Games That Push the Limits of the Super NES

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 3 авг 2024
  • The Super NES, Nintendo's souped up super successor to the NES. In this pushing the limits video I'm going searching through Nintendo's dustiest attics to haul down some lesser known games that push it to the limits. Just to add a bit of spice I'm leaving out the enhancement chips too, it's all running on the stock hardware.
    Support me on Patreon
    / sharopolis
    Game Sack - Games that Push Hardware Limits - Including SNES Mode 7
    • Games that Push Hardwa...
    00:00 Intro Waffle
    00:49 Choujikuu Yousai Macross: Scrambled Valkyrie
    04:25 On The Ball
    07:53 Tommy Moe's Winter Extreme
    11:24 Jurassic Park
    16:00 Rendering Ranger R2
    21:00 Ending Waffle
    Music Used
    Chicago - Joe Bagale
    Empire Seasons - Dan Henig
    Far Apart - Causmic
    In The Atomosphere - Bad Snacks
    Space Navigator - Sarah The Instrumentalist
    Color Of Your Face - NoMBe
    Back To The Future - NOMBe
  • ИгрыИгры

Комментарии • 602

  • @ElBloeTigre
    @ElBloeTigre 3 года назад +133

    I came into this video blind expecting a few gratuitous shots some of famous SNES games but this is a really in-depth, considered, insightful and thoughtful video.

  • @Larry
    @Larry 3 года назад +275

    If you ever do a follow up to this, Another World deserves a mention, A Super FX game designed to run on a 16 meg cart, which amazingly runs on an 8 meg cart without a Super FX chip thanks to an amazing programmer because the publisher was too tight to pay for additional hardware.

    • @JesusSaves86AB
      @JesusSaves86AB 3 года назад +32

      Developers that demand the best product for minimal investment then blame staff for missing the target.
      I'd sooner buy a well done 8 or 16bit game than anything with modern graphics

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад +54

      That one I probably would have slipped in if I'd have known about it, I didn't realise there was a SNES port, next time definitely! Thanks Larry!

    • @braschlosan
      @braschlosan 3 года назад +13

      This sounds like a juicy story with great technical accomplishments. I bet there's a couple more games with similar stories and it could be a video about programming successes despite the employers sabotaging the project.

    • @StanislaoMoulinsky79
      @StanislaoMoulinsky79 3 года назад +7

      For infos straight off the horse's mouth:
      ruclips.net/video/tiq0OL8rzso/видео.html

    • @kylebennett4196
      @kylebennett4196 3 года назад +4

      Incredible game, even beyond just its era

  • @AlbionVega
    @AlbionVega 3 года назад +50

    Woooow, Scrambled Valkyrie, one of my favorite jp-only games. You sir are truly a scholar and a gentleman.

  • @andrewnorris5415
    @andrewnorris5415 3 года назад +43

    I started coding a 3d SNES demo for a software company I worked for in the 90s. They were impressed and I ended up getting the first PS1 dev kit that came in. This was one of the very first kits in the UK. Had to get to grips with C after using assembly and BASIC for years! Was a fun time.

    • @Jamie-yp7qz
      @Jamie-yp7qz 3 года назад +2

      Oh nice! Do you still have the demo?

    • @pavy415
      @pavy415 3 года назад

      Where is the demo show it off plz

    • @user-cc9pu2nv1y
      @user-cc9pu2nv1y 7 месяцев назад

      Kit snes no existe?

  • @solarflare9078
    @solarflare9078 3 года назад +22

    I just knew Rendering Ranger R2 would be in this video, and that's no big deal. It pushed a ton of action on the system (especially the shoot em up sections) with no hint of slowdown at all!

    • @3xperiment8
      @3xperiment8 2 года назад +3

      Same for Space Megaforce

  • @stevegundaker
    @stevegundaker 3 года назад +20

    This was more like a mini documentary. Thanks for all the content! Never even knew upgrades were possible for the SNES.

  • @youisiaint
    @youisiaint 3 года назад +10

    Super Turrican 2 and Yoshi's Island were some of the most graphically impressive 16 bit games ever

  • @IanSlinger
    @IanSlinger 3 года назад +25

    I just want to thank you for using the phrase "needs no introduction" and not immediately providing one anyway like most people do.

  • @miaouew
    @miaouew 3 года назад +46

    Macross SV and Rendering Ranger2 really do make the SNES look like a 32 bit system.

    • @user-cc9pu2nv1y
      @user-cc9pu2nv1y 7 месяцев назад

      Secret of mana 3.star ocean
      Tales of phantasy.treasure rundran

    • @Unicoseti
      @Unicoseti 5 дней назад

      No no 16bit on steroids

  • @RDJ134
    @RDJ134 3 года назад +39

    Never heard of Rendering Ranger R2 . Definitly going to check the ROM's of them. Thank you for the tips.
    Also great video.

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад +5

      It's a great game if you like a challenge!

    • @RDJ134
      @RDJ134 3 года назад +1

      @@Sharopolis Always up for a good challenge :)

    • @mrhaftbar
      @mrhaftbar 3 года назад +2

      It's tough. Good luck

  • @BokanoiD
    @BokanoiD 3 года назад +9

    As a fan of the Turrican series, thanks for the heads-up on Rendering Ranger! Looks like my weekend sorted.

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад +2

      No everyone seem to like it, but if you're a Turrican fan you'll probably enjoy it. Have Fun!

  • @nastybedazzler
    @nastybedazzler 3 года назад +41

    That Rendering Ranger R2 game looked insane. Shame I didn't get to play that as a kid that would've blown my mind.

    • @Rodzilla97
      @Rodzilla97 2 года назад +5

      and there is 0 slowdown whatsoever, even using game genie & filling the screen as much as you can(testing it for slowdown anywhere), it will never slowdown. level 7 is crazy at it's most busy moments

    • @matrixman7706
      @matrixman7706 Год назад +2

      @@Rodzilla97 I think the SNES CPU, when programmed right, could easily rival the genesis CPU.

  • @verficationaccount
    @verficationaccount 3 года назад +34

    Great explanation of the effect in Jurassic Park!

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад +1

      Thanks!

    • @JB_inks
      @JB_inks 3 года назад

      @@Sharopolis I'm not sure I fully understood it, I think I need to watch it again

    • @PrsnllJebus
      @PrsnllJebus 3 года назад +3

      That was my favorite snes game, I came to call it get your ass kicked park. Also it took me about 12 years to beat it >.> I kept falling into the walls in the raptor nest.

  • @sternpio
    @sternpio 2 года назад +4

    Manfred Trenz a genius:
    pushed the c64 to its limits with *Turrican 2*
    pushed the SNES to its limits with *Rendering Ranger R2*

  • @wfjhDUI
    @wfjhDUI 3 года назад +37

    0:33 The possibility of including enhancement chips is such an interesting feature that we've lost with the move away from cartridges.

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro 3 года назад +14

      Yes, but at the same time it's inefficient to have multiple of the same hardware for different games. It just hides it from the consumer (but not from the consumer's wallet).

    • @retropolis1
      @retropolis1 3 года назад +8

      @@bangerbangerbro most enhancement chips did not alter the retail price. In Europe, for instance, Nintendo created three price classes that everybody had to stick to. One for Nintendo inhouse games, one for typical 3rd party games and one for games with a great amount of memory. Most games with enhancement chips were sold in category 2 or 3. Of course, some games were still sold for higher prices, but that was a decision of greedy retailers and had nothing to do with Nintendos price policy.

    • @jSyndeoMusic
      @jSyndeoMusic 2 года назад +1

      I was wondering today why N64 games never used them (that I can recall at least). Was it due to the intended move to 64DD and the R&D involved there? (By contrast, Sony was the one doing most of the work on the SNES Play Station upgrade, not Nintendo, so maybe that’s why?)

    • @inlovewithi
      @inlovewithi 2 года назад

      I was really excited for the Switch and the possibility of enhancement chips, and the overall benefits of cartridges. Unfortunately the game cards are more akin to CDs. And you also can't have enhancement chips on games purchased for download.

    • @jendorei
      @jendorei 2 года назад +1

      @@jSyndeoMusic N64 did get the Memory Pak. I’m guessing that slot was designed to be used instead of expansion chips

  • @waynecuff3140
    @waynecuff3140 3 года назад +4

    Scrambled Valkyrie, totally stunning. Love the Snes, my favourite console ever always will be. The way it manipulated sprites with mode 7 was a genius design. Still looks amazing today.

  • @daftcruz
    @daftcruz 3 года назад +6

    Please do a part 2, this video is very good.
    Though there's a lot of games missing.
    Seiken Densetsu 3, Gundam Wing Endless Duel, Iron Commando, Front Mission Gun Hazard, Rockman & Forte...there's plenty of overlooked or underrated games that pushed the SNES/SFC to its limits.

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад

      Yep, I really enjoyed making this so there will be more to come, thanks for the tips!

    • @Halbared
      @Halbared 3 года назад

      @@Sharopolis excellente!

  • @MrYazbo
    @MrYazbo 4 месяца назад +1

    My mate Paul Robinson wrote Jurassic Park on the SNES - blew me away when I saw how good a job he did with the 3d sections.
    He went on to work at Neversoft on some of the Tony Hawks and Guitar Hero games.

  • @enemyofvirtue
    @enemyofvirtue 2 года назад +5

    this was my first time being to rendering ranger, and i've never been in such awe of a snes game before. great video!

  • @BatLB
    @BatLB 3 года назад +4

    This Winter Sports Game looks amazing. Never seen it before - The Devs deserve kudos for using the SNES so gracefully!

    • @AmariMarvelous
      @AmariMarvelous Год назад +1

      It looks like an early PS1 game.

    • @BatLB
      @BatLB Год назад

      @@AmariMarvelous i would even claim the snowboarding in FF7 looked worse.

  • @jackcullen69
    @jackcullen69 3 года назад +5

    Loving the technical explanations. I don't have a technical background so the explanations helped me appreciate the main points better. Good stuff

  • @dreamcastfan
    @dreamcastfan 3 года назад +6

    I’ve always felt the lava boss in Axelay was one of the greatest spectacles the Super NES could produce. Amusingly, if I use the save states on my SD2SNES cart on one of Axelay’s Mode 7 levels it does deactivate the scaling and just has the background scrolling like a normal vertical shooter!

    • @mariowario5945
      @mariowario5945 3 года назад +7

      axelay isnt even pushing the limits of the snes. Its programmed in slowrom, so the cpu is far from being pushed at all.

    • @MaxwelThuThu
      @MaxwelThuThu 3 года назад +6

      Also, the vertical stages in Axelay doesn't uses Mode 7, it's a HDMA trick by removing lines, making the background squish in size.
      But Mode 7 still being used in the game for another things, like the clouds in the opening cutscene, the level 2 boss with the rotating head and the ending cutscene.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 2 года назад +3

      Looks like something off of a arcade or 32-bit system.

  • @shifty2755
    @shifty2755 3 года назад +13

    Greatest console of all time.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 2 года назад

      I feel like it's underrated due to critics by to comparison to other 16-bit systems (genesis) and using special chips in their games. Even though is difficult to program than the genesis, pce x68k, amiga and ect. With the right developer you can pull off amazing games especially ones that look like 32-bit games. Snes and the GameCube are my favorite Nintendo consoles of all times. Including the portable console like gba, ds and switch.

  • @JulienBertozzi
    @JulienBertozzi 3 года назад +5

    Thanks! I love that you go a bit into details about the tricks used

  • @7sshare
    @7sshare 3 года назад +1

    This is a fantastic video, you do a really great job explaining the technical aspects of these games. These sorts of videos rarely get into the finer technical points as well as this one.

  • @matrixman7706
    @matrixman7706 Год назад +3

    A lot of these games run pretty fast, and there are lots of sprites on the screen with very little to no slow down. So this makes me believe that the Super NES had a very fast and capable CPU when programmed right.

  • @TheRaven078
    @TheRaven078 3 года назад +14

    I'll never forget Jurassic Park on the SNES, the night I rented it in 1993 my grandmother died.

    • @ezehogan
      @ezehogan 3 года назад +3

      That sucks. My grandmother died 13 years ago. Still hands down the worst day of my life.

    • @DB-bc1tg
      @DB-bc1tg 3 года назад

      My grandpa died the day I rented Yoshi’s Island, and the pause screen remained on the TV the whole night as family streamed in to mourn.

  • @Peter_Morris
    @Peter_Morris 3 года назад +3

    Holy cow that Scrambled Valkyrie looks awesome!
    Thanks, HG.
    I remember checking out Rendering Ranger when the SNES emulators first dropped and being blown away. We really missed out on that gem.

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro 3 года назад +1

      Especially weird considering it is done by a European.

  • @peterbudziszewski
    @peterbudziszewski 3 года назад +1

    Really enjoying the increasing level of technical details that your limit pushing videos are including.
    I'm an old school demo coder so I know most of these tricks but I've still learnt a few things.

  • @tomkrawec
    @tomkrawec 3 года назад +16

    Seeing the broken Mode 7 on F-Zero at the end is oddly endearing.

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад +1

      Yeah it's a shame it's so unplayable!

    • @CarlintVeld
      @CarlintVeld 3 года назад +1

      @@Sharopolis do you have a pointer to a website where I can learn more about hacking into snes games myself? Impressive you were able to switch off mode 7!

    • @demgreens
      @demgreens 2 года назад

      SNES9x used to have this feature up until the early 2000's. You could disable all HDMA which would break the perspective in F-Zero and other games that use the effect.

  • @Longlostpuss
    @Longlostpuss 3 года назад +2

    How dare they hide that Rendering Ranger R2 game from me for all these years, it looks absolutely stunning, you'd be forgiven for thinking it was a 32-BIT platform shooter.
    Can't believe it's running without an additional chip and looking like that.

  • @timpieper5492
    @timpieper5492 3 года назад +3

    Very well done and informative. Glad to see only obscure titles and games w/o extra chips in the cartridges.

  • @samueljansen6372
    @samueljansen6372 3 года назад

    I found myself thinking about your channel when I was at work earlier and then I see this video up. It’s great how you provide such technical detail on how these games pull it off. Keep it up

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад +1

      Thank you! I'm trying my best to keep it coming!

  • @RetroMoments
    @RetroMoments 3 года назад +8

    Great list and you're good at delivering information.
    The Macross game is absolutely fantastic! I recently played it and also put it in my own list "10 amazing Super Famicom games you need to play!"

    • @RetroMoments
      @RetroMoments 3 года назад

      @Grizzly Poota Well I want to highlight that the game is that good, coming from another source. I want more people to know its worth checking out!

  • @fungo6631
    @fungo6631 2 года назад +2

    Somewhat ironically, if you want the most speed out of the SNES CPU, limiting yourself to the 8 bit mode wherever possible is the way to go. That's because it saves cycles, which you want to save to compete with the 68K, which is certainly possible, given how on the 6502 some instructions eat 2 cycles, while on the 68k they eat at least 4. That's if you don't perform operations on memory, in which case the cycle count can balloon pretty high.

  • @arcadely
    @arcadely 3 года назад +4

    Great video: clearly I'm going to have to emulate some of these. Rendering Ranger R2, in particular, looks absolutely incredible.

  • @DMMDestroyer
    @DMMDestroyer 2 года назад +1

    16:00 was completely blown away that this was on stock hardware and never heard of it before. Whoever was harsh on the reviews, had no idea how incredible this game was made.

  • @willrobinson7599
    @willrobinson7599 3 года назад

    Brilliant how u went into how the effects were done. Very interesting and enjoyable video. Keep them coming

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад

      Thank you very much! More on it's way!

  • @mattwilson174
    @mattwilson174 4 месяца назад

    Glad you covered Jurassic Park. I was super impressed by the 1st person sequences back then and even seeing it now I think they did an amazing job considering.

  • @SomeGuy712x
    @SomeGuy712x 3 года назад +5

    I'm definitely familiar with On the Ball, having rented it long in the past. Also, Cameltry is on Taito Collection 2 (which I have on the PS2), so that was certainly nice to see, immediately bringing back my memories of On the Ball.

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro 3 года назад

      I've only known cameltry from the Taito collections in PS2 and PSP. Consequently I have never heard of it being called "on the ball".

  • @mode7scaling3
    @mode7scaling3 2 года назад +1

    19:00 and onward, HOLY GOODNESS...reminds me 100% of the transition parts of RADIANT SILVERGUN on the SEGA SATURN!!! these are unbelievable tricks done on the es nes (pronounced s nes)

  • @PianoMan-hx3ev
    @PianoMan-hx3ev 3 года назад +8

    It’s not so much the size of the processor, but the magic in the coder.

    • @gabrielandy9272
      @gabrielandy9272 3 года назад +1

      yes and no limitations exist i mean we would not have ray tracing graphics or playstation 4 graphics on a snes tho... its just that the better the code the more it can use the hardware its codding but the limitations is still there..

    • @PianoMan-hx3ev
      @PianoMan-hx3ev 2 года назад

      @Lucas. 💯

    • @matrixman7706
      @matrixman7706 Год назад

      @Lucas OMG! Now this is a great post. I always thought the same thing, the SNES processor when programmed right is phenomenal.

    • @LarryLopez91
      @LarryLopez91 Год назад

      @Lucas
      It's because big companies like Capcom made the processor look bad.
      After seeing how games like Rendering Ranger or Space Megaforce run with a bunch of sprites onscreen without much sweat, there's absolutely no excuse for games like Demon's Crest to start chugging with only a handful of sprites onscreen.
      Even Hal Labs is guilty of sloppy performance in games like Kirby Superstar, especially since that game has the SA-1 chip in the cart!

  • @neil12011
    @neil12011 3 года назад +2

    This is an EXCELLENT video. Nerd stats are off the charts, thank you!

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад +1

      Thank you for watching, glad you enjoyed it!

  • @tohur
    @tohur 3 года назад +3

    Ah Jurassic Park one of my favorite snes games. I put hundreds if not thousands of hours into that game

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 2 года назад

      I wish toy story would've added 3D/Mode 7 driving stage as well. It would've been more competitive comparison against the genesis version.

  • @fortnag
    @fortnag 3 года назад +1

    Rendering Rangers is one of the pertiest 16 bit things I've ever seen.

  • @terraspent
    @terraspent 3 года назад

    this really is a great little channel, i feel it is about time for it to expand. there certaily is quality of presentation and content. i wish you well you deserve to thrive and i for one shall share your vids with my retro game enthusiast friends.

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад

      Thanks for your support, I'm glad you've enjoyed my videos!

  • @Eyedunno
    @Eyedunno 3 года назад +1

    The original title of Rendering Ranger R2 was Targa, but the publisher insisted on Rendering Ranger R2 for the Japanese market. Targa did get a small-batch cartridge release years later for collectors, and I believe the ROM is available with Manfred Trenz's blessing. It does have a few small differences from Rendering Ranger R2, but this is mainly just the title screen and the head of the protagonist (he is not wearing a helmet and has a beard).

  • @robinbrowne5419
    @robinbrowne5419 2 года назад

    Great review. Thank you. I think my favourite game on the SNES was Pilot Wings. And my kids too. Back in the early 90s, I remember many an evening that went like this. "Ok kids. Time for bed." "Not fair. We have to go to bed and you get to stay up all night and play Nintendo." Cheers from Canada :-)

  • @Raddland
    @Raddland 3 года назад

    Very well researched and presented. Ace job!

  • @stewsretroreviews
    @stewsretroreviews 3 года назад +1

    That 1st game is stunning, got to look for that one, also the ski game, class, excellent video and detail here mate, cheers

  • @johneymute
    @johneymute 3 года назад +1

    Winter extreme on the snes is a prime example of making good use of it, no boring flat serfaces but nice looking hills,i wisch nintendo did sich thing with mario kart by combining hills & flat serfaces together, that would,ve been really cool, trough.

  • @mrcynicallyred2007
    @mrcynicallyred2007 2 года назад

    I still have Jurrassic Park - what a game!! Visuals and phenomenal sound effects and music.

  • @TNX255
    @TNX255 3 года назад +3

    Love your videos, sense of humor and in this one especially the game picks! I never knew Mr. Trenz had made a Japan-only shooter game of such awesomeness :O
    Perhaps I finally need to invest on that Everdrive I've been dreaming about...

  • @inceptional
    @inceptional 3 года назад +1

    Well now I'm even more impressed with those fps sections of Jurassic Park knowing that they were done using that single Mode 7 background. :-o
    Another cool touch in this game is the fact the normal in-game HUD is running is either pseudo high res mode or full high res mode (it's one of the two), which means it can created the illusion of being semi-transparent just by removing every second line of the images, but because this mode is running in high res, it's less obvious that it's fake transparency that if it was doing the same effect with full size pixels, as it usually is on the Genesis for example.

  • @Hologhoul
    @Hologhoul Год назад

    That skiing game is incredibly real for its time. I've snowboarded many times and watching this evoked feelings of being there, doing it! The FPS one is really impressive, and the one at the end - wow!

  • @MilesPrower1992
    @MilesPrower1992 3 года назад +1

    On the ball? Cool. Let's see the next game.
    Winter Extreme? Alright, Let's watch.
    THAT'S ON THE SNES?

  • @amylee9092
    @amylee9092 3 года назад +1

    Top Gear did the same trick as Tommy Moe's Winter Extreme Skiing and Snowboarding.

  • @blueowl0708
    @blueowl0708 3 года назад

    Nice video, very cool to see different games featured (compared to most showcases).
    Not sure if I could play On the Ball for very long, hurt my eyes just watching your footage!

  • @JohnZyski
    @JohnZyski 3 года назад +3

    I still remember playing On The Ball on Christmas morning.

  • @Optimus6128
    @Optimus6128 3 года назад +3

    13:47 I was thinking about how the draw pixels on wolfenstein3D for SNES from what I heard before, but the technique here was obvious and didn't come to mind then.
    Previously, it was mentioned for wolf3d on SNES that they also used the Mode 7 as a canvas to draw pixels easier, but what I assumed then (because it didn't occur to me and the videos usually don't go in detail) that Mode 7 was used because it's the only mode where the graphics of each tile are in chunky mode (8bpp, 1 byte = 1 pixel) while as I read some docs on SNES dev, most other modes have bitplanes graphics (each bit is in different byte in memory, a nightmare for software rendering just like the Amiga). But my initial thought (which might be not the case in retrospect) was, they setup a 16*16 tile screen for example with no scale (or only scale x2 to double the pixels) and still have to find which tile the pixel they have to draw belongs to (or write specialized column rendering algorithms that skips tiles) which is still a bit of overhead on the CPU but much better than bitplane tiles. But no, your video taught me the obvious I didn't think, you can simply define 8*8 tiles where each pixel of a single tile shares the same color, so if you display these tiles they are bland single colored boxes,. but use the Mode 7 to zoom out by 8x and you effectively map a full single color tile to a pixel. If 128*128 is small, you can zoom out by 4x to have a doubled pixel display. In that case, writing one byte in the linear tile map will be the fastest way to write individual pixels on the screen. Store 256 different colored tiles in your ROM and you have a short of 256 indexed palette for your canvas. So,. that's quite better than what I thought wolfenstein 3D did, and maybe wolf3d also does the same tricks as the jurassic park game (will need to run an emulator and go in some debug mode to verify this, but I am not familiar with SNES development).
    Thanks for clearing up, great video!

  • @dan_loup
    @dan_loup 3 года назад +10

    The HDMA is quite simple to understand in details.
    Basically it runs a "task list" of sorts, like "write to scroll register in line 25, change the palette at line 60" and so forth.
    You just assemble the list, pass it to the HDMA hardware and it will do everything for you without directly bothering the program at all (but stealing a bit of time as you can't run the DMA and the CPU at the same time).
    I think the sega genesis also have a very similar DMA scheme, it's pretty darn cool.

    • @chriskoschik391
      @chriskoschik391 3 года назад +1

      Awesome! Thank you for that!

    • @SerBallister
      @SerBallister 3 года назад +2

      Sounds similar to the Amiga "copper list"

    • @wishusknight3009
      @wishusknight3009 3 года назад +2

      @@SerBallister Except the amiga could run dma and cpu at the same time when you had fast ram.

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro 3 года назад

      So it's like the ANTIC display lists and the copper? I've never heard of the Megadrive having anything similar. It has a "DMA engine" but that's basically just a blitter afaik, though someone will tear me apart by saying that it can't do bit aligned copies and a blitter has to be able to or something like that. I hate things being called "DMA" blah blah blah because while it sounds cool, "Direct memory access" is a pretty generic term that often doesn't seem to have much to do with what is going on.

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro 3 года назад

      @@wishusknight3009 I thought the copper could run without interrupting anything even with just chip RAM?

  • @Halbared
    @Halbared 3 года назад +5

    As a brit, funny to hear you keep saying S-N-E-S instead of snes. :D

  • @andiarrohnds5163
    @andiarrohnds5163 3 года назад +1

    good lord, rendering ranger is HARDCORE AF ... NEVER SEEN IT UNTIL NOW

  • @stuartbrownlee3108
    @stuartbrownlee3108 3 года назад +7

    Finally...you are on patreon. Your tech knowledge of these systems is amazing, and wow...a Manfred Trenz game I never had heard of...featuring some bloke who isn't exactly dressed up as as a proper "Turrrican" bloke...first time I ever played "Turrican" was on the c64. Interestingly enough, both Turrican 1 & 2 were a lot harder to play than they were on the Amiga. Also, Turrican 2 on the c64 had some amazing things going on with the spaceship levels...just seemed a lot more creative than what was in the Amiga version. Eh. Last thing, while on the subject of the c64, the Tim Follin "Ghouls & Ghosts" soundtrack...wow.......how did he do that? He made sounds come out of the sid chip that are beyond my understanding.

    • @ostradiemgi5469
      @ostradiemgi5469 3 года назад

      The C64 got a very capable synth as a soundchip. If you put some effort and CPU cycles into it you can get some amazing sounds out. The intro is a very standout track on the SID. A synthesize masterclass.

  • @Stinger2578
    @Stinger2578 3 года назад +1

    The Tommy Moe game brought to mind Super Off Road: The Baja which might use a similar technique for the tracks.

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад

      Yes I think it does and I nearly used that in the video, but Tommy Moe has a much better frame rate. Super Off Road seems to have more going on though.

  • @xTerrySunderlandx
    @xTerrySunderlandx 2 года назад +1

    renderer ranger is an AMAZING piece of coding, but one of the biggest reasoons the game works so well is because it has 0 (and i mean CERO) artificial inteligence, the enemies simply do not see the main character, all the shooting etc happens randomly and not towards the MC. this liberates a hell lot of procesing.

  • @hualni
    @hualni 3 года назад +1

    The first time I saw pictures of ActRaiser in a Game Magazine, I was blown away. It was an incredible looking game. (Side note, these games came out either at the same time, or a few years after 7th Guest came out. The gap in graphical qualities shows just how far ahead PC gaming was at this time. The gap has narrowed.)

  • @sudicalwig
    @sudicalwig Год назад +1

    Rendering Ranger R2 was insane!! Wow!

  • @amylee9092
    @amylee9092 3 года назад +1

    I'd love Sharopolis to do a classic Game Autopsy on how Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest has smooth scrolling in the water levels. It actually looks like 3D scrolling.

  • @karlhans6678
    @karlhans6678 3 года назад +1

    Rendering Ranger looks like DoomGuy, and there's a map that looks like the city Blade Runner, I like the volley of scud missiles shooting up.

  • @TriforceofShadows
    @TriforceofShadows 3 года назад

    Great video, love all the technical stuff. You have a new subscriber.

  • @MrBillgonzo
    @MrBillgonzo 3 года назад +1

    Nice! I've been wanting someone to make a video like this.

  • @Sintoolkicks
    @Sintoolkicks 6 месяцев назад

    the real impressive genius of Jurassic Park is that elevator music

  • @TrainerCTZ
    @TrainerCTZ 3 года назад +1

    What an amazing an educating video, well done!

  • @FatNorthernBigot
    @FatNorthernBigot 3 года назад +6

    "On the Ball" looks like the bonus level on "Sonic the Hedgehog". Smoother, but I wouldn't pay full wack for it.

    • @Prizrak-hv6qk
      @Prizrak-hv6qk 3 года назад +3

      That's what I thought too. Sonic is definitely more impressive though, simply because the Mega Drive doesn't do any kind of background (or sprite) rotation in hardware. It was quite a sight for its time!

    • @schwarzerritter5724
      @schwarzerritter5724 3 года назад

      It is the same gameplay as the bonus levels from Sonic the Hedgehog 4 Episode 1. Super Nintendo did it first though.

    • @granvillimus
      @granvillimus 3 года назад +1

      @@Prizrak-hv6qk There are also hacks that make the rotation even smoother (by disabling a single line of code IIRC), Sega intentionally capped the rotation framerate very low for some reason. In actuality, the crystal squares that make up the stage are a 16-frame animated sprite that are simply shifted around in patterns to simulate the appearance of rotation. So it's not really "rotating" in the way that mode7 and other similar effects work.

    • @Gambit771
      @Gambit771 3 года назад

      @@granvillimus doesn't matter how it does it only that it did.
      People get so hung up on dedicated hardware when really it is all done through hardware and software on both machines.
      As if sprite rotation must have dedicated hardware.

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro 3 года назад

      @@Gambit771 Dedicated hardware helps a lot. But yeah, the images are rotating, just they are not necessarily rotated in real time is what he means.

  • @abymondesir23
    @abymondesir23 3 года назад +1

    That mod7 especially with contra 3 alien wars I went crazy wen I 1st saw that very impressive and beautiful also adds in extra fun factor the game SNES all day baby!!!

  • @danieldougan269
    @danieldougan269 2 года назад +2

    I'm just now getting around to playing Super Metroid. It looks and sounds fantastic even if not limit-pushing. The thing that impresses me about it is just how big and complex the maps are. But the visual effects are also amazing for the SNES.

    • @AmariMarvelous
      @AmariMarvelous Год назад

      Another game I think is visually impressive and cinematic for its time on the SNES is Out of This World. To me Metal Gear Solid for the PS1 made me realize video games can be cinematic and movie like but Out Of This World started doing that but wasn't fully realized.

  • @elesfinter9753
    @elesfinter9753 3 года назад +2

    For my whole life I thought that Jurassic Park game was a fake memory. But it is REAL!!!. I thought it was a Mortal kombat game, I think I messed up the logos since both are yellow/red and black.
    I remember seeing that explorer but I remember thinking it was a farmer lol
    I also remember that pseudo 3D but again I thought I confused it with another game; Toy Story for the snes

  • @philjohn2649
    @philjohn2649 2 года назад

    Watched a few of your videos now. Well done bringing some info about how these games were brought to life to people who never got past 20 GOTO 10.

  • @Halbared
    @Halbared 3 года назад +1

    "Rooting through the jumble", not a phrase one hears so much anymore. :)

  • @popixel
    @popixel 2 года назад +1

    I want to see a hacker add new tracks to Mario Kart with hills now. I didn't even know that was possible.

  • @jaisonjay6527
    @jaisonjay6527 Год назад

    This Is Really a Good Content. Thank U

  • @user-zo9dc1lu3q
    @user-zo9dc1lu3q 3 года назад +3

    Amazing video !
    Can you do a similar video but dedicated to the Game Boy Advance ?
    The console is usually seen as a simple portable Snes.
    But some games like Street Racing Syndicate are proving the exact opposite.
    The GBA don't have any hardware capable to manage a true 3D graphics ... so it's all software generated.
    And this for me is REALLY impressive, if we consider that the Game Boy Advance is capable to generate 3D games that in some cases rasemble some of the early 3D games for the PS1.
    P S. The Game Boy Advance is actually a 32 bit console.

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад +1

      I've already done that exact thing, but for some reason it totally died and never got any views compared to some of my other stuff, so that's probably why you never saw it.
      Hmm wait a minute... I recognise that name!
      You should definitely watch this video!
      ruclips.net/video/zBW27dhEwso/видео.html
      Watch it right to the end, including my stupid outro, you might hear a name you recognise...

    • @user-zo9dc1lu3q
      @user-zo9dc1lu3q 3 года назад

      ​@@Sharopolis
      WOOOW that's FANTASTIC !
      Thanks dude !
      It's a joy to hear my name in that video 😄
      P.S. Don't worry about your outro ... in my case i am so shy that is a miracle if one day or another i will ever do one in my videos 😆

  • @ar_xiv
    @ar_xiv 3 года назад +18

    lol is it even possible to stop BLASTING in rendering ranger?

  • @goatintuxedo2206
    @goatintuxedo2206 2 года назад

    lol.. that last part with F-Zero.
    reminds me of when i was messing with Zelda: a link to the past and action replay codes.

  • @Mackadotious51
    @Mackadotious51 Месяц назад

    Wow....that Tommy Moe's Winter Extreme is awesome... Never knew about that one.

  • @jeffdavis6657
    @jeffdavis6657 3 года назад +2

    There is very little love for the TG16/PCengine, there wa a list of stuff that was said could not be done, parallax, sprite zoom and rotate,all was accomplished. There was not enough physical space in the HuCards to add additional hardware and the CD games had only the system. If you have ever played the system, the developers managed to do quite a bit with the limited hardware.

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro 3 года назад

      Are you sure there is very little love? I hear about it enough to have wanted one on several occasions.

    • @jeffdavis6657
      @jeffdavis6657 3 года назад

      @@bangerbangerbro Did you only hear about it because of the "mini" release? Every gamer RUclips channel seemed to do a bit about it, almost all admitted they did not have one and did not know anyone who did.

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro 3 года назад

      @@jeffdavis6657 Hear about what?

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro 3 года назад +1

      @@jeffdavis6657 Oh you mean the PC engine? Of course I have heard of it. For a while I thought you were suddenly talking about some obscure game. I suppose some people who have never drifted about the internet and managed to miss it at the time (in the US you should have at least heard of it as in France, and in Japan it was one of the main contenders. Anywhere other than those three places however it was probably easy to miss). But it is easy to come across on the internet in articles about other machines and even the Wii has games for it on virtual console. I would have thought a lot of the more affluent RUclipsrs would have one? It's quite a nice machine I believe. The CD has a lot of RPGs in its library which aren't really my thing but a lot of shoot em ups too on both formats. Technically the machine is quite nice with lots of colours on screen at once without tricks, enough that you would say that it was held back by its master palette. The biggest problem when compared to its later competitors is the lack of parallax scrolling which is remedied by the supergrafx but that wasn't very successful. But I didn't think it was that obscure. There is an earlier video on it in this series too.

  • @alexchavez6059
    @alexchavez6059 2 года назад

    If you haven't already, Plz make a GameCube related sequel where GC's hardware was indeed pushed to it's limitations. This type of content you put together is superb. You breakdown of the graphics was awesome 👍 we don't get to see often the break down of tricks and techniques that were implemented on the GameCube. This is a fun idea 💡

  • @BinaryCounter
    @BinaryCounter 3 года назад +3

    Great Video! Love the technical explanations too! Breath of fresh air after watching so many of these list videos that just show off flashy effects (or just wrongly attribute everything to mode 7). Gives me a Lot of inspiration for my own SNES homebrew endeavours.
    I'd love to see a video about different expansion chips, their capabilities, and how they're used in game. Everybody knows the SuperFx, but almost nobody knows about the SA-1 and it's a BEAST.
    Basically it's another 65816 running at 10Mhz with some great DMA facilities on board. Most of these carts also come with 64/128 KByte extra RAM in the cart.
    Lately they've been a lot of romhacks that utilize this chip to remove slowdown from existing games.
    Subscribed!

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад +1

      Thanks!
      I love your Hello demo!

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro 3 года назад +1

      The SA-1 is probably talked about less because it's less interesting. Another of the main CPU. Still interesting to an extent though. I still don't really understand what the "DSP"s do.

  • @ActuallySanFrancisco
    @ActuallySanFrancisco 3 года назад +2

    well, you've got a new subscriber (: also i totally had (and still have) tommy mo's winter extreme skiing and snowboarding growing up. thought it was awesome then, still do, and fantastic to finally see someone cover it! electrobrain made awesome games on the SNES in general and i feel like almost all of them are vastly under-appreciated.

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад +1

      Thanks for the sub! Electro Brain did a bunch of interesting stuff didn't they? I looked them up when making this vid.

  • @ClarkPotter
    @ClarkPotter 10 месяцев назад

    Rendering Ranger looks amazing. Neo Geo-level quality. I love shmups and would have lost my mind for this game as a kid.

  • @daveb1930
    @daveb1930 3 года назад +11

    As a BBC Model B user from the 80s, it still annoys the living peepee out of me when people talk about the SNES Mode 7.

    • @Sharopolis
      @Sharopolis  3 года назад +3

      Ha Ha! Yes! I almost made a reference to that in the video, but I thought no one would know what I was on about, nice to know one person out there would.

    • @johneygd
      @johneygd 3 года назад +3

      I never found mode 7 that impressive at all, except for those hills effects.

    • @jamesburchill7522
      @jamesburchill7522 3 года назад +3

      Mode 7: 1 big, chunky Sprite that eats all the system resources. I think it was alright when used for occasional effects..but games entirely based on it (even Fzero) make my mind bleed.

    • @robertmcmillan3638
      @robertmcmillan3638 3 года назад +2

      @@jamesburchill7522 F-Zero is a very good game.
      F-Zero and Road Rash 1 and 2 on the Megadrive/ Genesis are the only 16-bit generation racing games that still hold up today.
      Don't know if I'll ever get around to playing Pilot Wings, but that looks pretty amazing too.

    • @jamesburchill7522
      @jamesburchill7522 3 года назад

      @@robertmcmillan3638 Oh. Don't get me wrong. I LOVE F-Zero (except for the GBA ones) it's just really ugly. The soundtrack though...

  • @VenomStryker
    @VenomStryker 2 года назад

    That SNES Sonic port even has the "Blast Processing". 🤣

  • @thecunninlynguist
    @thecunninlynguist 3 года назад +3

    wow, I have on the ball...never really thought about how it pushed the SNES

  • @BGizzle8098
    @BGizzle8098 3 года назад

    So, a whole game using Sonic 1 special stage? Bravo 👏

  • @ChicagoRetroGamer
    @ChicagoRetroGamer 3 года назад +1

    Most definitely some of the early side-scrolling beat 'em ups caused some serious lag at times. Cheers!

  • @tejonBiker
    @tejonBiker 3 года назад +1

    Turrican reference, instant like!

  • @X-Gen-001
    @X-Gen-001 3 года назад +1

    Scrambled Valkyrie looks cool. I didn't have that one back in the day. I like R-Type style games. There's was this arcade sidescroll shooter I used to play it every day on the way home from school. But frustratingly I can't recall the name of it. I've been occasionally searching for it since the birth of the internet. Its vintage is somewhere between mid-late 80's to 1991.

  • @Noisy_Cricket
    @Noisy_Cricket 2 года назад

    The Jurassic Park game basically used a backdoor framebuffer on the SNES. Incredible.

  • @KorenLesthe
    @KorenLesthe 2 года назад

    Yes, yes and yes ! Rendering Ranger R2 ! Manfred Trenz is a genius and I really miss him (he stepped away from video games).