10 Gamer Problems THAT ARE NOW DEAD

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июн 2024
  • Video games have seen many trends come and go over the decades. Here are some gamer problems that are extinct now.
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    0:00 intro
    0:14 Number 10
    1:21 Number 9
    2:49 Number 8
    3:48 Number 7
    5:00 Number 6
    5:49 Number 5
    6:54 Number 4
    8:09 Number 3
    9:06 Number 2
    10:33 Number 1
  • ИгрыИгры

Комментарии • 2,4 тыс.

  • @mattyb4873
    @mattyb4873 Год назад +136

    I really miss the old physical game guide books. Not for walk through, but for all the lore they would have. Like the Rouge Sqaudron book that went into full detail on every mission and every ship in the game

    • @thriceXplus7
      @thriceXplus7 Год назад

      Low?

    • @mattyb4873
      @mattyb4873 Год назад

      @@thriceXplus7 oh dang, I meant lore

    • @mattyb4873
      @mattyb4873 Год назад

      @@thriceXplus7 I fix

    • @CD-Gaming
      @CD-Gaming Год назад +7

      I miss the old instruction manuels giving you some backstory or insights into the game's world, like Sonic telling you all the Levels, or Dungeon Master II sharing a little side story set jus before the game starts! Assassin's Creed II had memos from between the modern day characters as well!

    • @mattyb4873
      @mattyb4873 Год назад +2

      @@CD-Gaming THIS^|^

  • @TihetrisWeathersby
    @TihetrisWeathersby Год назад +1078

    If you remember the PS2 days you know the memory card was a pain

    • @gameranxTV
      @gameranxTV  Год назад +83

      😅👆🏻

    • @juankovacs6033
      @juankovacs6033 Год назад +84

      And the CD as well. If that lens got a little dust on it you had to pray the gods and wait to see that logo turn on.

    • @bakerrr925
      @bakerrr925 Год назад +29

      Memory cards were the best

    • @michaelmoore1627
      @michaelmoore1627 Год назад +42

      Ps2? I remember needing a memory pack for the n64...I'm getting old. The ps1 had a multi memory card with a digital display that had 30 cards worth of memory to pick from..then all my ff7 saves were gone when the card stopped working.😢

    • @tomscott9230
      @tomscott9230 Год назад +10

      I always thought it was bizarre that internal storage was such a hurdle. I think nintendo was real snake bit by having so many solutions before tech caught up. Theyre still using memory sticks

  • @brettbeyer73
    @brettbeyer73 Год назад +87

    As for the multiple discs, when you opened that package up and found three or four discs, there was an actual ping of excitement. "This game is HUGE!"

    • @ThatBaritoneGuitarGuy
      @ThatBaritoneGuitarGuy Год назад

      Grand Theft Auto 5 is indeed HUGE.
      (4 DVDs)

    • @Fantasylord2205
      @Fantasylord2205 Год назад

      me when i emulated MGS:

    • @gavinsnider4275
      @gavinsnider4275 Год назад +1

      That's how I felt when I saw TLOU2 and initially Cyberpunk 2077 (my dad preordered me the PS4 version for Christmas and we know how that went) The 2 disk thing died and then came back and I wouldn't be surprised if it comes back again late in the PS5s life

    • @chuiduma
      @chuiduma Год назад +1

      I remember doing that with FFVII (original) when it came out. If you told me way back then that one day I would have a copy of that game on my mobile phone that I could play, I wouldn't have believed you.
      I still have my old official game guide for FFVII too, in good condition, which I was amazed about when I realized how old it was when Remake came out. 😅

    • @ThatBaritoneGuitarGuy
      @ThatBaritoneGuitarGuy Год назад +2

      For goodness sake, I have Skyrim on my Samsung Smart Fridge. I also have it on my Tesla, so I can play video games on my way home from the bar.

  • @xventex9822
    @xventex9822 Год назад +28

    The thing i miss the most, is the physical guide book you always had for mainly rp games. i kept some of them because it reminds me of how my grandpa sat in his armchair reading the guide to me and i was playing the whole day. i think of him every day i play at the console. good times

    • @geovalde1
      @geovalde1 Год назад

      I remember when I would get a guide book I would read it when i would go to the restroom. Read it and started playing afterwards to finish what I was stuck on. Miss those days.

    • @read-it2311
      @read-it2311 Год назад +1

      They still get made for some games! I see guide books in walmart from time to time. Also book stores have lots.

  • @taylor_drift
    @taylor_drift Год назад +230

    I remember back in the 90s when you could get demo compilation disc's in magazines. My brother and I were PC gamers and were super stoked when we came across a free copy of Jazz the Jackrabbit in a magazine, and I'm still obsessed with that series to this day.

    • @pimphandduke8447
      @pimphandduke8447 Год назад +7

      Those were the bomb. Nope'd out of many a bad game purchase because the demo sucked.

    • @cmdr.jabozerstorer3968
      @cmdr.jabozerstorer3968 Год назад +1

      Yep. I had ST Format cover disk demos. I remember playing Sensible Soccer from one of them and there was a way to basically get an unlimited game, so you could score as many goals as you liked until you got bored.

    • @Blnze
      @Blnze Год назад +5

      Had the demo for Need for speed Underground. Its was only a few races was still sick

    • @wolfmelody2787
      @wolfmelody2787 Год назад +1

      The good old days. Thanks blockbuster

    • @CHEEBnRUN
      @CHEEBnRUN Год назад +1

      Jazz JackRabbit 2 was my first video game. Epic Games sure has come a long way.

  • @neil_mch
    @neil_mch Год назад +89

    As an older gamer, I remember many games that had over 10 disks, some as many as 15.
    Back then, pre-CD floppy discs only held 1.4 MBs.
    In modern standards, Black Ops Cold War would take over 170,000 of those discs.

    • @donaldfrederick501
      @donaldfrederick501 Год назад +4

      5 floppy discs for Tie Fighter.

    • @cmdr.jabozerstorer3968
      @cmdr.jabozerstorer3968 Год назад

      You could get 2mb High Density floppies but yes most were 1.44mbs.

    • @Shoelessjoe78
      @Shoelessjoe78 Год назад +2

      I don't know you. But I know you... Different era.

    • @ceasarcruz8312
      @ceasarcruz8312 Год назад +1

      @@cmdr.jabozerstorer3968 a whopping 2mb, wow!

    • @franck3279
      @franck3279 Год назад +2

      As a teen, I begged my parents to upgrade our 486 with a cdrom, only to discover that I couln’t use it and the sound board simultaneously, totaly negating tge interest of that expensive equipment,

  • @F1jones
    @F1jones Год назад +84

    Great list. It reminds me that I've been gaming for 35 years even though I'm 55. I've forgotten some of these things. Being an adult when I started made some things easier, i.e. no issue having someone turn off my console or not being able to get memory cards (I still have my PS2 and all my cards with saved files from back in the day). But I do remember pondering whether I really needed a new one or were hoarding saves. And I did leave my PS1 on all day while at work to save my practice qualifying from the night before on F197 and do the race when I got home because you couldn't save through about 3-4 hours of gameplay if you tried to do a full race weekend. Somehow I never killed that original Playstation, in spite of leaving it on 24/7. Or more sometimes. Also, there were a few old Sega 16-Bit games that, yeah, I just got stuck on and could never figure out how to progress past. Maybe even a few PS games too. Clocktower and Silent Hill come to mind. Some games just broke in the middle and couldn't be patched, or you'd scratch a disk and be unable to progress (with odds increasing of unplayable damage with multiple disk sets). People complain a lot, but we have it really good these days. Games are just incredible; they're marvels of technology. The accessibility is insane and in general, the quality has improved in ways we couldn't imagine 25 years ago. Back then, sometimes just trying to figure out how to play the game was the objective of playing, rather than enjoying the experience. We're almost at Star Trek holodeck simulations now. There's always a lot that can be improved and that has degraded the experience, but we have a lot to be thankful for as gamers too.

    • @baldmenwin9591
      @baldmenwin9591 Год назад +4

      My dad bought a Pong console in 1977. I remember bugging my dad for Pacman in 1980 for Atari and he shelled out $40 at Sears for it. Dad was the Best and he loved Arcade Games also. He loved Donkey Kong and I loved Asteroids.

    • @PublishedLeaf
      @PublishedLeaf Год назад +4

      What would you say are your favorites and if their old ones, and new/newer ones. I'm not that old but it still amazes me how we have all of stuff inside and it's somehow able to play these beautiful games. And how we somehow came so far in so little time. I would love to hear your opinions about games and some new ones and old ones, that you've played or would like to play and try sometime. Games you love and games you hate, even if I don't personally agree with you, as that's fine and no big deal as it's just opinions and shouldn't be taken so seriously. Or if you would like one recommendations of games, like The Evil Within, what remain of Edith Finch, or the resident evil series or any others as my game collection is huge and has a wide variety.

    • @F1jones
      @F1jones Год назад +1

      @@PublishedLeaf interesting question, thanks for asking. It's hard for me to say what my favorites are since my tastes have changed based on what's been technically available, plus I find that what I might have thought was fun 20-30 years ago maybe isn't so much anymore for whatever reason. And I don't remember a lot from my old Sega days, so long ago. Probably Outrun on Sega 16-Bit and definitely early Madden titles got the most traction on Sega Genesis (I've probably never been as good at any game as those). I got my first PC spec'd to support a racing sim called Grand Prix Legends in 1997, which still holds up today when modded. From there with Playstation, it's pretty boring. Gran Turismo 1&2, Tomb Raider, Resident Evil 1&2 are the big titles. Hulk Ultimate Destruction and the Marvel Ultimate Alliance are memorable, but I have a stack of games here for PS2. Past that, it's been all PC and I've gravitated more towards pseudo open world games like OG Tomb Raider first teased; Half Life 1&2, Oblivion, Skyrim, Witcher3, Arkham, Assassin's Creed (Black Flag and Origins are my favorite), Cyberpunk, etc. I really like the ability to not need to play the game and to just be able to just explore in my game worlds (RDR2 stands out, where I just went on mapping expeditions for days irl without touching any quests). Mass Effect gets a special nod given I rate it every bit as highly of a sci fi/fantasy franchise as Star Wars or Star Trek, and also Diablo 2 in the RPG space. I've always been into sim racing and have tried most of them but Project Cars 2 really stands out as an accessible title on par with GT. AAA titles get a lot of complaints directed towards them, but I think they're AAA for a reason and it seems I gravitate to them on reflection here. Each one I mentioned is something I can go back to and have fun with on any given day, and I do fairly frequently! But honestly, I've played more than I can remember and I know I'm leaving out many that I've enjoyed very much.
      Fun question. What are some of yours?

    • @PublishedLeaf
      @PublishedLeaf Год назад +1

      @@F1jones Sorry it took my so long to answer.
      I have 184 games so I cant name them all.
      Some of the games I love, I know people dislike and thats okay.
      My favorite game right now is the Evil Within 1, Its really chaotic and fun and will get you to ask the he'll is happening or whats going on every second.
      Another close second is What Remains of Edith Finch, its a game where its all about the story and your just walking around and its a cinematic masterpiece.
      Dying Light 2 is a game where I have over 200 hours in it and Im still coming back to play it. Its not a gamer for everybody, but I can stop playing it for 6 months and come back to it and have a blast.
      Another of my favorites is Mafia 3 and its Definitly not for everyone, peoplr have said a lot of the gameplay id repetitive, but the story is great. I actually really enjoy thr gameplay though.
      Outlast is the greatest horror gane ever made, enough said.
      I really enjoy lego games and have every lego game made by travlers tales except two of them.
      Watch dogs is a game 1 is a game I have played with my sister since we were younger and we just drive around and shoot people. I know it can disappoint people, but it cant with me as I have a blast playing it.
      Dishonered is a classic of either butchering people or being a good person. It's a game where you kinda get to chpice your own path or route.
      Resident evil games are always awesome, but Resident Evil 7 is my favorite and how I got into the series.
      Sleeping dogs and Far Cry Primal are game that are do satisfying to me.
      Dont think I need to tell you about minecraft as it gives me freedom to build my crappy houses.
      Assasins Creed blag flag is my favorite AC game.
      I play some Cod and my favorite is Cod Bo3 for the zombies.
      Dark souls makes me wish I was never born for a second time.
      The dead Island games (not di2, I havent played it yet) are just so good to goof off and not take seriosly if you need a break.
      Grand thedt auto 4 and 5 are still some pretty great games, even if rockstar is Satan. With Gta 4 being my favorite game of theres.
      The Last of us 1 and 2. TLOU2 is not a game for everyone and people are allowed to feel disappointed and mad. Not me though as I really enjoyed it and the story. I hope people can spread some positivity even if you hate the game, dont be a jerk to those who love the game.
      Lastly Hades is a game that is so addicting and one you can come back to even after you beaten it 20 times.
      These are just some of the games I have, but theyre my favorite to play and come back to. Some of these games are not for everyone, but that doesnt matter to me as I just have fun playing them.
      Excuse and spelling mistakes.
      I'd reccomend you check out Evil Within, What remains of Edith Finch. Abd if your heart can take it, outlast.

  • @jeremiegartner464
    @jeremiegartner464 Год назад +24

    I feel all of these to my core. The one thing I miss is a complete game at launch on a physical device is you can play it right away and offline.

  • @CaedoGenesis
    @CaedoGenesis Год назад +49

    I was grounded from playing games more often than not, so that startup sound was a real fear of mine every late night playing FF Tactics. Also I do kinda miss the memory cards. I only had a console of my own later, but thanks to a personal memory card I had saves I could keep with me from my buddy's place, without worry of overwrites. Those things also could go through the washer and survive, which impressed me too!

    • @enrd12
      @enrd12 Год назад +1

      My ps2 memory card went through the washer about 20 times and still works to this day with some repairs throughout the years.

    • @Jerekul
      @Jerekul Год назад +1

      Yeah the PS2 memory cards used flash, so they didn't have any onboard power, there was no chance to short them out if they aren't plugged in. As long as you make sure it's dry before you plug it back into your console, you should always be fine with those. Many electronic circuit boards can be washed underwater so long as there's no charge in the capacitors and has no battery attached to it.

    • @Powwpoww
      @Powwpoww Год назад

      Man the phone startup sound was so long and loud that even if I manage to start turning down the volume would be busted before it got to a lower volume.

  • @naldnald8899
    @naldnald8899 Год назад +135

    So grateful to be able to watch videos like this in 2023 and get that hit of nostalgia with my fellow aging gamers. I definitely love the newer generation of players and seeing them experience their own “discovery” phases we also had, but something just hits different being able to resonate with other gamers about downloading and printing a 50-page walkthrough from Gamefaqs back in the day and getting chewed out by your folks for using all the printer ink

    • @yvngnig
      @yvngnig Год назад +4

      yooo ur an og fr never heard that one 💪🏾

    • @patryksroka4783
      @patryksroka4783 Год назад +6

      I’m only 22 and I remember this lol I caught the end of the ps2 era, quit gaming for a few years and only got back when I was like 16 I think

    • @painful-Jay
      @painful-Jay Год назад +2

      I had printed a guide from mk3 ultra with all fighters and moves on it. I used it all the time.

    • @M3LT666
      @M3LT666 Год назад +1

      Too often with the start up chimes 🤣😭

    • @natnat8393
      @natnat8393 Год назад +1

      Complete facts lol

  • @TheDragonsFlare
    @TheDragonsFlare Год назад +19

    I think you missed the exploration aspect of old gaming (specially the PC ones). I still remember using a graph paper to create the maps of SSI gold box games or building maps for Sierra’s Hero’s Quest. So much nostalgia 😅

    • @thomasdarnall8912
      @thomasdarnall8912 Год назад +1

      Or Sierra's "Empire Earth" with the best cheat code.
      "All Your Base Are Belong To Us".

  • @ahampel22
    @ahampel22 Год назад +32

    Back in the 90s, I knew a guy who made his own water cooled PC with a copper plate, some tubing, a fish tank pump, and a 5 gallon bucket. It worked great and he was able to overclock that thing pretty hard.

    • @cheezethepunk
      @cheezethepunk Год назад

      Back in the late 90s I went to a friends house who’s younger brother, he was maybe 12-13, built his own PC and he had one he showed me that was operated by remote control. That blew me away and now it’s so common that it’s hardly as amazing as it was then.

    • @whatdoesthisthingdo
      @whatdoesthisthingdo Год назад +4

      Back in the 90s, I was in a very famous…

    • @cheezethepunk
      @cheezethepunk Год назад

      @@whatdoesthisthingdo very famous?

    • @ryougahibiki941
      @ryougahibiki941 Год назад +2

      Back when there were some graphics cards you could muck about with to overclock them, one of my mates had a water cooled system that the now heated water would be pumped into his tropical fish tank. Then pulled out into a filtration system, to let the water cook down, then pumped back through the computer.
      It was an overly complicated setup, but it worked.

    • @darthrader1068
      @darthrader1068 11 месяцев назад

      @@whatdoesthisthingdo??

  • @xxx-pliskin-sniper-xxx8538
    @xxx-pliskin-sniper-xxx8538 Год назад +34

    I remember being a naive kid with FF7, and when that screen came up to change the disk, it was mind blowing. I had never experienced a game as huge at that point, and having not 1 but 2 more disks to play through, 🤤amazing.

  • @_bravo_8581
    @_bravo_8581 Год назад +72

    I was actually thinking about this today. I feel like games were more challenging back in the day, not just from the lack of guides but also a lack of access to those guides. If you got stuck on a puzzle, you had to figure it out or wait till a buddy figured it out. Which also created some friendly competition.

    • @eigengeistt
      @eigengeistt Год назад +4

      Even just reading this gave me nostalgic and happy vibes like back in the day. God bless you

    • @Cman04092
      @Cman04092 Год назад +5

      Not just that, but originally games were designed for the arcade, then ported to home consoles. Harder games were just more profitable for arcadrs, they called them quarter eater games for a reason.

    • @Dave_ja_vu
      @Dave_ja_vu Год назад +5

      The worst was always that friend who would straight up lie about the cool things they did to unlock stuff and wasting time trying to replicate it. I say worst, but looking back even that was quite fun. Nowadays if a puzzle takes me more than a few minutes I'll look up a guide, back then we had to solve it or just never finish it

    • @_bravo_8581
      @_bravo_8581 Год назад +1

      @@eigengeistt boomer millennials gotta stick together lol

    • @lawrencetalbot8346
      @lawrencetalbot8346 Год назад

      That and older games especially for the original Xbox and PlayStation 1 & 2 were just harder. I like to dl original Xbox games and even with a guide, these games can be tough even on normal difficulty. You really had to “get good” and develop skills/learn the patterns of the enemies. Unlike today where a lot games are intentionally designed to be more forgiving to not burnout casual gamers right away.

  • @MMKMoore1
    @MMKMoore1 Год назад +6

    PC gaming, especially starting with DOS games, was how I learned so much about computers back in the day. I still have the old book I bought on how to manage IRQ settings. I miss all the hint books and guides as well. The most fun ones to use were the ones for the Sierra games, well, until you lost the red film thing that allowed you to read the hints.

  • @TheShon41
    @TheShon41 Год назад +5

    I remember my brother and me trying to finish FF7 without a memory card. We used to type down everything (how to do things in the game) in a notebook so that the next time we played we knew how to do it in the game. We managed to finish the game in one sitting after about 1 year of trying.

  • @mrflawless1165
    @mrflawless1165 Год назад +176

    I feel like the early days of gaming the hearing of easter eggs(happy easter btw to everyone who sees this comment), glitches and bugs from rumors, friends and strangers really cemented those things as legends and made looking and testing for them exciting and gave an air of mystery. I specifically remember the Missing No. from pokemon as being one of the most prominent and arguably the MOST popular glitch in gaming history.

    • @tylerfriske955
      @tylerfriske955 Год назад +3

      @Mr Flawless Happy Easter

    • @housemouseshorts
      @housemouseshorts Год назад +9

      there was more community as you had to physicaly be present to talk games. Those electronics shows he mentioned for instance. You didn't just go there for the parts you needed. You went to talk to OTHER people who where 99% likely to be into what you are into. Thats why they are there. I graduated highschool in 2009. I lived for mornings and lunch times. Where I got to sit down with like 10 or 15 other dudes and talk magic the gathering and smashbrothers.

    • @Christopher76Jared
      @Christopher76Jared Год назад +2

      Episode Suggestion: Old-school to fairly-old games that couldn't have fixes, debugs, or updates having those flaws or once thought all of as permanent errors fixed today.

    • @conkyvsricki4710
      @conkyvsricki4710 Год назад +1

      i remember that you could save on the original zelda for the nes

    • @Wraithsong
      @Wraithsong Год назад +1

      happy easter

  • @reig3123
    @reig3123 Год назад +67

    Saving your game progress is probably one of the biggest QOL improvement in gaming. Unlike today where seeing a game's end credits is more or less a sure thing, finishing a game way back then was a big achievement. You have to struggle through limited "lives"/retries plus no way of saving your progress. I also remember the pain of old consoles just randomly rebooting due to faulty power adapters.

    • @leonidas14775
      @leonidas14775 Год назад +7

      Or adventure games that don't tell you till hours later that you made the wrong choice and the game is unwinnable.

    • @pimphandduke8447
      @pimphandduke8447 Год назад +5

      Of course nowadays developers seem to be allergic to allowing you to save anywhere, its all checkpoints. And we're well past the point where the devs should know better than to put the checkpoint _before the cutscene_

    • @pimphandduke8447
      @pimphandduke8447 Год назад +4

      @@leonidas14775 Or you made all the right choices, but you missed the two pixel wide bobby pin on the library's checkerboard floor and didn't pick it up so now you can't pick the lock on the jail cell.

    • @ledumpsterfire6474
      @ledumpsterfire6474 Год назад +5

      @@pimphandduke8447 It's part of a growing trend of developers deciding they can force people to play a game in one specific way, settling their egos by making sure players have only the EXACT experience they intended, and nothing else.
      In this case, they're trying to eliminate save scumming. People who have lives and responsibilities be damned. You're either going to have the time to to beat this 40 minute mission in one go with no breaks, or you're not going to play our game, because some people might choose to abuse saving/loading and wouldn't have exactly the experience we wanted them to. Can't have that.
      Imagine if other artforms tried to restrict their bases that way. "You can only listen to this song three times, and the file will self-erase, because I only want people to hear it three times each so it doesn't get old." "If you interpret my painting in any way aside from what I intended, this mechanism will paint over it in black."

    • @leonidas14775
      @leonidas14775 Год назад +2

      @@ledumpsterfire6474 This arogance about making the user do things only one way is common in the tech industry.

  • @ledumpsterfire6474
    @ledumpsterfire6474 Год назад +11

    Ironically, my controller untangling skill became integral to part of my business. I did live sound, and no matter how hard you worked to keep everything wrapped up nice and organized, it would always still wind up a jumbled up mess somehow. You think 6-10' of controller wire is a hassle, just try untangling 50-100' of various kinds of sound cabling.

    • @garethlee7927
      @garethlee7927 Год назад

      You sometimes get crazy mofos that somehow tangle up socapex cables together just to pack up fast. Back in the warehouse untangling those are just a pure workout.

  • @DemonicAngelGaming1031
    @DemonicAngelGaming1031 Год назад +7

    Being 40, I experienced all of these except the last 2. Never had a pc as a kid. This list def hit home! 💯

  • @killianmeade
    @killianmeade Год назад +8

    I remember going down video store to rent games for the week or weekend and having to try and complete them before they where due back

    • @zaug1561
      @zaug1561 Год назад

      In my small town, we only had 1 day rentals, so we'd try to rent a game as early as we could on Saturday morning to maximize the time before we had to bring it back by 6 on Sunday.

  • @tomekvilmovskiy6547
    @tomekvilmovskiy6547 Год назад +81

    I had a friend with PS1 with no memory card, so we played games from a beginning on every gaming session.
    The measurement of a skill was "how much time you will waste to get to the point where you had finished the last time" )
    Means, faster you get there - more time to enjoy a new content that's further in a game

    • @FelisImpurrator
      @FelisImpurrator Год назад +9

      Oops, all roguelikes

    • @leonidas14775
      @leonidas14775 Год назад

      Thankfully one of my favorite PS1 games Machine Hunter had passwords

    • @ZeusAdvocate
      @ZeusAdvocate Год назад +2

      Games like final fantasy were a pain without memory cards I left my ps1 on for a week after finishing CD1

    • @iforgot87872
      @iforgot87872 Год назад

      Should have gone out and bought one one day haha

    • @franck3279
      @franck3279 Год назад

      Did that for Rick Dangerous on Atari STE with infinite lives over a full WE. I still don’t understand how anyone could have beaten that vicious game fairly.

  • @latetotheparty453
    @latetotheparty453 Год назад +6

    Oh man, I miss the game guide books. I loved having it to accompany my games. Especially for those large open world RPG games. I have boxes full of old ones. I used my Final Fantasy VII one so much it pretty much disintegrated. That thing is word for word imprinted on my brain.

  • @nemesisking_x2t223
    @nemesisking_x2t223 Год назад +1

    All those things that u just talked about definitely was pain or an obstacle for gaming experience but after seeing them here I’m really missing them. Because all this things are very nostalgic. Loved ur content there.

  • @jscott4reel
    @jscott4reel Год назад +58

    Not sure if it made the list, but not having to sacrifice quality for a handheld experience is a huge one for me.

    • @gameranxTV
      @gameranxTV  Год назад +5

      👍🏼

    • @Joreel
      @Joreel Год назад +3

      That's so true, but it was still amazing to take the game with you to play in your free time.

    • @monkeylife5742
      @monkeylife5742 Год назад +1

      My little sister managed too somehow not hide delete my saves but the memory card itself need to be reformatted. I still to this day don't know how she did that. She must've only been four or five

    • @CasepbX
      @CasepbX Год назад

      Huh? You still have to sacrifice plenty of quality for a handheld experience... just look at any Switch game vs PC or PS or Xbox.

    • @clumsycaden5708
      @clumsycaden5708 Год назад +1

      @@CasepbX steam deck, AYA neo, etc

  • @yerielzamora
    @yerielzamora Год назад +68

    Fixed angles could be cool sometimes when done right. The PS2 God of War games, had great camera setups that made for really cool fights, and freed up the right stick for additional movement options. That was some classic gameplay that feels satisfying even today. I can easily go back to them and not miss camera controls from modern games.

    • @gameskyjumper1721
      @gameskyjumper1721 Год назад +2

      yeah like Tormented Souls which is made fixed angle on purpose.

    • @akramlakamora5517
      @akramlakamora5517 Год назад +4

      And classic Resident Evil games wouldn't have worked as good without those fixed cameras.

    • @drgonzo123
      @drgonzo123 Год назад +4

      Silent Hill games were the goat with fixed camera angles. Still damn scary to this day. Not sure the remake is going to be as scary with its modern free camera set up

    • @leonidas14775
      @leonidas14775 Год назад

      It works alright in games like Put Put and Pajama Sam

    • @mikaelkarlsson8969
      @mikaelkarlsson8969 Год назад

      I did not like the fixed camera in God of war 3 when it realesed. I played it not long ago on my ps5 and still dont like it. I mean the fixed camera doing a good job but it feels so wrong now when you played alot of games with free camera movement and takes a little while to adjust. Otherwise the game is amazing and still looks really good. I just wished i could rotate and see the eyecandy.

  • @rudoodles1272
    @rudoodles1272 Год назад +6

    Honestly I love that I'm not alone in the existential drift of life and this video and the nostalgia did bring some peace to my mental. Playing without a Playstation memory card to beat Drakengard and Resident Evil 4 in one go and having power cuts and losing my mind but restarting like it was nothing. The multiple discs immediately brought FF7 to mind, said Gamefax the second Jake said look up guides and cheats. Remembering the tv volume set to 100 as a trap by my parents in case i turn on the PS2. I'm thirty now somehow and don't know where the time or our shiny little eyes and smiles went but it feels good to know we all made it this far, you guys take it easy and good luck figuring out the rest of life. P.S Hope this vid gets a part 2 .

  • @Fullmetalknight69
    @Fullmetalknight69 Год назад +5

    I remember having no ps2 memory for a solid 2 years and my brothers and I just got use to playing the game as far as we could 😂 when we finally got a memory card it was glorious we finally got to see what the rest of most games looked like and actually got to hit load game instead of new game!

  • @LuciusNox
    @LuciusNox Год назад +24

    I was actually waiting to hear something about "not having to blow dust out of a cartridge." That used to be the Bane of my existence. Even after cleaning the dust, I would still cross my fingers and pray when I put the game in the cartridge slot.😂

    • @michaelridley3676
      @michaelridley3676 Год назад +1

      Dust was never the issue, it was contact with the pins. Blowing into it just corroded it and caused another issue.

    • @paolaanimator
      @paolaanimator Год назад +1

      I remember blowing into Gameboy Advance cartridges when it didn't work and it works every time 😅

    • @marv600
      @marv600 Год назад

      @@michaelridley3676 Nah, I would say blowing in the cardridge was always a last resort.
      Meaning your game doesn´t work and the options would be buying a new one or blowing in, heck I would take a leaf blower to blow that cardridge.

  • @robertswoboda3328
    @robertswoboda3328 Год назад +27

    I lived through every one of these experiences. Glad we’re past a lot of them, but this definitely brought up
    Good memories.

  • @porakiyadraekojin3390
    @porakiyadraekojin3390 Год назад +2

    Number 10 I felt in my soul. That was my childhood: second hand/used consoles and no memory card. I can't even begin to tell you how many times I played the beginning of Final Fantasy VII, being only allowed an hour or two on the weekends, having to share with my brother, and having to put the Playstation up (same with Gamecube). It ended up being turned into "how far can I get before my time is up?" type of game while playing games XD I actually did manage to complete a few ps1 games this way: the Disney's Dinosaur game, Rugrats and the Search for Reptar, and I think one other that I can't remember.

  • @IbsenRogerGomesRego
    @IbsenRogerGomesRego Год назад +4

    I still remember when my uncle printed the whole walkthrough for RE: Code Veronica for Dreamcast. It was huge! I think things like that made me the gamer I am today.

  • @-iloveyou
    @-iloveyou Год назад +11

    Duuude having original guides - magazines/books were so freaking special, those were the OG gaming days. And figuring out cheat/exploits was truly rewarding and special

    • @AnalogDrift
      @AnalogDrift Год назад

      Those still exist, they're just worse than googling it and cost like $40 lol.

  • @Janosch-re9vw
    @Janosch-re9vw Год назад +12

    Man flatscreens have been revolutionary. Remember the old days when you had to carry your big old screen to a LAN party? It was like the heaviest thing to carry at 13 yrs

    • @1IGG
      @1IGG Год назад +2

      Or when one person switched on their monitor and all monitors in the row flickered? Or flickering because someone had their mobile next to a monitor and got a call..

    • @warderjack
      @warderjack Год назад

      This would be a good one to add to the list, how big and bulky old monitors were, just to get 1024x768 res

    • @nickforsythe6379
      @nickforsythe6379 Год назад

      Or someone daisy chained their surge protector from yours and the breakers flipped! God I hated when people did that.

    • @Klouhs
      @Klouhs Год назад

      @@1IGG holy throwback. I totally forgot that

  • @MattyIcecubes
    @MattyIcecubes Год назад +4

    Can't believe you left out online passes. Those infernal things that kept you from accessing the online portion of the game without inputting a unique code. If you bought the game used it was pretty much guaranteed that the access code included with it had been redeemed by the original owner, and you had to pay $10 for a new one.

    • @damedusa5107
      @damedusa5107 Год назад

      Battlefield did that to me

    • @MattyIcecubes
      @MattyIcecubes Год назад

      @@damedusa5107 They were the norm from around 2010-2013

  • @thegamingdave5089
    @thegamingdave5089 Год назад +2

    You showed a clip of Radioshack... That brought back so many memories.

  • @idkkkkk69
    @idkkkkk69 Год назад +5

    I still have the cheats written on a sheet of paper for the gta trilogy. It was so much fun back then making whole cheat sheets for different consoles.

  • @michaellanctot7457
    @michaellanctot7457 Год назад

    Loved this video. Every single thing you brought up I remember! A big one for me was in my younger days hoping my mom would be willing to rent a game for me at the video store. As I got older and could drive I would race to the local video store to rent a newly released game. The employees said one time I spent over 500 dollars over the years of renting there lol.

  • @thejackal007
    @thejackal007 Год назад +1

    9:55 Jake... I miss the Computer Show and Sale that came through every few months. I found games and things there that other stores never even heard of. All mostly before the internet, of course, but it felt like such a frontier some days. You never knew what you would find.

  • @juankovacs6033
    @juankovacs6033 Год назад +6

    Not a gamer specific one, but I remember the old mice that had the rolls and that ball in the middle. You had to open them and clean the rolls from time to time. Or trying to play games online and your mum shouting you to disconnect bc she wanted to use the phone.
    We are old, man.

    • @1IGG
      @1IGG Год назад +2

      I absolutely do not miss those shitty mice.

    • @pandalune
      @pandalune Год назад

      I had the opposite: I wanted to go online (whether it was for games or just simply to check email!) but my brother would always hog up the phone.

    • @wolfstarchaser
      @wolfstarchaser Год назад +1

      It was my ex, not my parents, to whom I had to try to explain that you can't pause an online game. I'd have had better luck talking to the dogs.

    • @cmdr.jabozerstorer3968
      @cmdr.jabozerstorer3968 Год назад

      Ah, the fun of having dialup back then.

  • @hapwn
    @hapwn Год назад +37

    10 years from now you're going to wish you had hard copies of your media, if you're not already.

    • @ParsleyBass
      @ParsleyBass Год назад +5

      Still have my O.G. copy of GTA V for PC on 7 DVDs

    • @Unicorn1231997
      @Unicorn1231997 Год назад +2

      Lol people have been saying that for many years y’all are just a bit dramatic about that stuff

    • @Lamasis2
      @Lamasis2 Год назад +3

      There is enough evidence that shows that they aren't.

    • @drgonzo123
      @drgonzo123 Год назад

      It’s great for collectors but everything is going all digital and there is no going back.

    • @WhyHighC
      @WhyHighC Год назад

      Not if emulators have anything to say about it

  • @albyx
    @albyx Год назад +1

    Two things: for no.5, my wife shared with me that they used to have to call a phone line where game tips helped you get through certain levels. And with no.2, I remember my mother taking out a credit card so we could get a fully decked out PC in 1998 (she bought us a $5K computer that came with speakers, monitor, etc).

  • @thothtahuti5509
    @thothtahuti5509 Год назад

    This video takes me back... I feel old :/
    Great video! :)

  • @sugreev2001
    @sugreev2001 Год назад +3

    The biggest current pain in the ass has to be to install the game in a console before you can play. Best thing about the pre-PS3 generations was that you just had to put the disc in or just put the cartridge on to immediately begin playing the game, and you never needed to worry about filling up your hard drives.

  • @cmdr.jabozerstorer3968
    @cmdr.jabozerstorer3968 Год назад +3

    One of other things you never see now (as far as I'm aware) is consoles rigged up in some retail outlets. Here in the UK Argos was such an example. They had N64s rigged up mostly with Mario 64, Golden Eye and Star Fox. Me and my College mate used to go down there at lunchtimes and play on them. You couldn't save your progress but it was still fun, especially on Co-Op, on Star Fox.
    I also remember another store had a PC in it with Theme Park installed and I used to pop in and play that for a bit too.

    • @danieln6700
      @danieln6700 Год назад

      Yeah I remember seeing consoles in these cabinets so u could play a demo or try a game etc. Was cool

  • @scallywagkirby.
    @scallywagkirby. Год назад

    Thanks for this video guys. My fiancé pointed out that this one made me visibly emotional. Life was so easy and enjoyable back then. I miss my friends, how we would talk about everything in the game we did the next day and it’s like nowadays I’ll just stare at the menu screen for 30 min before I’m so lonely I just go to bed. It was nice to remember a lot of these things

  • @w40k
    @w40k Год назад +2

    Great list. I don't know if it's still a thing but when you wanted to play with friends you either had a console with multiple controler and 1 tv which split screen, or you had to do Lan-Partys (Like with the first Counter Strike or Diablo 1) since there was no real internet like we know today :)

  • @dubbmoon
    @dubbmoon Год назад +6

    Definitely gotta do a part 2 for this.

    • @gameranxTV
      @gameranxTV  Год назад +3

      Will do

    • @dubbmoon
      @dubbmoon Год назад

      @@gameranxTV dope 👌 🙌 can't wait.

    • @pimphandduke8447
      @pimphandduke8447 Год назад

      @@gameranxTV Tank Controls in survival horror games. Is that even still a thing?

  • @thegameplayer125
    @thegameplayer125 Год назад +19

    although the sad thing about #3 is that we do have the advantage of being able to get glitches fixed unlike the past, we now have the disadvantage of companies releasing the games prematurely at subpar quality knowing they'll just patch it later. quite an interesting double edged sword really

    • @Joreel
      @Joreel Год назад +1

      This is definitely one of those things that has gotten worse.

    • @1IGG
      @1IGG Год назад

      Not necessarily. In the past we had to wait years and years for releases. Just wait 1 year after release today and you get a much cheaper and better game. Often with DLC on top for no extra charge.

    • @pimphandduke8447
      @pimphandduke8447 Год назад

      @@1IGG True, but it also opened the doors for such trash mechanics as loot boxes and NFTs instead of worthwhile content.

  • @rodrigoperez5073
    @rodrigoperez5073 Год назад

    About the guides, I remember I had a physical guide for Kingdom Hearts 1 and 2, and I remember looking at it constantly because I had missed a chest and I wanted to get them all. I don't think I would've been able to do it without those guides as a kid

  • @kyleshina3676
    @kyleshina3676 Год назад +1

    That RuneScape start up music always got me in trouble back in the day!

  • @ProjSHiNKiROU
    @ProjSHiNKiROU Год назад +5

    On games being finished on release: Programming languages and game dev tools are easier to use today than the past so it’s very hard to cause data corruption, but AA/AAA games today are much more complex than games made in the past and QA on the gameplay is much harder to get right than before.

  • @rottengalaxy
    @rottengalaxy Год назад +8

    The thing I liked about switching disk was the intentional story beats built around it.

  • @JimTheFly
    @JimTheFly Год назад +1

    I remember picking up a second hard drive that was ~1 GB so I could store EVERYTHING on it. It was 1080 MB and it cost just over $500. I can now walk down to the Walmart here in town in less than 30 minutes and pick up a 64 GB thumbdrive for $9. I love looking at at things like that sometimes.

  • @alexfarrell3250
    @alexfarrell3250 Год назад +1

    FF13 having 3 discs on the 360 was a weird nostalgia trip. Also I'm very surprised to see a cheatcc mention. Seemed like a far less known guide/cheat site from the early 2000's

  • @dio_Brando1888
    @dio_Brando1888 Год назад +6

    Oh those are the good old day. With playground rumors and stuff like that I remember I had a friend who was playing my pokémon game and use the master ball on a level 5 pokémon on the first route. I was mad as hell.

  • @igitaq
    @igitaq Год назад +3

    One of the painful things about multi disc games was letting a friend borrow the game. Then finding out after they returned it and moved out of state that the third Final Fantasy disc was instead Crash Bandicoot and you would never be able to finish the game again.

  • @stefanlagrange188
    @stefanlagrange188 Год назад +1

    The trade show was definitely a big thing when I was younger. I still remember purchasing a 386 CPU at one, in order to upgrade my old 286. We played a lot of Wolfenstein, Doom and Space Quest in those days.

  • @ninjafruitchilled
    @ninjafruitchilled Год назад +1

    The multi-disc thing was basically like having distinct chapters, which is cool! I've seen a couple of modern games do it and it's still cool imo. Sword and Sworcery was the last ones I played that did it, and those fades back to a title/chapter screen with some Jim Guthrie music blasting away were epic.
    And the fixed camera angles, yeah I think they need to come back! Or not necessarily fixed, but more scripted, curated camera angles. There is a lot of artistic benefit to them that is being neglected in modern games. I mean there is a reason why movies and TV don't just constantly show an over the shoulder or first person view of all their characters.

  • @davey2487
    @davey2487 Год назад +6

    Regarding #6, technically some games still have multiple discs. RDR2, for example, came with two discs. Luckily the first one was only needed during the installment process and after that you only ever needed the second disc. However, I did regularly insert the wrong disc, because I didn't pay attention to which disc I took from the box.

  • @EmberStudios
    @EmberStudios Год назад +3

    Man, you touched on so much nostalgia for me. I miss those trade shows. Back when tech was more tinkering and figuring it out where as now it's a part swap. I forgot about the proprietary memory card slots. And man I've waited in so many lines for games. How about the way we would get our game “demos” from blockbuster 😂🤣

  • @Ad-jl7si
    @Ad-jl7si Год назад +2

    My mother is a huge Zelda fan and I remember her constantly calling the Nintendo hotline for tips and cheats for the first two games. Now in her 60's she has 100% BOTW and is awaiting the next instalment.

  • @HP_Plays2010
    @HP_Plays2010 Год назад +1

    The Game Cube and Xbox are the reasons I still press the volume button to turn the volume all the way down to this day. Those start up menus got me in trouble quite a few times in the early hours of the morning.

  • @mysterymayhem7020
    @mysterymayhem7020 Год назад +7

    I remember the joy of playing the legend of zelda on the NES and being completely floored that you could save your progress because the cartridge had an on board battery to keep the memory on board active.

    • @gameranxTV
      @gameranxTV  Год назад +3

      👆🏻

    • @tomekvilmovskiy6547
      @tomekvilmovskiy6547 Год назад +1

      some games on SEGA had it too.
      the problem is often (50/50 in my cases) on not-so-original cartridges there was no memory chip at all. Even if it was, no fact it'd work.
      also one time the battery failed and I lost a month of progress.

    • @darthwiizius
      @darthwiizius Год назад

      @@tomekvilmovskiy6547
      On N64 it was typically first party games that had on cart saves and 3rd party carts that didn't.

  • @teedotfoster
    @teedotfoster Год назад +4

    There was something cool standing in line with a bunch of people who loved Madden like you do

  • @ditobear
    @ditobear Год назад

    those old school guides is amazing man....... GameFAQs is forever hero for me

  • @RL_Koi
    @RL_Koi Год назад

    It’s been years since I’ve seen a gameranx video. You guys made my childhood, expanded my view on entertainment

  • @nartnayr
    @nartnayr Год назад +4

    Number 7 really had me there. The last real big game release that I had to wait in line for was Red Dead Redemption 2. All of us were standing in the bitter cold, soaking in the rain. Definitely felt nostalgic.

    • @lolmanyeah1
      @lolmanyeah1 Год назад

      Hate to break it to you, but you didn't have to wait in line for that one. It was released well after the point in time he was talking about. Real halo 2 og's know.

    • @nartnayr
      @nartnayr Год назад

      @@lolmanyeah1 I didnt own a PS4 at the time so it was a bundle at purchase. Im fine with taking my time with things. Was definitely an experience nonetheless.

  • @NachoManRandySandwich
    @NachoManRandySandwich Год назад +2

    I remember having a ZX Spectrum back in the 80's that loaded game's by cassette tape. You might have to wait 30 to 40 minutes for the game to load only to have it fail and repeat the process over again often multiple times. Some days you couldn't get it to load at all, usually the times when you had friends or relatives over that you were trying to impress 😂

    • @akaken23
      @akaken23 Год назад +1

      Load""code

    • @wannabikkit
      @wannabikkit Год назад +1

      The Spectrum and the ZX81 were my family's first home computers. I don't miss cassette tapes at all! I much prefer being able to play games installed on my laptop's ssd. 😆

    • @carn9507
      @carn9507 Год назад +1

      I had (still have) an Amstrad CPC 464 which had a built in tape deck which was generally more reliable but yeah its 5 to 10 mins or so for each tape. And some of the old tapes don't work anymore (cos 40 years old). You can get cool lil devices these days to use SD cards on your old 8 bit computer and load the games instantly if you want to have the authentic experience of the real hardware but not the time it took to load each game off a real cassette (cos we're getting old and don't have that time to waste anymore :P )

  • @TyReeL7
    @TyReeL7 Год назад

    You gave me full blown nostalgia, I used to have a green cheat code book that kept everything sorted by name and console

  • @heckpeanuts
    @heckpeanuts Год назад

    Y'all really bringing me back with the volume and the wires thing lmao

  • @adamssp
    @adamssp Год назад +2

    I feel like I miss number 7 for that feeling and excitement. Something about getting something physical was a treat. Wether or not it was a long wait etc.

  • @zenkim6709
    @zenkim6709 Год назад +8

    Having to troubleshoot a variety of hardware / software issues when installing PC games for DOS / Windows on my own systems taught me a lot
    ...such as how to optimize conventional memory usage (best I ever got was 604K free), how to (re)configure sound card settings (which became even more fun w/ each sound card upgrade), how to resolve IRQ & other system resource conflicts (which got increasingly frequent as I got further & further into video card & other component upgrades) among other issues.
    I think the craziest thing I had to troubleshoot was a new CD-ROM drive upgrade -- as soon as I installed the thing, the PC refused to boot up. Turns out, screwing in the mounting screws caused the entire system to "short to ground" ... so I had to go out & buy non-conducting nylon screw replacements to get everything working again. Oh, the myriad delights we had back then!

    • @cmdr.jabozerstorer3968
      @cmdr.jabozerstorer3968 Год назад +1

      Ah yes, Extended Memory in DOS games. Fun times. I also remember adjusting swap file size to get games to run too.

  • @robertmclendon2702
    @robertmclendon2702 Год назад +1

    I remember my dad used to impulsively turn off every light switch when I was a kid even if the light was off. The socket that my tv and SNES were on were controlled by the light switch next to my door and he’d be walking by and flip it off every time he passed my room. Days of progress on games like Super Star Wars gone instantly with me actively playing it

  • @IceBlokee
    @IceBlokee Год назад +1

    another example is having to make game specific boot discs for MS-DOS to make certain games work to maximise the available ram to make the game run smoothly, i recall wing commander IV giving me a few headaches when it first released on DOS, removing none-essential TSR apps and drivers from the boot up config files.

  • @Smilifacetf
    @Smilifacetf Год назад +5

    I definitely feel that memory card issue. I had a PS2 with no memory card and I would always play Jak and Daxter from the beginning and try to beat it all in one sitting each time 😂 ...I would always make it up to the mine section in Jak and Daxter before I would fall asleep and my dad would turn off the PS2 while I was sleeping. I finally beat the whole game when they released the collection.

    • @Ad-jl7si
      @Ad-jl7si Год назад +1

      Also, nothing worse than loading up a game and being told that the game had not saved, etc, or the memory card was corrupted.....

  • @WisdomofTheStar
    @WisdomofTheStar Год назад +7

    Leaving the ps2 on because you didn't have a memory card, oh its first on the list lmao, gameranx knows

  • @crazyeyez1502
    @crazyeyez1502 Год назад +1

    Right in the feels, dude.... 😢
    I'm in my 40s, and this hurts. Memory cards... multiple disks ( FF7), and CheatCC... Spent alot of time on CCC looking up stuff. That and paper guide books, both game specific ones or the large collection books. And, least we forget Game Genie and Game Shark.

  • @medafan53
    @medafan53 Год назад +1

    I miss strategy guides. I still use my Watch Dogs 2 strategy guide... mostly as a mouse mat true, but when I replay the game, which is fairly often, I use it to find all the cash and research points

  • @Its_Paji
    @Its_Paji Год назад +6

    I remember when the Xbox 360 and PS3 came out that you could turn the consoles on and off while using the controller. This was a true game changer lol

  • @philboyg
    @philboyg Год назад +3

    Lol i still mute the tv before firing up the xbox at 6am so my wife doesnt wake up...im 40😂

  • @Hoptockets
    @Hoptockets Год назад

    I relate to #2 the most because the Tiger Direct you shared in the video is the one i used to shop at LMAO. It's a K&G now.

  • @paranoidandroid___1248
    @paranoidandroid___1248 Год назад +1

    Waiting in line for day one releases. Fun story. My buddy from way back when worked for Wal-Mart, and when the PS3 and Wii launched within a week of each other he knew how many consoles the store was getting, and when people were allowed to start lining up for them. This location did not let people line up inside the store so in the middle of November we had to sit outside camped in a tent two separate days for both consoles, but we were first in line both times. 6 people got a PS3, and 25 got a Wii. All of us had to wait on the sidewalk for over 24 hours. The worst part was nobody delivered food from an App back then so we took turns calling friends to get shitty gas station food for us cause the town we lived in was nowhere near civilization. I also remember saving up 2 weeks vacation, and 8 personal days just for these console releases. Easily the best day one releases that'll stick in my memory forever.

  • @princerudra1443
    @princerudra1443 Год назад +4

    1:18 which game ?

  • @Milocinia
    @Milocinia Год назад +3

    I guess you guys are too young to remember the tip lines in the back of the instruction booklets. I remember those being a thing before even the FAQ guides.

    • @redeyeknight1660
      @redeyeknight1660 Год назад +1

      I miss that... I rented a copy of MGS2 from Blockbusters and the guy working there typed up his own instructions on the back. No booklet but what a legend

    • @Milocinia
      @Milocinia Год назад +2

      @@redeyeknight1660 Those days when gamers were a small niche group. lol

    • @redeyeknight1660
      @redeyeknight1660 Год назад +1

      @@Milocinia Exactly. That one lad from a small town managed to write his own guide on one page, just from playing the game himself

  • @hazimreitz
    @hazimreitz Год назад

    You making this video, makes me feel something. So... Thanks 😘

  • @pilo754
    @pilo754 Год назад +1

    On the part of cheat books and guides. Sometimes your friend would only give you the book for a few hours or days so you had to spend hours on end to write down the cheats in an exercise book.

  • @macdonaldchaboka6117
    @macdonaldchaboka6117 Год назад +5

    The memory card issues were big back in the days , i never could find a ps1 memory card back in Africa during the early 2000s,matter of fact I've never seen a ps1 memory card to this day. At least the ps2 memory cards were less rare but were sold at high prices

  • @arefrigerator396
    @arefrigerator396 Год назад +2

    I still use GAME FAQs. Lol.

  • @danieln6700
    @danieln6700 Год назад +1

    Ps1 startup sound was legendary. So many old games were hard with bad camera angles.

  • @SirBloopious
    @SirBloopious Год назад

    One that I think is underappreciated. The fact that online gaming has taken away the worry to a lot of people of having other people to play your favourite game with

  • @user-zq9kd2pn9m
    @user-zq9kd2pn9m Год назад +9

    I remember switching discs was a huge deal when playing FF7, 8 and 9. It was like a mark of pride to be able to get to the next one after hours of playing.

    • @gameranxTV
      @gameranxTV  Год назад

      👆🏻

    • @tomekvilmovskiy6547
      @tomekvilmovskiy6547 Год назад

      I remember "Driver 2", the same thing: you had to have a skill to beat half of the game to continue on disc 2.
      The bad point: if a game freezes on Disc 2, you have to reset the console, install Disc 1, load the main menu, choose to load the save, then install Disc 2 again. And it freezed just A LOT. I changed discs like 30 times in a session. )

  • @PrinceIsot
    @PrinceIsot Год назад +4

    My cousin gave me a memory card with his PS2 so I was hooked up from the get and my first console was the first Xbox....which we should really be able to call the Xbox one 😤 Microsoft naming scheme is dog shit

  • @Mrkitterman
    @Mrkitterman Год назад +65

    The New GEN Gamers have no idea how real the struggle really was in our generation 😫 ! I'm an 80s baby but but a 90s kid and man how I love the nostalgia tho! Because these lists are spot on 100% haha man how I miss the 90s tho! Game shark & I miss my games gear magazine I used to get. That's how we found out about games coming out or with the demo disc in another game/magazine.

    • @gameranxTV
      @gameranxTV  Год назад +9

      🤝😅

    • @NDFAnonymous-zf9gm
      @NDFAnonymous-zf9gm Год назад +6

      True tho

    • @BrandonGavin_EDC
      @BrandonGavin_EDC Год назад +7

      Me too I’d go back to the 80’s and 90’s today if I could.

    • @Mrkitterman
      @Mrkitterman Год назад +1

      @@BrandonGavin_EDC OH absolutely 💯

    • @teedotfoster
      @teedotfoster Год назад +2

      Me too lol we’ve been apart of every one of these changes. Crazy to look back on it!

  • @painful-Jay
    @painful-Jay Год назад

    1:06 I did that all the time. I remember pausing Mario 3 near bowser after going through every level, no warp whistles, and I came back and the nes was doing that weird flashing on and off light.

  • @grampaeddie
    @grampaeddie Год назад

    The cable management became a transferable skill for me at work lol rolling up controller cables so that they would still be usable and not look like a telephone cord with something I would do constantly. Now I do it with power cables for laptops at work.

  • @no-hw8db
    @no-hw8db Год назад +3

    i

  • @cataorshane
    @cataorshane Год назад +5

    To add to the list, it's reviews. Back in the day it was almost a gamble to buy a game. Nowadays with so many reviews available online, I'm more confident in the games I purchase and quite rarely feel like I'm taking a shot in the dark. Back in the day unless it was Pokémon or any other big popular franchise, I'd pick based on the how "cool" the cover looked because that's all I could realistically base my decision on.

    • @Kasper0822
      @Kasper0822 Год назад

      I can relate. Usually when i decided to get a game i had no idea what it's gonna be. CD cover was my only guidance.

  • @Lookitsalfred
    @Lookitsalfred Год назад +1

    Oh man the loud PS2 start up nose just gave me flashbacks lol. I used to turn the volume off until the sound was done and then turn the volume up to like 3 😂

  • @thomasscott6252
    @thomasscott6252 Год назад

    I remember having a ton of trouble getting C&C Red Alert working on my crappy 90s Era pc. I think it had something to do with the sound card. But yea troubleshooting problems back then was so much more difficult than it is today.