I run 16 Bit Virtual Studios. You can find more reviews from me on YouTube youtube.com/@16bitvirtual or other social media @16bitvirtual, and we sell our 3D Printed stuff on 16bitstore.com

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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 16th, 2023

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  • Oldest system, by release year its my Hong Kong 6 Switch Atari 2600. Local guy was selling it and it was in immaculate condition. Dust cover on the system, with boxed games.

    At the time I was selling games and systems, so I kept the system and 2 games for myself. Don’t use it much since its a 2600, but I have it on my shelf.

    Oldest system I own is my GBC, had it since before my youngest sibling was born and I still have it today. Obviously doesn’t get much use since GBA SP, but I still keep it around.



  • We do, but they aren’t that good of a deal, especially since you can get the same discount… if not more, if you buy used. And you can sell the game when you are done rather than being stuck with digital.

    That said, outside of Nintendo, who rarely if ever discount their games, most games on modern systems get heavily discounted months if not a year after they come out. You are a fool if you buy the latest Ubisoft Game new since it’s usually $15-$30 before it’s been on-sale for a year. Even Sony first party IP, I got most of them for $10-$20 a pop new or digital, since I bought in at the tail end of the PS4 generation.



  • While I understand your argument. I have my own philosophy for what is retro in terms of games.

    For me I don’t look at the system but the games. And for games it about 10-15 years after they were first released.

    Enough time that kids can be born and never see this game until now. While I wouldn’t call Pokemon Sun/Moon retro just yet. The 3ds/2ds has games on it that I would consider it retro.

    Its been over half a decade since Nintendo stopped making games for it, and even longer since people cared about it.

    The only time I will argue something isn’t retro is when its still on the store shelf and not in the discount bin.







  • I love the idea of KDE connect, but its over featured and buggy.

    Most times I’m trying to send a file, the computer I’m sending to is not visible which requires me to goto that machine and reset KDE Connect. I can’t send more than one file or KDE Connect crashes and resetting it on Linux is a proper pain.

    Plus I just want to use it to transfer files, yet there is no universal setting for the app, thus I have to turn on/off the features I want per device. And when KDE connect randomly forgets a device and I need to re-pair it I have to disable everything again.

    At times Bluetooth file transfer is easier. But then I use it on my iPad, where the app can’t work unless its open and in focus. But the alternative is a great big middle finger. Its fantastic and I will deal with the KDE jank.



  • In North America the NES isn’t a top loader and due to the mechanism they used the pins ware out, especially after 35-40 years. On top of that there is very little in the NES Library that’s only on the NES these days. If I hadn’t already invested in an NES and games, I’d just get the NES Classic and be done with it. If I wanted extra games I’d get collections like the Castlevaina Collection, The Mega Man one, and Disney Afternoon. You can extract the ROMs from these collections and put them on the NES Classic if you are willing to fiddle.

    Meanwhile the master system is often times forgotten, but has a similar library for third party games. And what unique games does have are rarely found elsewhere as the master system version. Let alone the European releases like Sonic the Hedgehog.

    With that said, I prefaced this with “Find games first” for a reason. The master system has a smaller library of games, and if OP was looking for games more like Dragon Quest Warrior or Final Fantasy, then a system with only Phantasy Star would be a bad choice.


  • I think you should find games first. No point in owning an NES without finding something to play on it. But if you are looking for opinion on the hardware itself.

    I own all 3 systems.

    Atari 7800: isn’t fare to compare it to a NES or Master System. Think of it as a suped up 2600. Great system if you use the European controller or a Sega 9pin controller. Game selection is good but limited. Best way to play 2600 games. Rf only sucks but can be modded. I’d get it if there are 2600 or 7800 games you wanna play. But the Atari 50th collection has pretty much everything you’d want to play on it.

    NES: is a good system for the time, but hasn’t aged well. Getting games to work has turned into a ritual for me. But when they work you’ll have access to the best games from the late 80’s and early 90’s. Controller has aged like fine wine. Most of its non-nintendo library can be found elsewhere for cheap while the Nintendo games are behind a subscription service. Not many games exclusive these days but worth playing anyways

    Master System: the NES we have at home. Mostly a similar library of games to the NES but are sometimes better, sometimes worse. Depends on the publisher. In north america it was forgotten and game selection was limited. Controller is mushy but a genesis controller can fix that.

    Out of the 3 the master system is probably the best experience, but the NES has the best games.








  • The device looks like it’ll be good to play most games upto the PSP. While I can suggest the usual suspects, Super Metroid, Metroid 4, SotN, Pokemon I’m going to suggest odd-ball games which I like

    Game Boy

    • Super Mario Bros Deluxe (NES Mario 1 & JP Mario 2 with saves and bonus features)
    • Harry Potter 1,2,&3 (Turn Based RPGs, bit rough but an excellent sound track)
    • Mickey’s Speedway USA (made by Rare, fantastic soundtrack, top down racer, GBC game so controls are wonky)

    GBA

    • Crash Nitro Kart (smoother and plays better IMHO than Super Circuit, controls require some patience to master)
    • Spongebob Squarepants the Movie the Game (Made by Wayforward, and is better than I’d expect a license game to be)
    • Jurassic Park Operation Genesis (Zoo tycoon with Dinos on GBA)

    Genesis

    • Ren & Stimpy Stimpy’s Invention (beautiful and painful platformer)
    • TMNT Hyperstone Heist (Turtles in Time, but legally distinct so Nintendo didn’t sue)
    • Scooby-Doo Mystery (A point and click adventure on the Genesis, yes they made one)

    SNES

    PlayStation

    • Pac-Man World 20th Anniversary (3D Platformer that’s aged well)
    • Scooby Doo and the Cyber Chase (A 3D Platformer that hasn’t)
    • Harry Potter 1&2 (We have the Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time at home)
    • Rugrats Search for Reptar (if you like the show you’ll like the game, otherwise it makes PS1 Hagrid look like the monalisa)
    • The Emperor’s New Groove (3D Platformer that’s aged a lot better than it should’ve)

    PSP

    • Star Wars Battlefront II, Renegade Squadron, & Elite Squadron (same concept, 3 different implementations, all have their pros and cons)
    • Modnation Racers (yes they ported a PS3 game to a portable with less power than a PS2, and it’s not half bad)
    • LittleBigPlanet (same deal, just with a platformer)
    • LEGO Star Wars II/LEGO Indiana Jones (PS2 games ported to PSP)