games with me to wherever I go.
We really need a "renaissance" in gaming. But, before that we will have to watch the slow death of the gaming industry. Bloated and corrupted by out of touch executives and political saboteurs! Great video, man! ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
SSX 3, Wild Arms, Persona, Magna Carta and Mega Man Legends. God do I miss the styles of games back them. Feature complete, fun, built in collectables, rewards for exploration, and most of all, they didn't make me feel... compelled to play them. I completed them because I had fun, not because they tricked me with manipulative gameplay loops, designed to keep you playing long after you stopped having fun.
@mikerainbow11 I really need to try the persona series someday. I just beat chrono trigger for the first time this year for the ds. Used to play tons of ssx tricky. I loved it when companies weren't so risk-averse with their franchises. Do you remember megaman x command mission?
@@Tenacityfromtheglass Yeah! That game was amazing! I never knew I needed a true Megaman RPG until I played that. Same with Super Mario RPG, just a great twist that payed out so freaking well. I agree, when the stakes were lower, companies could take risks, but with 10s, even 100s of millions on the line, they fall into patterns, manipulation and other predatory processes to get their money back.
When I was a kid I used to activate the invisiblity, all weaps, and infinite ammo cheats for GoldenEye 007 for the N64 and roleplay as the Terminator. I'd put that Deep Purple song Hush on repeat - it was the closest I had to Bad To The Bone, as played in Terminator 2. Thanks for reminding me of this time!
Props to you showing MGRR during the vid. There were so many titles that I missed when I was younger and because of my budget I’m happy to play an older game over a newer one. The fact that game preservation isn’t as important as music and film is a disgrace to the gaming industry.
I think older games represent a time when we owned our physical media, and companies don't like that. They're so afraid of you buying a used copy of a game that they would go as far as destroying the very concept of ownership. I believe all of this is by design. Even look at the download sizes for these games, sometimes taking up a 3rd of your storage. Is it because they're poorly optimized, or is it because they want it to be the only game you play? What a coincidence that the only game you have storage space for is full of microtransactions. Art is sacred! AA, AAA, AAAA, nomatter how many A's they toss at a pile of trash, it won't turn it into a meaningful gameplay experience unless they respect the art.
5 things i miss about older games 1. attractive female characters 2. everything didn't have to be political 3. no micro transactions 4. Cheats were awesome 5. Games were complete at launch.
One thing I miss in games is that old arcade level design going from level to level engaging in the games difficult and in depth combat systems with a scoring system that kept you playing these games over and over and over again. Another Thing I missed was the difficulty in older games such as Ninja Gaiden, God Hand on Lvl Die, DoDonPachi,Devil May Cry on DMD,Final Fight,Street Fighter,King of Fighters,F Zero GX,Gungrave. And having to actually GET GOOD and practice the game rather than playing it once and already being a master at the game. And another thing I miss about old arcade games is the Linear level design and the level to level system rather than than going around and doing tedious tasks not engaging in the games combat long walking sections of nothingness,and lazy minigames that hurt the games longevity. The level to level system was instant and got you straight into the games combat immediately without wasting any time and in depth scoring systems is just something that needs to come back.
Retro died with the N64, but there were still awesome games to play on the PS2, XBOX and Gamecube. Halo: CE will always be my favorite game of all time, all with REAL people in one room. I have every console released in the US, and I have over 14,000 games, but to me, the 360 and PS3 were the beginning of the end. Games went from being played together in the same room to being played by yourself in your own home, with your friend(s) being in their own homes as well. There is something to be said with 16 people all playing at the same time with Halo, all in the same place and since that time, I haven't felt the same about gaming.
I just started my emulator journey yesterday at 36yo, and found my joy in games again. Grew up in the 90s playing snes, 64, gb and my friends ps1, eventually was gifted a ps2 in 2001 from my cousins, and only moved to a xb360 a decade later. Ever since, i never played games again because imo the market went crazy with the prices and "unfinished" releases and countless microtransactions. Last year the oled switch got my attention and i thought to myself "maybe this device will take me back to the 90s". And boy it did. Playing Zelda, Pokemon and all the retro stuff from the online exclusives made me realize that i do still like gaming, just not modern ones. So just like you (because of Russ) i started my emulator journey only 2 days ago from posting this comment with a ps2 emulator and its as good as i remember. Now i remember why i would always say "ps2 is the best console ever made, and nothing will ever match it". Put it simple: it perfectly bridged the gap between old school quirky looking and ultra modern realistic. Meaning it was way ahead of the 90s stuff, but not too "serious" like new stuff. You still had cheats, no microtransactions, the games werent only great but they were also properly made with non or just very minor glitches, and not only could you take your games to a friends house, but you could take your save files too, only today we realize just how brilliant that was! Im playing ps2 on my pc now (even though i still have my original ps2) and im in love again. Good times...
I agree buddy, I miss older games as well, these days I’m mostly playing Xbox 360 and Xbox One games on my Xbox Series X, apart from games like Lego Star Wars the Skywalker saga, even though these games have paid dlc. 👍🏻
That segment about having to manage your hard drive space for games really hit home with me. Like getting a new game and finding out you have to delete one or two of your old ones to make room for it. Or even better a game requires an update that the space takes enough to where you have to delete a game for that as well.
that is what i love about games, you can be leon kennedy isacc clark link batman spiderman samus 2d or 3d or any good action or turn based rpg character and have fun while "saving the world"
I have gone the same route as you. I rarely ever play anything new. The newest game i played recently was the Dead Space Remake. But even that is just a remake and i played it because the original Dead Space is one of my favorite games. Other than that i have been playing old games for years now and recently got into buying retro consoles. I bought a PS Vita last week and im honestly in love with it.
I took a ten or fifteen year break from gaming and since coming back the only 2 games that genuinely impressed me were red dead redemption 2, and metal gear solid 5. There's a few others if like to try but my GPU died and it'll be awhile before I can afford a new system.
It's definitely the simplicity, hop in hop out, local co-op, complete on launch, no micro transactions, and time to beat that I miss the most. Most games are overly complex with mechanics or controls (which I do truly love). You have to invest extensive amounts of time to enjoy or make any noticable progress, which when limited on game time defeats any purpose to play other than to inch along the story. Most games only allow online co op with limited local if any. Games either launch incomplete, in total shambles, or have necessary content locked behind DLC. And to top it all off most games now a days are so massive they take 30+ hours just to get through, and that's not including side quests and over all exploration. It's funny because all of these things (aside from micro transactions) are either things that wouldn't bother me or I would have wanted, complex gameplay, longer story and time to enjoy the game plus more to do. Having so many games to choose and play at my finger tips also adds to the struggle of enjoying games, which is why I often revert back to old favorites or shorter games I can hop in and out of without fear of having to catch up on story i forgot or just can't mentally grasp at the time. The Steam Deck has been amazing for this.
i miss those old graphics, i miss when games actually felt like games, i miss replaying a game over and over and never getting sick of it because of how good it was and i miss when you bought a game and knew it was completed nowadays a game comes out with hella bugs and shi
This is a great video. I don’t ever comment on videos, but this one hit home. I exactly agree with you. And putting value on older games, you realize that just because it’s new doesn’t mean it’s more fun. Plus every game that I never got a chance to play back in the day is still new to me!
I have kids now. I'm 32, just set up a retro play room in our basement for the kids as a hangout spot as they're getting older too. My boy discovered the OG Legend of Zelda on NES and it was like watching him transform into a younger kid from the golden years. He was asking and engaging with where items are located in the game world. You don't get that with Madden and I told him that. He appreciates it too, I can see it. were running through Halo and Ratchet and Clank simultaneously now.
Im playing Final Fantasy 7 and 15 both for first time at same time. Its night and day. Ff7 pacing is so quick and its hard hitting with the emotions. I never get a chance to breathe. Feels like so much is happening in such a short period of time, an emotional roller coaster. Meanwhile in ff15 i am feeling literally nothing. It has a huge open world full of sidequests and im spending majority of the time waiting for the car to arrive at the next destination. So much to do yet feels very unfufilling. We are just a bunch of bros driving around on a roadtrip while our war is tearing our country apart but everything is happening offscreem there is zero emotional impsct!
@@magicjohnson3121 im jumping between games but just started nier replicant and first hour of thr game im just doing these dumb mmo style fetchquests omg.
@I_Am_The_Social_Reject yes ffxv they ask you fo fish to feed starving kitten. Get repair kit to fix some guy broken car. Hunting monsters. Cid wants you to find stuff to upgrade your weapons. Theres some guy who also needs errands done. I just started ignoring it all and focus on the main story.
And this is why I'm a huge fan of decompilation / recompilation and sincerely hope it expands beyond the N64 -- it allows fans to get truly creative, far more than is possible with emulation, in adding features and content through mods.
My passion for games died right after the PS4 came out as I didnt like anything but Call of Duty anymore and I didnt even like that ever again as soon as the PS4 came out. Going to retro games on the Switch and Steam have I been able to make a return in a massive way and love gaming now more than I ever have at any point in my life and I just play old games.
Bro you've described my exact feelings on gaming . I was born 94 so i got the tail end of the golden era for gaming growing up from gta 2-5, nba live 00- 10, nba 2k1- 2k13 , tony hawk pro skater series, zelda, halo, crackdown, saints row 1-3, prototype series, sly, spyro, ratchet and clank, mario kart, need 4 speed, midnight club series , prince of persia, street fighter soul caliber , tekken series , mortal kombat ssx tricky, atv vs motorcros, Skate series spiderman 2 , web of shawdows and ultimate spiderman, early batman games like vengeance etc etc all of those are far better than any games that came out in the last 5 years. I miss playing the game to get better without feeling like im being cheated by the game to force me to pay so i can have fun and compete. I miss games being released in their complete form ready to play out the box.
I love nearly every game you just mentioned. Especially sports games back in the day. They were so cool! I'm currently playing a game called Helskate that you might like. It's a mix between Tony Hawks pro skater and devil may cry. I never knew I needed a hack and slash pro skater game 😂
I grew up with the NES/SNES/Genesis/N64 and quit playing gaming for a long time. When I came back, I just wanted my old games, so I went and found them. Overtime, I discovered gamecube, really liked it. Collected it too. I discovered similar games to my retro games, like Cuphead. I have a Switch and it's mostly retro games, like Contra Anniversary Collection, Smash Bros and I order retro inspired games like Iron Meat and Rugrats. I've never had an Xbox, or any free to play type of game. I've never played the new Spiderman, none of it. I don't really feel a need to. I just enjoy the games I've always enjoyed. I think I'm just a Nintendo person, and they're still how they've always been. At least the games I play. I've never really played anything online though, so I have no idea what's going on with that.
"I prefer indie games, because they are made by people who actually play and like games", yeah modern games are too hard to make and too time consuming to play. It's like this lost art of game making: "enjoying the process".
42 year old gamer here. I just went retro, I like getting those old consoles I never played and try the best games on them; if you go retro and just play the top 10 best games on each console, you have easy 100 games to play, all of them great. Also, a modern game might ask you to put 2000 hours of mind numbing action, but an old game is just around 10 hours, 50 if you go RPG or early 3D, so you can spend those 2000 hours in a huge variety of genres. So that, get a CRT (or a retrotink), some old consoles, a handful of Everdrives and go nuts. Right now I´m playing a Super Metroid Hack on my SNES called Ascend and it´s awesome, a completely new game made by a crazy talented fan.
When you talked about buying new games, but for whatever reason not finishing them, and going back to older games, I felt that. That's so relatable to me. You articulated exactly why I don't care about modern gaming anymore. For me, as modern as I'll go is the Switch, but I have more fun modding older consoles, and giving them quality of life improvements, and getting lost in playing older games. Modern gaming is dying on the vine in real time, and it makes me appreciate what came before even more.
Ah the krypt in deadly alliance and the costumes in spiderman hit me right in the nostalgia, those were perfect examples of how much more passion went into games back then. Thanks for sharing, it really was nice to hear someone else having the same thoughts❤
I have lived through the golden age of video/arcade gaming (from 1977 to present) and would not trade my early memories for anything. I too, am a curent gamer with my Xbox Series X, PS5, Switch, and PC games. However, there are many times when I will go back to my beloved NES and pop in Super Mario Brothers 3 and feel like a kid again. Thank you, Devin!!!
Miss the old days when we lived our life for real… the games back then were everything but money. It was all about having fun, about friends getting together… it was about the boxes, manuals… maps… putting the puzzle together… oh man… glad to have experienced the 80s and 90s…
I'm 41 and in my opinion there is or are at least 1 or more good games every year and one, in my opinion, is better than none. Even if we could go back in time to 2003 or whatever year, we would still have a handful games and have to wait for the rest, no difference now
I miss the era of when you played a game, finished it and couldn't wait to go back and play it again because it was the only game you had. Scarcity meant the game was appreciated more.
I grew up in the 80's and 90's were games were not kind, they could be frustrating and challenging but you kept coming back. These days I find games hold your hand way too much, it's why I actually got into Project Zomboid, the intro barely explains enough of the game to survive one day and there is no real end to the game until you die but that's kind of why I love it. There is no missions you can tick off to give you purpose and help you, you have to figure things out for yourself and set your own goals and discover your own limitations
Same here, been beating the absolute hell out of L4D2 and the DLC for weeks now. Still play FarCry5, still play Diablo3, still play The Legend Of Dragoon, still play Phantasy Star 4. The only newer game I play now and again is Armored Core 6. Other than that it's Far Cry 5. Nothing new appeals.
Same happens to me, have a monster pc, that can run anything on ultra, installed all the new games, tested them than a month latter just forgot what and were i was. Guess what, old games are better, they are simple, easy to understand, easy to load.
This is what I feel in this past 5 years. The more I play newest modern games, the more I feel exhaust and get bore easily. I find playing retro games, even from games or system that I never played its soo much fun than play newest games (like how I enjoy PC Engine game although I never see and touch the console directly).
I think the game as a service ruined gaming because it made developers think of ways to make a quick buck instead of making games fun like in banjo kazooie i remember searching for those cheato books and bottle codes and having a blast trying them out. Nowadays its whats the newest skin for the get rich scheme
That first 1:25 is so relatable there are very few games I like that I actually don’t need to be forced to play I actually had to stop playing rdr2 because I didn’t want it to end, but with a lot of games I do the same shit that he said and rinse repeat and then go spend 60 plus hrs on a game I’ve had for ages.
I bought my V2 Switch in 2019 and it made me a Gamer again! Without the Switch I would have gave up on gaming altogether long time ago. I don't use my PS4 anymore it's just my Resident Evil machine. I also found Retro Game Corps and bought my RG35XX-H and now I can play any GBA and PS1 game on that little pocketable device. Right now I play Golden Sun, Colin McRae Rally 2.0 and Street Fighter Alpha 3 on it. As a husband I don't have the time to play many hours on my TV but I have always a few minutes for 1 or 2 rounds of Street Fighter or a race in Colin McRae wich is just Awesome!
I just picked up that red rg35xxsp and it makes a world of a difference when playing gba games. It's cool whenever I see other people getting into retro handhelds, living outside the bounds of conventional gaming.
@@Tenacityfromtheglass I still use my Switch I just don't buy that many games because of the Anbernic device... But I still bought a used Switch for my 8 year old niece for her birthday because that console is perfect for her needs. I hate Nintendo as a company but their games in the modern landscape are still the best. It would be worse without them.
I miss actually finishing a game. When a game is able to grab your attention and keep it for its run from start to finish and it's a thrill ride all the way through. Now it feels like a chore, a checklist of objectives to complete instead of activities that I want to do. The game being fun is the reason I come back to it, I don't need the game to demand 50 hours of me to unlock the "FUN". Just make it fun.
I have been trying to write a comment to this video for the last hour. I do agree I do miss older games, but its not the older games themselves I miss its that they respected your time, were an actual video game where they threw you into the world after either no cutscene or a small cutscene and that the big time sink game was far and few inbetween which actually made them feel special.
@faequeenapril6921 perfect point. It's not just Nostalgia being the main driving factor of why we miss older games. They were designed by people just like us who love games. When I play most modern games, it feels like they were designed to hack my brain with some psychological player retention trickery instead of being an actual game.
Your point on spending more time downloading games than playing them is soo true. Also back in the day the games were finished and didnt need to get any big updates or didnt get any updates at all. Today every fu**ing game gets an day one patch…
Back in the day, you could drive to gamestop, buy a game, bring it home, and already be playing it faster than these day one patches take to download. Are we really living in the future?
Traditionally, older people dont play much games. By the time you got to PS3 you were that age when you were too old. However, the Fortnite and Genshin Impact Zoomer generation of gamers call your "PS2 era" games outdated when they make RUclips content about it.
Older people rarely play games or watch cartoons because there was always a "change" that turned away the older group. I found video as early as 2004 where people said, "they used to play games or watch cartoons when they were kids. Now your generation is doing that to the 2024 Fortnite/Genshin Impact/Roblox generation of gamers. And they say "Okay Boomer"
@@sumnahlennon5449 Speak for yourself, I purposely seek out PS2 games to play because the whole era has interesting and experimental games you’ll seldom have now. There hasn’t been a new Castlevania or Mega Man in decades, many games that pushed the envelope either undersold or their companies died, various franchises are in a state of dead and undead, and don’t even get me started on the stuff WE NEVER EVEN GOT IN THE WEST. I’ll take stuff like Shin Megami Tensei 1 & 2, Baroque (Sega Saturn), Virtual On, older Pokemon games, Elemental Gimmick Gear, GameCube Tales of Symphonia, MadWorld, or Killer7 over a large majority of new AAA games for the variety. I don’t need everything to be open world, multiplayer, or indie to find a game fun. Give me the “outdated” generation anyday. -a zoomer
@ekurisona663 I remember I avoided skyward sword because of it being the black sheep or whatever. Boy, do I regret passing on that game back then. It's amazing!
@@Tenacityfromtheglass You call amazing those awful motion controls?... i mean, yes is better than the shitty botw games, but the motion controls makes it feels terrible.
@@Raylightsen I see. You are entitled to your opinion and thats fine and I do understand why you might not like it. I get that the motion controls are not for everyone. Though Im curious if you have tried playing the Switch version. They added an option that allows you to use the control sick to swing the sword instead of using gyro.
I like my games stylish, sexy, unrealistic and creative, with unlockables and cheats, and not 120+ hours to finish. That’s why I played Re4 Remake eight times, unlocked everything, speed run it, obsessed over Mercenaries, and then played de Ada DLC +10 times. I had waaay over 200h on that game when I finally uninstalled it. Juts like in the old days.
I'm telling you! The steam deck, 3ds and ambernic combo is the holy trinity for retro games, but either one of these by themselves could get you through a zombie apocalypse. 😅
I'm happy this spoke to you. It took going back and playing some classics for me to realize, It's not me, I haven't changed. It really is how a lot of games are designed nowadays
Unfortunately physical games aren’t what they used to be. More often than not, there’s no manual included, and your disc is basically a physical drm to download the actual game from the store (because 100 gigs don’t fit on a disc) I sound such like a doomer but it is what it is lol
I hate that in some games you have to put your email address or other information just to play a game. I can take loading screens. But i don't want to put my info on games. Even though you already put info for your console. What More do my games need?!
@@GabrielWhitaker-iw2hj yeah, it's so frustrating getting a game, especially on steam and having to download a separate launcher and make an account. I literally did that with need for speed unbound ontop of waiting for it to download only for it to repeatedly crash over and again.
@@Tenacityfromtheglass Castlevania collections and Mega Man collections are good examples of games with passwords. If you have an Xbox one, Banjo Kazooie and Tooie on Rare Replay is a good example of cheat codes.
You're describing what a lot of gamers are feeling nowadays. It is true that playing a lot of retro or older games is just more fun. Either games you've already played or never had the chance to play. I played a bunch of older games this year like the Thief games, Catherine, Talos Principle, AC1, Halo campaigns, Impossible Creatures, Dead Space 2, multiple 2D Zelda games... and more. Had fun with most of the games I played. The ones I didn't enjoy (Dawn of War, Strongold Crusader HD, Soul Reaver), I just stopped and put those in the '' tried it, didn't like it '' pile.
The simplicity of plug N play.❤❤ No Internet requirements. No subscriptions. No loot boxes. NO MICRO TRANSACTIONS. No accounts or sign in. ❤😂 God I miss the old ways gaming.
Another thing i hate about new games is that there's woke stuff in games or more women and so called " women" are the devs. Where's the men?! Where's the strong men making games? Having a huge and smart manly characters to play as? And another thing is that games these days have beautiful graphics. But the games are not fun. I probably have more fun and be amazed by going out side and going in my woods. Pretending like it's Minecraft or something. Like making a fire, making a bow and arrow, and other tools. ( After watching a video on how to do that lol) Games were a lot simple. And more fun. When you look at the old arcade games from the 70s,80s or 90s you can see how simple they are and in your opinion didn't aged well. But when you find fun in it. Your addicted. As much as i like my ps5. I can't find anything fun that's new. I'm always going back. To ps4,ps3,ps2 and ps1. snes, nes, Sega Genesis and going to my local arcade.
Tbf we had too much of the brown and grey bald manly army dude type of games in the Xbox 360 era I wouldn't want to see that again I prefer a nice art style over hyper realistic graphics take games like Oakmi and Odin Sphere they still hold up to this day compared to say gears of war
Hey thanks for the mention, I'm honored to have helped bring you new (old) gaming memories!
@RetroGameCorps you just made my entire day! Thank you so much for bringing the fun back to gaming for me!
That’s why I love the steam deck lol. The thing is a beautiful 7th gen portable
was about to quit gaming too but thanks to you i bought a retroid pocket 4 pro and enjoy retro gaming ever since and even discover new (old) gems
Don't listen to this guy, he will cost you a lot of money! 😉
Everything I miss about older games: permanence, quality, creativity
I don't like when games have their online mode shut down.
@@digitaldiablo1653 that’s why I like single player games…That’s not the real reason; I don’t have reliable internet, I prefer story driven adventures, and I hate people. But it’s nice not having to worry about online play (Blizzard…)
Yup, Both Breath of the Wild and Tears of the Kingdom I beat the dungeons and never bothered with finishing the game. Just got boring 8 hours in. Classic games are the best
@@chiquita683 botw and totk aren’t my favorite in the franchise. Open world games tend to be pretty bloated, the stripped down story and lack of dungeons was disappointing, and weapon durability and cooking system can eat my ass. But I did have some fun playing them. The exploration was cool, puzzles were neat, and I appreciate the experimentation with the gameplay. Strapping a korok to the front of a rocket cart and sending it cartwheeling over a boulder was satisfying.
Nintendo still makes quality games that are very well polished and complete at launch, and they continue to innovate on gameplay. Also VR gaming is getting a lot more innovation, both hardware and software. Many VR games have fresh and novel gameplay mechanics that are only possible in VR, like The Last Clockwinder, or Eye of the Temple.
I miss when games had a clear beginning and end. You replayed the game if you wanted to, not because the game lured you into it. Now games are designed to be neverending, eternal grindfests. They're designed to prey upon your ego, to be addictive, to make you feel bad if you quit.
When you're right
You're right!
And money money!
Spider-man 2 and Jedi Survivor in a nutshell
OG Spider Nan 2 would never
@@paulgilbert5278 oh yeah OG for sure, but I'm talking the mediocrity that came out this last year. Disappointing how that game turned out compared to the 2018 game.
Ps3/360 era was the last time I felt excited about new games.
It's still crazy to me that those consoles are considered retro now. We we were truly alive during the peak of gaming.
From 1997 to 2007 Video Games went from PS1 240p to HD 720P PS3, compare that with the last 10 years and it feels like we've made no progress at all. The jump from PS1 > PS2 > PS3 is monumental. The Jump from PS3 > PS4 > PS5 feels like a minor upgrade at best.
That was the peak era for gaming.
Yeah those were good times.
@விஷ்ணு_கார்த்திக் you must be joking. Tell me silent hill 2 remake or horizon fw ps5 or ratchet and clank rift apart or returnal look barely better than a ps3 game
games then and now:
1. cheat codes are replaced with microtransaction.
2. rewards and bonuses are replaced with achievements.
3. local co-op/split screen are replaced with online mode, which means you'll need two consoles, two TVs, two same game and two online pass to play with family.
4. 8mb of ps2 memory card was enough for saving, now you''ll need 1tb to at least install few games
True which is sad. Earlier this yr i was playing a ps1 game on my working ps2 and was looking through my memory cards and seeing my 16mb ps2 memory card and laughed as I thought about the fact I made a backup save of my save data on my ps5, the day before, that was 16gb : /
Also woke up
Each port of the same game had exclusive DLCs, like Soul Caliber in Gen 6. I thought that was cool. Also back during Gen 4 the games played slightly differently and the soundtracks were different too.
@@BeingADik_Jacob Soundtracks fell off when they could use whole tracks instead of relying on chips that only played sounds of a limited bit rate.
Some composers, like Hiroki Kikuta on Secret of Mana, even engineered their own sound banks to make sure each instrument sounded the way they intended for it to be heard when generated by the console.
Now people just arrange, mix, and export... Not saying that's bad. Having higher quality audio is great. But back in the day any 2 composers would have a unique sound even if they used audio from the _exact_ same synthesizer to generate them. We've lost those technological limitations that forced people to think up unique solutions. Now, those problems just don't exist. It's got upsides and downsides. It's easier to compose and program audio, but overall it stopped being what we recognize as "video game music" and started being just "music."
Single player Cheat codes is a PC thing but it's also a double edge sword as there are also cheats on multi-player.
To be honest i missed older games where things were experimental and creative, back in the 2010s where every company can brainstorming an idea.
indie games still do this
@@ekurisona663 including indie cartoons
I feel like the 2010s were the beginning of the end of the creativity you are talking about.
2010s lol. That was the beginning of the end 😂 I get what you mean though
I'm sure the ratchet and clank devs would still be doing this if sony weren't forcing them to make a metric fuck ton of friggen marvel games...
Just remember, it's not your job to enjoy games. It's the game's job to entertain YOU. If the game has only kept you engaged halfway, that's the game's fault for boring you, not the other way around. Saying no to certain games means saying yes to utilizing your time for better things.
This
incorrect, the function of the game is not to entertain you, it is also to have your own predisposition before playing a game, watching a movie or reading a book. I'm not saying there aren't bad entertainment products, there are many. But there are a lot of good jobs that you are not enjoying simply because you don't do a little bit of your part to do it, if you are tired, depressed or if you are a guy who doesn't pay attention to anything he is witnessing it is your fault. If you really are your maximum emotional and mental capacity when consuming an entertainment product and then realized that you didn't enjoy it, it's probably because the product is really bad or it's just not for you.
@@Dagon218false
@@Dagon218yah that’s not it buddy try again please
@@Dagon218 I agree. I am the biggest offender when it comes to losing interest when the pay-off was probably worth it. It isn't the game's fault if you lose interest, maybe the game just wasn't made for you.
I feel you. It gets boring having to pick up 200 branches, 100pieces of cloth and 50 beast tooth's to upgrade a sword. Why not give me natural progression? You finish a mission and can select an upgrade of your choice or the boss you kill drops a new weapon.
Also the traveling. I want a 45 minutes gaming session after work. First 10 minutes to climbing a mountain to reach a minor upgrade to my health bar. Then 5 minutes going to the nearby marker on the map to get an accessory I will never use. Then 5 minutes traveling to the sidequest. I play the sidequest for 20 minutes and the last 5 minutes I fast travel to town to sell all useless scraps and bits you pickup. My gaming is done for the evening without any progression in the story or feeling of accomplishment.
Modern games lack density. Everything fell apart when people started judging games by how long they take to beat to feel they got their money’s worth. AAA is now bloated with huge worlds and cutscenes, they just take the content of older games and stretch it to be 10 times longer. You can easily make a very fun game without many years of development or budgets in the hundreds of millions. You just need devs with talent that know how to not waste the player’s time with boredom. There’s a reason why indie games fill the void left by AAA. Less is more in this case.
Basically, I came to play games to have fun and escape the stresses of life and work, not to go back into after I just finished a weeks worth of shifts!
Astro Bot was pretty refreshing since it didn't feel like work, it was just plain enjoyable
Exactly. I don’t mind upgrading weapons and armor by collecting items, I actually kinda like it, but i hate it when they make you collect a million items for a tiny upgrade and they make it do hard to get them, especially with rare items.
Open world games are pointless and meaningless. The whole travel time between missions are just boring waste. The bigger the map the more boring it is
I whould rather replay a 1 hour game thousands of times than play a 20 hour game once and never touch it again.
I miss when games actually cared about the gameplay and fun mechanics, now every modern game is always the same open world action game with one gazillion dollars in budget, I preferred when games cared about being fun.
ik what you mean, i feel everygame that comes out is hyped but they are basically the same, they either a soul like game or a story based game with hyper realistic graphics, i just wish there where more wacky and fun videogames, that's why i like nintendo because they always try new ideas and make gameplay super fun
@@slowdust9541Exactly. Everyone talking about this being the worst generation of consoles is primarily playing PS5 or X Box Series. The Switch has been an absolute godsend as Nintendo has managed to deliver one fantastic game after another.
Tengo Project's reimaginings of some of Natsume's best games from the 16 and 8-bit eras have been fantastic as well.
@davidaitken8503 my only problem with Nintendo is there pricing but other than that I am more than happy to play there games
EXACTLY!!!
I agree. All of these clueless consumers claiming they want longer games "to get their money's worth" are fools! I used to be able to play through 3 to 5 games from the 8 and 16-bit era between breakfast and lunch on a Saturday morning. Even if I had already played through them hundreds of times already that was still a lot of variety. I always felt a sense of accomplishment too, as underneath their surface level simplicity was a lot of technical skill that you could always improve on. Too many of today's games are just filled with repetitive padding.
What I miss about older games is the fact that majority of the games back then felt like completed experience for $40-$50, but now for $70 you only get a 3rd of what the game has to offer and the rest are essentially lock via multiple season passes that are around $30-$40 for each… it just makes me sad and a bit angry to see that.
$40 in 2002 is $70 today so it’s still the same lol
The pay wall is truly the worst thing about modern gaming. That & the rush to launch triple A games loaded with the glitches
@@sov3cd a lot of the times it feels like you’re spending money on a buggy demo rather than a complete experience that feels polished and high quality.
On top of that, in most games the DLC content you buy it doesn't really seems that different from what was already on base game. So it gets really repetitive really fast.
The biggest problem with anything trying to "go for realism" is it limits the imagination. Back in the 80s and 90s, we had loads of colorful, mascot style characters. Many of them weren't human, and even the ones that were had unique silhouettes and colorful designs. Characters would be able to jump tens of feet in the air. Enemies and bosses could defeat you as quickly as you defeated them. You usually had to learn and master earlier parts of the game thanks to limited checkpoints and lives running out (a good and bad thing about retro gaming). Nowadays you have mostly human protagonists (usually middled aged men or androgynous teenage boys), you jump a "realistic" height (if at all), boss fights usually take over ten minutes (sometimes with no checkpoints if you lose most of the way through), and checkpoints are everywhere with no limits (this varies and isn't necessarily a bad thing).
Music has gone from being melodic and memorable to atmospheric and kind of bland. Weapons and methods of attack are often "period-accurate" rather than imaginative or unique (guns, swords, knives Vs. Mega busters, whips, boomerangs). Main point being, realism kills imagination.
I also hate when they try to add realistic morals to video games, it's literal fiction, it's not the place for 'right and wrong' morality lessons!
@@Tam00393 I will disagree with you on that. Stories, fiction or not, has always been a way to convey messages of morality (among other things).
I agree with you up to a point, because games like Doom, Splinter Cell, Half-Life, the first Assassins Creed, Ultima, etc all had a realistic approach and attempted a realistic take on graphics as much as it was possible at the time. And they were still amazing.
@@Daniel__Nobre I'm not saying you can't have amazing games steeped in realism. But imagine the possibilities some of those games could have had with more creative approaches. Or more memorable music. Or if some of them didn't feature a human protagonist, or realistic physics (tbf Assassin't Creed's tower dive is very unrealistic), or if they used a large variety of vivid colors and varied environments. Like they were amazing, I agree. But we get so many realistic games these days they feel very same-y.
@@GoeTeeks I completely agree with that part yes. I grew up with 16bit Sonic and Super Mario and Earthworm Jim, Comix Zone, etc so for a long time the idea of reaching realistic graphics was a dream.
But I agree the pendulum has tipped way too much into that side now and we lost a lot of innovation and great art direction and indeed crazy design explorations.
Given today’s technology it would be great to bring that boldness of the 90s and apply it to what could be achieved now. Indie does it a bit, but it still feels mostly very safe and as such so far away from the diversity of types of ground breaking games we saw in the 90s.
And that includes, like you say, crazy weapons concepts, colourful mascots with an attitude, gameplay involving interesting powers.. treating videogames again like fun toys and sandboxes..
The early 2000s were the golden years to be a gamer
Nah the late 80's/90's were the golden yrs of gaming. Then again I guess whatever decade you were a kid old enough to start gaming in would be the golden yrs to you.
@@amyhoard1222the thing is the early 2000s still had that old school feel because the people who made them came from that era BUT now it’s people who don’t even like video games making them
@@amyhoard1222 It's more about 2D vs 3D preference. The SNES vs the Gensis era was the peak of the 2D era while the early 2000s with the PS2, GC and Xbox were the peak of the 3D era.
Every poll I find online, these 2 generations are always at the top because they represent the best their era had to offer. Early 2D and early 3D were kind of janky and very limited because of hardware and late 3D has become the slop we all know.
1990-2010 is the best period of gaming in general. The best games of all time came out during that period.
@@Izelor can’t argue with that even tho there was alot of good games that came out in 2011-2013 but after that things starting going downhill it was right after the success of call of duty all these causals came in just to ruin our hobby by buying every DLC/gun skin call of duty came out with
I agree. I loved, even now, the PS 1 and PS 2. The best game moments of my life. I have only a few modern games that give me any real joy. Many modern games feel exploitative, using manipulation to get you to play and raise the engagement time instead of being fun.
So true this is why I prefer indy games when it comes to buying a new game you can tell they enjoy making games
@MrKingkz u get ones blue moon game that is good.i don't pre order games.i did that with remake resident evil 2 3
6th gen was the craziest; almost perfect. Very little BS, games worked, systems were truly unique, and developers weren't afraid to take risks.
I feel the PS3/360 era is where modern gaming and creativity peaked. Everything after became more corporate, more monetized, more safe.
entering your credit card cheat code...💀
one of the best comments i ever saw on steam was someone commenting on valve's doomed card game (artifact)...'most overpowered card is credit card'
@ekurisona663 yeah, it's like the money cheat in gta but in reverse.
That's the ultimate item in all games these days 😭
The XBox 360 Era is the time I miss the most about gaming
The Xbox 360 felt like Life in general was at its peak back then
@@Tenacityfromtheglass you could say that again
I remember those days the Xbox 360 and PS3 those were good days of gaming so is the original Xbox and the PS2 I just wish they made more games like that. Well, at least we got indie games because that’s the closest thing that feels like retro gaming nowadays.
This dude explained my gaming experience for the past 10 years
Retro games are not dead there just indie now
A lot of new games coming out are just remasters, remakes or HD collections. Old games never died and based on what I heard and seen from having an arcade walking distance from me. Kids play their Fortnite and other free to play games but a lot are going back to 90s games
You're dead on. Remember games like shovel knight feeling like an nes game. Now we have games like crow country that feel like ps1 games. It won't be too long and we'll have indie games that feel more like the AAA 6th generation. I'm already seeing games like night runners looking like a black box need for speed underground game. Blows my mind!
There are hundreds of Indie games released every week. Why do RUclipsrs behave like only AAA games exist?
@@sumnahlennon5449 Because there is no advertising for them back in the day there wasn't either but they were on the shelf of a game store while you were looking and at least back then they matched triple a games in visuals. Indie games now are hidden away and obviously don't match triple a games in visuals anymore. So I take it a lot of people don't want a $500 console to play a 10 dollar game that has PS1 graphics you want to make the most of your purchase but the industry is in a really weird place where nothing is really lining up anymore and its fact that indie games as fun as some of them are will never carry a generation.
@@Tenacityfromtheglass gonna throw in Lunacid as a honerable mention! That game is basically like Is kings field or shadow tower abyss if was made last year.
@@sumnahlennon5449not just indie, there are lot good budget or AA games from middle size companies. People just never glanced at them
I remember reading the manual for Icewind Dale 2 on the way home from the mall with my grandma. And she looked at me and asked "what are you doing?" And I told her that I was learning the rules and the specifics of the game I just bought. And this thing was like a 200 page manuscript. Complete list of spells and descriptions for everything. Everything.
And my grandma, being a little ahead of her time, told me she was proud of me. Because she never even learned a game like chess enough to learn the rules like that. Let alone an entire book. She didn't judge me for something that wasn't real or tangible, but I found enjoyment in anyway. It was an awesome time to be a kid.
I miss the old days when you could just pop in a disc and play the full game. Now you got company’s like Activision making games like like modern warfare 1-3 which feels like dlcs for skins for warzone
Gaming has gone the way of music and movies, the golden days of the media have sadly passed us.
1996 - 2010 was the GOLDEN era of games hands down
I was born in 1996 🙂
Things I missed
1. This is the big one. The manual and artwork that used to come with a lot of games including the box art. It gave it so much charm and made me happy to be a collector. Nowadays you just have a generic case with nothing included. Just feels absolutely soul-less.
*2. When retro game shopping used to be affordable. Thanks to scalpers and flippers, the market for older games has increased dramatically and just taken all the fun out of collecting. It used to be before 2010 where you could collect really amazing games without hurting your pocket.*
3. When game companies actually cared about their consumers and would do more tie in deals and promotions for their line up. Nowadays you don’t really hear much about a new game dropping, even the more mainstream ones and when they do they just have fixed prices with nothing really included. No incentive.
*4. No DLC bullshit that most games used to have. The DLC itself a bad thing, but when it’s attached with an exuberant price tag almost as much as the original game, it boils my blood.*
5. Many sellers and companies taking advantage of the FOMO mentality to make consumers buy their games. Nintendo doing this for the Super Mario All-Stars Release was just dirty
*6. Speaking of All Stars, just companies being lazy and uninspired and just releasing HD remakes of their older games with little to no changes for the price of a new game. Donkey Kong Tropical Freeze was notorious for this. $50-60 of the same older 3DS game that cost $20 nowadays.*
7. This is more of a bone I have with PlayStation and Xbox with how they release their games. Instead of just releasing A1 games with other barebone games in between, throw in some love for your lesser known properties in between your A1 releases.
*8. GameStop in general. In the early 2000s, I used to love going in and seeing the walls of colorful games and other cool merchandise that decorated the stores. Most gamestops I see now have a generic set up display and sell more crappy merch, funko pops and unnecessary game assessories than actual games*
I miss having zero updates.
Back then if you ship a broken game, you are cooked. No online to download extra Gbs of hot fixes
@@KlaymenDelwell , that made the developers more careful , which lead to better games on release , less bugs and a WAY smaller size
Most of what you said in your video is what I've been writing about online for like the last decade, and when you share your thoughts like you did on this video, the newer generations don't really understand you, and in the live service games that I used to play, they would often call me a grandpa or make fun of me just because I talked about the issue, but modern gaming which is mostly live service, is just an endless grind that you don't really own, because all the money and time you invest in those games, can be taken away from you any moment that the publishers running the servers want to, or even worse yet if the MMOs you used to play don't go down, they just change so much that they are beyond recognition, and at that point even if the games are still alive, you just don't feel like playing them, because the things that hooked you in or that you enjoyed, were either nerfed or removed because the game decided to go in a different direction, or for the games that used to be subscription based, when they eventually became "Free to play" they were just not worth it anymore, because to pretty much do anything you needed to take out your wallet and spend hundreds instead of the $10-20 you used to pay monthly, and for those reasons and more is that I turned my back on live service stuff, because I want to have fun not have to be enslaved to a stupid game I don't enjoy anymore just so that I stay "relevant".
I also strongly agree that developers need to put a pause on the whole Open World game concept, because nowadays every game wants to do it and because of so many assets and crap those games nowadays end up being 100+GB, and sure while you can say that just because those games can give you 100+ hours of playing to collect and do everything, not everyone is a completionist nor do they enjoy having to do that, so for most people when they get bored or want to try something else, it becomes really difficult to get back into the groove they had with the game, which is like you said in order to not be lost with the progress or story, most people start over and then get stuck again on the same points, and that's actually what used to happen in a ton of older RPGs too, because they were designed to make you grind and stuff to lengthen the game times, but I'm the type of person that just enjoys platformers or action games, so I much rather play a game that I can beat between 2-4 hours, but has a lot of replayability rather than spend 20+ hours in a game that I will never touch again. I recently got my hands on an Ayaneo FLIP DS and I'm totally loving this system, because since it has two screens I can pretty much emulate any console even those that have two screens like the DS or 3DS, and since its portable I can take my entire library of games with me to wherever I go.
I recently went back to playing my Gamecube after many, many years of online "modern gaming", and it feels awesome.
We really need a "renaissance" in gaming. But, before that we will have to watch the slow death of the gaming industry. Bloated and corrupted by out of touch executives and political saboteurs!
Great video, man! ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
SSX 3, Wild Arms, Persona, Magna Carta and Mega Man Legends. God do I miss the styles of games back them. Feature complete, fun, built in collectables, rewards for exploration, and most of all, they didn't make me feel... compelled to play them. I completed them because I had fun, not because they tricked me with manipulative gameplay loops, designed to keep you playing long after you stopped having fun.
@mikerainbow11 I really need to try the persona series someday. I just beat chrono trigger for the first time this year for the ds. Used to play tons of ssx tricky. I loved it when companies weren't so risk-averse with their franchises. Do you remember megaman x command mission?
@@Tenacityfromtheglass Yeah! That game was amazing! I never knew I needed a true Megaman RPG until I played that. Same with Super Mario RPG, just a great twist that payed out so freaking well. I agree, when the stakes were lower, companies could take risks, but with 10s, even 100s of millions on the line, they fall into patterns, manipulation and other predatory processes to get their money back.
Try Ghostwire: Tokyo.
When I was a kid I used to activate the invisiblity, all weaps, and infinite ammo cheats for GoldenEye 007 for the N64 and roleplay as the Terminator. I'd put that Deep Purple song Hush on repeat - it was the closest I had to Bad To The Bone, as played in Terminator 2.
Thanks for reminding me of this time!
Props to you showing MGRR during the vid. There were so many titles that I missed when I was younger and because of my budget I’m happy to play an older game over a newer one. The fact that game preservation isn’t as important as music and film is a disgrace to the gaming industry.
I think older games represent a time when we owned our physical media, and companies don't like that. They're so afraid of you buying a used copy of a game that they would go as far as destroying the very concept of ownership. I believe all of this is by design. Even look at the download sizes for these games, sometimes taking up a 3rd of your storage. Is it because they're poorly optimized, or is it because they want it to be the only game you play? What a coincidence that the only game you have storage space for is full of microtransactions. Art is sacred! AA, AAA, AAAA, nomatter how many A's they toss at a pile of trash, it won't turn it into a meaningful gameplay experience unless they respect the art.
I bought myself a Pi console and never looked back. Now I have like 10k games including Arcade games in it too.
5 things i miss about older games
1. attractive female characters
2. everything didn't have to be political
3. no micro transactions
4. Cheats were awesome
5. Games were complete at launch.
I know that feel bro
Shut it chud
Great list! Heres another Multiplayer on the same console with actual friends and not online
A lot of games, especially the widely-regarded "classics" were political
The thumbnail says “Grand Older Games” and I agree
@@williamhououin Oh, wow! I didn't even notice that when I was messing around in canva. 😅
One thing I miss in games is that old arcade level design going from level to level engaging in the games difficult and in depth combat systems with a scoring system that kept you playing these games over and over and over again.
Another Thing I missed was the difficulty in older games such as Ninja Gaiden, God Hand on Lvl Die, DoDonPachi,Devil May Cry on DMD,Final Fight,Street Fighter,King of Fighters,F Zero GX,Gungrave. And having to actually GET GOOD and practice the game rather than playing it once and already being a master at the game.
And another thing I miss about old arcade games is the Linear level design and the level to level system rather than than going around and doing tedious tasks not engaging in the games combat long walking sections of nothingness,and lazy minigames that hurt the games longevity. The level to level system was instant and got you straight into the games combat immediately without wasting any time and in depth scoring systems is just something that needs to come back.
Retro died with the N64, but there were still awesome games to play on the PS2, XBOX and Gamecube. Halo: CE will always be my favorite game of all time, all with REAL people in one room. I have every console released in the US, and I have over 14,000 games, but to me, the 360 and PS3 were the beginning of the end. Games went from being played together in the same room to being played by yourself in your own home, with your friend(s) being in their own homes as well.
There is something to be said with 16 people all playing at the same time with Halo, all in the same place and since that time, I haven't felt the same about gaming.
do you have atari?
Its like LAN parties. Man, do I miss those..
Nintendo is still keeping gaming alive.
I just started my emulator journey yesterday at 36yo, and found my joy in games again. Grew up in the 90s playing snes, 64, gb and my friends ps1, eventually was gifted a ps2 in 2001 from my cousins, and only moved to a xb360 a decade later. Ever since, i never played games again because imo the market went crazy with the prices and "unfinished" releases and countless microtransactions. Last year the oled switch got my attention and i thought to myself "maybe this device will take me back to the 90s". And boy it did. Playing Zelda, Pokemon and all the retro stuff from the online exclusives made me realize that i do still like gaming, just not modern ones. So just like you (because of Russ) i started my emulator journey only 2 days ago from posting this comment with a ps2 emulator and its as good as i remember. Now i remember why i would always say "ps2 is the best console ever made, and nothing will ever match it". Put it simple: it perfectly bridged the gap between old school quirky looking and ultra modern realistic. Meaning it was way ahead of the 90s stuff, but not too "serious" like new stuff. You still had cheats, no microtransactions, the games werent only great but they were also properly made with non or just very minor glitches, and not only could you take your games to a friends house, but you could take your save files too, only today we realize just how brilliant that was! Im playing ps2 on my pc now (even though i still have my original ps2) and im in love again. Good times...
I love arcade games from the late 80s to the early 2000s
Light gun crt games.
Some plug and play games.
VR can be fun.
I miss light gun games
I agree buddy, I miss older games as well, these days I’m mostly playing Xbox 360 and Xbox One games on my Xbox Series X, apart from games like Lego Star Wars the Skywalker saga, even though these games have paid dlc. 👍🏻
That segment about having to manage your hard drive space for games really hit home with me. Like getting a new game and finding out you have to delete one or two of your old ones to make room for it. Or even better a game requires an update that the space takes enough to where you have to delete a game for that as well.
There's plenty of old school games to last a lifetime. Sometimes we get cool newer indie games too but I play 90% old school lol
Games just used to be better. That's it.
"Older games" and it starts with an Xbox 360 logo.
Oh man im an old man arent I?
I know right my first game and favorite game ever was super Mario brothers 2
Were you born in the late 1900s?
@@Trapezius_God yes
that is what i love about games, you can be
leon kennedy
isacc clark
link
batman
spiderman
samus 2d or 3d
or any good action or turn based rpg character
and have fun while "saving the world"
I have gone the same route as you. I rarely ever play anything new. The newest game i played recently was the Dead Space Remake. But even that is just a remake and i played it because the original Dead Space is one of my favorite games. Other than that i have been playing old games for years now and recently got into buying retro consoles. I bought a PS Vita last week and im honestly in love with it.
I took a ten or fifteen year break from gaming and since coming back the only 2 games that genuinely impressed me were red dead redemption 2, and metal gear solid 5. There's a few others if like to try but my GPU died and it'll be awhile before I can afford a new system.
It's definitely the simplicity, hop in hop out, local co-op, complete on launch, no micro transactions, and time to beat that I miss the most.
Most games are overly complex with mechanics or controls (which I do truly love). You have to invest extensive amounts of time to enjoy or make any noticable progress, which when limited on game time defeats any purpose to play other than to inch along the story. Most games only allow online co op with limited local if any. Games either launch incomplete, in total shambles, or have necessary content locked behind DLC. And to top it all off most games now a days are so massive they take 30+ hours just to get through, and that's not including side quests and over all exploration.
It's funny because all of these things (aside from micro transactions) are either things that wouldn't bother me or I would have wanted, complex gameplay, longer story and time to enjoy the game plus more to do.
Having so many games to choose and play at my finger tips also adds to the struggle of enjoying games, which is why I often revert back to old favorites or shorter games I can hop in and out of without fear of having to catch up on story i forgot or just can't mentally grasp at the time. The Steam Deck has been amazing for this.
i miss those old graphics, i miss when games actually felt like games, i miss replaying a game over and over and never getting sick of it because of how good it was and i miss when you bought a game and knew it was completed nowadays a game comes out with hella bugs and shi
This is a great video. I don’t ever comment on videos, but this one hit home. I exactly agree with you. And putting value on older games, you realize that just because it’s new doesn’t mean it’s more fun. Plus every game that I never got a chance to play back in the day is still new to me!
We need to cherish the indies that keep the spirit of fun games alive! Got yourself a new sub man, God bless ya!
I have kids now. I'm 32, just set up a retro play room in our basement for the kids as a hangout spot as they're getting older too. My boy discovered the OG Legend of Zelda on NES and it was like watching him transform into a younger kid from the golden years. He was asking and engaging with where items are located in the game world. You don't get that with Madden and I told him that. He appreciates it too, I can see it. were running through Halo and Ratchet and Clank simultaneously now.
Im playing Final Fantasy 7 and 15 both for first time at same time. Its night and day. Ff7 pacing is so quick and its hard hitting with the emotions. I never get a chance to breathe. Feels like so much is happening in such a short period of time, an emotional roller coaster. Meanwhile in ff15 i am feeling literally nothing. It has a huge open world full of sidequests and im spending majority of the time waiting for the car to arrive at the next destination. So much to do yet feels very unfufilling. We are just a bunch of bros driving around on a roadtrip while our war is tearing our country apart but everything is happening offscreem there is zero emotional impsct!
It's called gameplay density. Something modern game developers forgot about.
@@magicjohnson3121 im jumping between games but just started nier replicant and first hour of thr game im just doing these dumb mmo style fetchquests omg.
Full of side quests? Ehh
@I_Am_The_Social_Reject yes ffxv they ask you fo fish to feed starving kitten. Get repair kit to fix some guy broken car. Hunting monsters. Cid wants you to find stuff to upgrade your weapons. Theres some guy who also needs errands done. I just started ignoring it all and focus on the main story.
@@ziljin that's not a lot. I platinumed the game quickly. Low effort. I never platinum anything. It's a very bare bones game
And this is why I'm a huge fan of decompilation / recompilation and sincerely hope it expands beyond the N64 -- it allows fans to get truly creative, far more than is possible with emulation, in adding features and content through mods.
0:19 I can very happily say that as a Nintendo Switch owner, I don't have this problem.
Nintendo been selling customers the same games over and over again. 😂😂😂
@@dwg8084 you say that like it hasn't been the case for Nintendo AND the rest for decades.
Nostalgia games ™️ will not only bring back gaming to its heyday but elevate it past what’s currently possible
My passion for games died right after the PS4 came out as I didnt like anything but Call of Duty anymore and I didnt even like that ever again as soon as the PS4 came out. Going to retro games on the Switch and Steam have I been able to make a return in a massive way and love gaming now more than I ever have at any point in my life and I just play old games.
Bro you've described my exact feelings on gaming . I was born 94 so i got the tail end of the golden era for gaming growing up from gta 2-5, nba live 00- 10, nba 2k1- 2k13 , tony hawk pro skater series, zelda, halo, crackdown, saints row 1-3, prototype series, sly, spyro, ratchet and clank, mario kart, need 4 speed, midnight club series , prince of persia, street fighter soul caliber , tekken series , mortal kombat ssx tricky, atv vs motorcros, Skate series spiderman 2 , web of shawdows and ultimate spiderman, early batman games like vengeance etc etc all of those are far better than any games that came out in the last 5 years. I miss playing the game to get better without feeling like im being cheated by the game to force me to pay so i can have fun and compete. I miss games being released in their complete form ready to play out the box.
I love nearly every game you just mentioned. Especially sports games back in the day. They were so cool! I'm currently playing a game called Helskate that you might like. It's a mix between Tony Hawks pro skater and devil may cry. I never knew I needed a hack and slash pro skater game 😂
I grew up with the NES/SNES/Genesis/N64 and quit playing gaming for a long time. When I came back, I just wanted my old games, so I went and found them. Overtime, I discovered gamecube, really liked it. Collected it too. I discovered similar games to my retro games, like Cuphead. I have a Switch and it's mostly retro games, like Contra Anniversary Collection, Smash Bros and I order retro inspired games like Iron Meat and Rugrats. I've never had an Xbox, or any free to play type of game. I've never played the new Spiderman, none of it. I don't really feel a need to. I just enjoy the games I've always enjoyed. I think I'm just a Nintendo person, and they're still how they've always been. At least the games I play. I've never really played anything online though, so I have no idea what's going on with that.
Dude before you cut to it I literally was thinking Spider Man 1 costume unlockables 🤣 couldn’t believe it
"I prefer indie games, because they are made by people who actually play and like games", yeah modern games are too hard to make and too time consuming to play. It's like this lost art of game making: "enjoying the process".
42 year old gamer here. I just went retro, I like getting those old consoles I never played and try the best games on them; if you go retro and just play the top 10 best games on each console, you have easy 100 games to play, all of them great. Also, a modern game might ask you to put 2000 hours of mind numbing action, but an old game is just around 10 hours, 50 if you go RPG or early 3D, so you can spend those 2000 hours in a huge variety of genres.
So that, get a CRT (or a retrotink), some old consoles, a handful of Everdrives and go nuts. Right now I´m playing a Super Metroid Hack on my SNES called Ascend and it´s awesome, a completely new game made by a crazy talented fan.
When you talked about buying new games, but for whatever reason not finishing them, and going back to older games, I felt that. That's so relatable to me. You articulated exactly why I don't care about modern gaming anymore.
For me, as modern as I'll go is the Switch, but I have more fun modding older consoles, and giving them quality of life improvements, and getting lost in playing older games. Modern gaming is dying on the vine in real time, and it makes me appreciate what came before even more.
Ah the krypt in deadly alliance and the costumes in spiderman hit me right in the nostalgia, those were perfect examples of how much more passion went into games back then. Thanks for sharing, it really was nice to hear someone else having the same thoughts❤
I have lived through the golden age of video/arcade gaming (from 1977 to present) and would not trade my early memories for anything. I too, am a curent gamer with my Xbox Series X, PS5, Switch, and PC games. However, there are many times when I will go back to my beloved NES and pop in Super Mario Brothers 3 and feel like a kid again. Thank you, Devin!!!
Miss the old days when we lived our life for real… the games back then were everything but money. It was all about having fun, about friends getting together… it was about the boxes, manuals… maps… putting the puzzle together… oh man… glad to have experienced the 80s and 90s…
I like to play classic games, now after this video you'll make me more grateful keep up the cool content dude ❤
I'm 41 and in my opinion there is or are at least 1 or more good games every year and one, in my opinion, is better than none. Even if we could go back in time to 2003 or whatever year, we would still have a handful games and have to wait for the rest, no difference now
I miss the era of when you played a game, finished it and couldn't wait to go back and play it again because it was the only game you had. Scarcity meant the game was appreciated more.
I always referred to the upgraded wooden sword in Ninja Gaiden Black as the 'Spanker'.
Same here! I once even referred to it as the principal's paddle
I grew up in the 80's and 90's were games were not kind, they could be frustrating and challenging but you kept coming back.
These days I find games hold your hand way too much, it's why I actually got into Project Zomboid, the intro barely explains enough of the game to survive one day and there is no real end to the game until you die but that's kind of why I love it. There is no missions you can tick off to give you purpose and help you, you have to figure things out for yourself and set your own goals and discover your own limitations
At 1:05 so true I just redownloaded Red Dead Redemption 1 , Fable 3 , GTA SA
Same here, been beating the absolute hell out of L4D2 and the DLC for weeks now. Still play FarCry5, still play Diablo3, still play The Legend Of Dragoon, still play Phantasy Star 4.
The only newer game I play now and again is Armored Core 6. Other than that it's Far Cry 5. Nothing new appeals.
Sounds like this came right out of my head, man. Theres a shit ton of us that are kindred to your feelings, homie.
Same happens to me, have a monster pc, that can run anything on ultra, installed all the new games, tested them than a month latter just forgot what and were i was. Guess what, old games are better, they are simple, easy to understand, easy to load.
This is what I feel in this past 5 years. The more I play newest modern games, the more I feel exhaust and get bore easily. I find playing retro games, even from games or system that I never played its soo much fun than play newest games (like how I enjoy PC Engine game although I never see and touch the console directly).
I think the game as a service ruined gaming because it made developers think of ways to make a quick buck instead of making games fun like in banjo kazooie i remember searching for those cheato books and bottle codes and having a blast trying them out. Nowadays its whats the newest skin for the get rich scheme
That first 1:25 is so relatable there are very few games I like that I actually don’t need to be forced to play I actually had to stop playing rdr2 because I didn’t want it to end, but with a lot of games I do the same shit that he said and rinse repeat and then go spend 60 plus hrs on a game I’ve had for ages.
Same except RDR2 is the game I keep trying to play and resetting lol
I bought my V2 Switch in 2019 and it made me a Gamer again! Without the Switch I would have gave up on gaming altogether long time ago. I don't use my PS4 anymore it's just my Resident Evil machine.
I also found Retro Game Corps and bought my RG35XX-H and now I can play any GBA and PS1 game on that little pocketable device. Right now I play Golden Sun, Colin McRae Rally 2.0 and Street Fighter Alpha 3 on it. As a husband I don't have the time to play many hours on my TV but I have always a few minutes for 1 or 2 rounds of Street Fighter or a race in Colin McRae wich is just Awesome!
I just picked up that red rg35xxsp and it makes a world of a difference when playing gba games. It's cool whenever I see other people getting into retro handhelds, living outside the bounds of conventional gaming.
@@Tenacityfromtheglass I still use my Switch I just don't buy that many games because of the Anbernic device... But I still bought a used Switch for my 8 year old niece for her birthday because that console is perfect for her needs.
I hate Nintendo as a company but their games in the modern landscape are still the best. It would be worse without them.
I miss actually finishing a game. When a game is able to grab your attention and keep it for its run from start to finish and it's a thrill ride all the way through. Now it feels like a chore, a checklist of objectives to complete instead of activities that I want to do. The game being fun is the reason I come back to it, I don't need the game to demand 50 hours of me to unlock the "FUN". Just make it fun.
movies too
music too
internet too
😢
Take me back to 2004!
artists need their peace, and it seems the peace is gone
People too 😂
@@Sh3ail 🪙
Absolute BANGER video... Havent even watched it yet but just from the title i can tell
I have been trying to write a comment to this video for the last hour. I do agree I do miss older games, but its not the older games themselves I miss its that they respected your time, were an actual video game where they threw you into the world after either no cutscene or a small cutscene and that the big time sink game was far and few inbetween which actually made them feel special.
@faequeenapril6921 perfect point. It's not just Nostalgia being the main driving factor of why we miss older games. They were designed by people just like us who love games. When I play most modern games, it feels like they were designed to hack my brain with some psychological player retention trickery instead of being an actual game.
Your point on spending more time downloading games than playing them is soo true. Also back in the day the games were finished and didnt need to get any big updates or didnt get any updates at all. Today every fu**ing game gets an day one patch…
Back in the day, you could drive to gamestop, buy a game, bring it home, and already be playing it faster than these day one patches take to download. Are we really living in the future?
Totally with you, man. I only got as far as the PS3. But I mostly play ps2 and psp.
Traditionally, older people dont play much games. By the time you got to PS3 you were that age when you were too old.
However, the Fortnite and Genshin Impact Zoomer generation of gamers call your "PS2 era" games outdated when they make RUclips content about it.
Older people rarely play games or watch cartoons because there was always a "change" that turned away the older group.
I found video as early as 2004 where people said, "they used to play games or watch cartoons when they were kids. Now your generation is doing that to the 2024 Fortnite/Genshin Impact/Roblox generation of gamers. And they say "Okay Boomer"
@@sumnahlennon5449
Speak for yourself, I purposely seek out PS2 games to play because the whole era has interesting and experimental games you’ll seldom have now. There hasn’t been a new Castlevania or Mega Man in decades, many games that pushed the envelope either undersold or their companies died, various franchises are in a state of dead and undead, and don’t even get me started on the stuff WE NEVER EVEN GOT IN THE WEST.
I’ll take stuff like Shin Megami Tensei 1 & 2, Baroque (Sega Saturn), Virtual On, older Pokemon games, Elemental Gimmick Gear, GameCube Tales of Symphonia, MadWorld, or Killer7 over a large majority of new AAA games for the variety. I don’t need everything to be open world, multiplayer, or indie to find a game fun. Give me the “outdated” generation anyday.
-a zoomer
the intro alone described my modern gaming experience verbatum. its insane how shared experiences are
Your PS2 scratching your discs? I see you had the slim model 😂
Edit: wow that code Veronica safe room music... Those were the days
The opening paragraph is a disturbingly accurate description of my gaming over the last probably 5-7 years
I was looking at getting skyward sword this week too
@ekurisona663 I remember I avoided skyward sword because of it being the black sheep or whatever. Boy, do I regret passing on that game back then. It's amazing!
@@Tenacityfromtheglass You call amazing those awful motion controls?... i mean, yes is better than the shitty botw games, but the motion controls makes it feels terrible.
@@Raylightsen I always like the motion controls. It made feel like a warrior slashing my way through enemies.
@@ProjectionProjects2.7182 As optional is fine, but as the only control scheme, is the worst.
@@Raylightsen I see. You are entitled to your opinion and thats fine and I do understand why you might not like it. I get that the motion controls are not for everyone. Though Im curious if you have tried playing the Switch version. They added an option that allows you to use the control sick to swing the sword instead of using gyro.
I like my games stylish, sexy, unrealistic and creative, with unlockables and cheats, and not 120+ hours to finish. That’s why I played Re4 Remake eight times, unlocked everything, speed run it, obsessed over Mercenaries, and then played de Ada DLC +10 times. I had waaay over 200h on that game when I finally uninstalled it. Juts like in the old days.
0:14 EYYOOOOO I ALSO GOT MY 35XX SP RECENTLY! Like two days ago, also chose the new red :D, also also a month ago i got a metalic red new 3ds xl :000
I'm telling you! The steam deck, 3ds and ambernic combo is the holy trinity for retro games, but either one of these by themselves could get you through a zombie apocalypse. 😅
This video has actually helped me so much I’ve been stuck in such a rut lately with my PS5. This has given me hope thank you!
I'm happy this spoke to you. It took going back and playing some classics for me to realize, It's not me, I haven't changed. It really is how a lot of games are designed nowadays
Unfortunately physical games aren’t what they used to be. More often than not, there’s no manual included, and your disc is basically a physical drm to download the actual game from the store (because 100 gigs don’t fit on a disc)
I sound such like a doomer but it is what it is lol
The first triple A publisher to realize that you can market 6 hour long games is going to thrive
I thought they already did make 6 hour long games, only they're attached to a bunch of cutscenes, grinding and forced walking sections 😂
I hate that in some games you have to put your email address or other information just to play a game. I can take loading screens. But i don't want to put my info on games. Even though you already put info for your console. What More do my games need?!
@@GabrielWhitaker-iw2hj yeah, it's so frustrating getting a game, especially on steam and having to download a separate launcher and make an account. I literally did that with need for speed unbound ontop of waiting for it to download only for it to repeatedly crash over and again.
@@Tenacityfromtheglass Castlevania collections and Mega Man collections are good examples of games with passwords.
If you have an Xbox one, Banjo Kazooie and Tooie on Rare Replay is a good example of cheat codes.
Every sentence of this entire video is quotable and worthy of memorization. 🔥
3:25 to skip the intro
Here you go fam, might as well skip the whole video 13:10
You're describing what a lot of gamers are feeling nowadays. It is true that playing a lot of retro or older games is just more fun. Either games you've already played or never had the chance to play. I played a bunch of older games this year like the Thief games, Catherine, Talos Principle, AC1, Halo campaigns, Impossible Creatures, Dead Space 2, multiple 2D Zelda games... and more. Had fun with most of the games I played. The ones I didn't enjoy (Dawn of War, Strongold Crusader HD, Soul Reaver), I just stopped and put those in the '' tried it, didn't like it '' pile.
Same, I just bought games from 2 decade, a decade or few years ago. Only some that I am really interested in are latest release
Congratulations on making it to 1000 subs, Devin! Here's $2 out of your own wallet.
Thank you so much... hey, wait a minute!
The simplicity of plug N play.❤❤ No Internet requirements. No subscriptions. No loot boxes. NO MICRO TRANSACTIONS. No accounts or sign in. ❤😂 God I miss the old ways gaming.
Another thing i hate about new games is that there's woke stuff in games or more women and so called " women" are the devs. Where's the men?! Where's the strong men making games? Having a huge and smart manly characters to play as? And another thing is that games these days have beautiful graphics. But the games are not fun. I probably have more fun and be amazed by going out side and going in my woods. Pretending like it's Minecraft or something. Like making a fire, making a bow and arrow, and other tools. ( After watching a video on how to do that lol) Games were a lot simple. And more fun. When you look at the old arcade games from the 70s,80s or 90s you can see how simple they are and in your opinion didn't aged well. But when you find fun in it. Your addicted. As much as i like my ps5. I can't find anything fun that's new. I'm always going back. To ps4,ps3,ps2 and ps1. snes, nes, Sega Genesis and going to my local arcade.
Whoa! settle down there you racist homophobe, I have the right mind to report you to the Twitter police.
Tbf we had too much of the brown and grey bald manly army dude type of games in the Xbox 360 era I wouldn't want to see that again I prefer a nice art style over hyper realistic graphics take games like Oakmi and Odin Sphere they still hold up to this day compared to say gears of war
Play fighting games like Guilty Gear, Boom Sol badguy (although he's a 90s character.
Buy a cheap pc...
And a x arcade control panel.
Use emulators like mame ..and a front end like..hyper spin.
Its a great time.
Only 30 secs in and I already agree with you, trying to stack up on my hand held games.