I wonder if the NES would rank even higher on the most units sold list if you could count up all the pirate versions and clones of it sold in China, Taiwan, South America, Eastern Europe, etc. Hell, they're probably still doing business selling some in low-income parts of the world, blowing peoples' minds with pirated versions of Arkanoid, SMB1 and Excite Bike. Which is kind of a cool thought in a sense. It also occurs to me that in its way, Duck Hunt especially was a sort of Wii for its time. The average dad would never try Super Mario Bros on their kids' system, but shooting pixel ducks with a toy gun was immediately accessible. The first time me and my brother played with our NES, we ended up having an impromptu Duck Hunt tournament between a dozen different family members, because everyone wanted a go.
nope, only official consoles from the actual maker count.... we can sorta gauge conmtinued popularity by the retrons and designer consoles but I wouldn't count the knock off's as anything but a rip off, a doorstop and nothing more lol though I wonder if in a few years someone will do a Retron like console for PS3 and PS4 and what not lol I honestly think modern games are kinda frakked for that cus think about it, PS3 wouldn't even run the game if you didn't have a profile, the X360 would let you run an offline profile no prob and IDK how PS4 does it cus i never tried to play without a profile, I was unable to run anything without the update though lol gotta love that man, even the consoles this gen weren't finished before they shipped and required an update LMAO NES we can just pop a game in and if the console works it'll play, newer consoles there's issues attached LMAO
While the NES is the reason I am a 38 year old collector who consists his collection more of a library than a museum, the 2600 was my first (before the 86 nes launch...my parents actually feel for the "fun is back" campaign and bought me a jr, not knowing it was the same system as my woodgrain vcs lol), and sega holds my heart. And I always had both consoles so it wasn't the "what I had" effect. I actually bought a Saturn in 96 and a Dreamcast at launch. I loved Sega. Still do.
I'm an Australian. And, honestly, I have no childhood or even teenage memories of the NES. Back in the day, we owned a Sega Master System and a Sega Mega Drive. In fact, all my relatives and friends owned at least one of those two Sega consoles. Absolutely not one person I knew back then or even now owned an NES. Not one. Granted, I have friends from the United States who owned an NES back in the day and I've been told countless times how popular it was in the US at the time. But I can't say for sure if the same is true for Australia. I've seen a second hand NES on display at Gametraders, so I know they were at least sold here. But I don't know if it was even well known down here. I never even heard of "Nintendo" until I received a VHS copy of Toy Story as a gift and the advertisement for Sega Mega Drive and Super Nintendo tie in came on before the movie. I guess the Sega Master System was for the Australian population what the NES was for the American population.
+Jarrah White Yeah it was, the predominant company in Australia was Sega because their distributor Ozisoft did a far better job of marketing and selling to the local market. Mattel had the licences for here and parts of Europe (including the UK) and in all regions Mattel had, the console(s) did poorly. The high price of NES and SNES in Australia was a factor in that. I know at least one person who owned a NES, possibly more. Nintendo made far more inroads once they took over distribution/marketing.
+Jarrah White Yeah, Nintendo pretty much owned Japan and North America. Europe and Australia was Sega's market. In fact, as a kid, the NES was so popular in America to the point where Nintendo became the name for video games. Kids used to say I'm playing Nintendo" rather than saying "I'm playing video games". Parents who didn't know the difference between consoles used to call everything a "Nintendo". Come to think of it, I don't think I even saw a Master System console until my older brother bought one at a yard sale in the late 90's.
it's like reading history from a paralell universe hehehe, I'm in uruguay, the first sega thing that existed here was megadrive, nobody knew master system existed, in fact, over here it came out AFTER megadrive, i remember tv ads and brand new master systems for sale in stores even by 1998. hahahaha. oh, by the way, like 8 out of 10 people had famicom instead of the north american NES, it was a lot cheaper and cartridges were cheaper too, the same game on nes format costed twice what it costed on famicom format. what we all did was having famicom consoles and getting a cheap adaptor to play nes cartridges.
+Sunderland Gaming Wrong gaming community since "Lord Gaben" is a fat ugly sloth who the Pirate Cheapskates Disaster Race Virgin community worships. Plus those who worship "Gaben" hates console gamers & console gaming in general.
I don't think saying Super Mario Bros. 3 is the greatest game of the era is very controversial--- that's a pretty widely regarded opinion, and the game typically ranks #1 of all-time on top NES games lists. I actually had one major gripe with the game (which was fixed on the All-Stars remake): The game was huge and yet there was no save feature.
I remember playing Super Mario Bros 3 for the first time. I had never heard of it at the time, never knew it was out. My brother told me a friend was coming over and bringing it over. I was so happy to be playing a new Mario game....I played the hell out of the first one...no matter what games we had for the NES, i'd still pop in Super Mario Bros on a regular basis.
I really liked Super Mario 2. Probably because it was different than all the rest. I also agree with Mario Bros 3 being one of the best games for the NES and 3rd generation as a whole. Many Many hours sunk into that.
Shane Singleton Yeah,Mario 3s kind of my least favorite of the three.Its more of a rehash of part one,and I find the world map pretty annoying,as are the little side games,because it slows down all the platforming.Also you can choose between four characters in part 2.Which I really liked.
I loved hearing about your first experience with the NES because it resonated SO MUCH with me. My very first memory ever is when I was 3 (I was able to confirm this with my mother lol) My older brother (6 at the time) is losing his mind with excitement over this weird grey box. It's in front of our big wooden-cabinet floor-bound CRT. I'm mesmerized watching him jump on mushrooms and shooting fireballs. I remember him handing me a controller because it was my turn, and I got to be the green one. The timing is a little different, as this was 1991. I didn't even know 'other' game consoles existed until 1994 when we moved and a neighbor kid showed me his Sega Genesis and Sonic 2 and BLEW MY MIND lol. Fast forward a few years and I'm soliciting my body to science for the 300$ I needed to get a Dreamcast, Sonic Adventure, and a VMU - the rest is history. Pretty much my whole life has gone the direction it has because of the influence video games had on me.
@Jarrah White not at all correct. I'm also Australian, had an NES, everyone I new had an NES. I knew only one kid with a master system. The NES was definitely dominant, I'm not sure if you remember shops at the time, BigW etc, but NES was everywhere, much easier to find games for today aswell. Not the same with Megadrive obviously, it was huge, maybe bigger than SNES, not sure on that but I knew roughly the same number of people who had Megadtive vs SNES.
Hey Adam once again great video man, when you showed Castlevania. I had a little bit of a flashback of me playing that game with my dad. The thing is that was the only game that I can remember that he would actually sit down and play with me he loved it for some reason. Lol. and I had totally forgotten about that till now. I think that's part of why your videos are so great.you never know what fond memory can surface that you totally forgot about. I found myself checking the time on the video. not cuz I was in a rush for it to end. but the opposite I wanted it not to end, and that's priceless. so just wanted to thank you for the great video.
Another excellent video Adam! The NES was my introduction into video games and holds a special place in my heart. I think it's awesome you actually have the same system you first saw as a little kid!
Nes was the first system I've ever played, was about 3 or 4 yrs old and my brother was playing Mario. it was awesome at the time. One of the first games I got was Robocop.
I remember an uncle bought it with Super Mario Bros./Duck Hunt/track n field and literally being soo blown away. I was crying once he packed it up and took it home. Literally. I also was 6 years old. Adam, you must be younger since you never experienced the NES at it's peak. Cause to me, it was the chet. Of course the SNES put me on a natural high for months.
Me and you both saw the same console first. When I was 4 I saw my brother play super Mario Bros 1 and Tetris. Awesome memory. Thank you Adam for doing these awesome videos..
No Contra, Double Dragon or Mega Man? Aww... Well, Super Mario Bros. 3 is definitely the best. 18 million people can't be wrong. Takashi Tezuka, the level designer for the Super Mario Bros. series, even said that it is his masterpiece. I've seen plenty of people in the game industry say that if you want to get into level design: play and take inspiration from Super Mario Bros. 3. It's because of Super Mario Maker, I'm starting to realize how subtlely brilliant Super Mario Bros. is. Why empty blocks floating in mid air? Why not stairs? Well if you had that area blocked off, it would be like being told no when you really want to go somewhere. Less options means less fun. Why a bottomless pit? Why not spikes? If you had spikes then that would mean the artist would have to spend extra time drawing a sprite, then a programmer would have to code it and color it in and then it would just eat up more memory. Why not just have nothing there? I've seen tons of ROM hacks and levels that stick spikes/munchers in without a thought or care in the world and they look so bad. Super Mario Bros. is the Star Wars of our generation. Hideo Kojima said that he wanted to be a film director because of John Carpenter. At a Sony press conference or some gaming event I forget, when asked by a fan what his favorite game was he replied Super Mario Bros. The Sony reps looked so angry at him for saying that but then they made a face like, "Well, he said it already." It was so awkward and amusing. Just like him and a lot of other people, Super Mario Bros. inspired us to get into gaming. It truly was the genesis of the modern video gaming era.
I think to a lot of people, the NES was the first system they ever own that was marketed for them. I remember playing the Atari 5200 before getting a NES but the 5200 was my parents system that I was allowed to play on. The NES was my system and while my dad did buy it for himself, I was the one asking to get games on it while the 5200 I never asked games for it. I was born in 82 so I have a lot of great memories with it and even remember buying it with my dad. It also had to be during the time that the school yard culture also helped. Every kid I knew had a NES and we'd all take time in the afternoon after school to play it at each others house. It was also everywhere, cartoons, shirts, cereal, books, even movies for just Nintendo and only Nintendo. It was OUR video game console and was the only console for kids that was directly marketed towards kids so we just grew up with it.
+AdamKoralik one thing I've found very fascinating about Famicom/NES history is how many different versions there were. The NES had the European, Mattel, Spanish (or Italian? I forget, but one for a very specific region), along with a Hong Kong and Asian version. Additionally, the Famicom had three known versions: the Japanese version, Hong Kong version (and a HK Disk System, which seems to be the same model # as the Japanese one, as the HK Famicom has a dif model number) and a Taiwanese version, which wasn't really known till the past five years and still is quite vague. Thanks for an awesome video! ^_^
I'd never thought about how the NES was styled to look like a VCR until a few months ago when I saw an early 80's NEC betamax player at a goodwill that looked EXACTLY like a NES.
Hey Adam! I have my old "retro" (I say retro in quotations because many people have different versions of the word, mine definition is any system that received arcade points, first being the 2nd gen, last being the dreamcast, with the rest of the 6th gen not getting ports.) systems hooked up to CRT TVs, giving an exception to the DC, as the whole VGA part makes me put it on a HD TV. I was wondering if there were RGB Scart CRT TVs so that I could keep the 80/90s feel of a CRT without losing the video quality of RGB Scart. If such a thing does exist, I do imagine that shipping prices would be high because of CRTs being giant lead cubes with lights and electricity.
You know, after watching this video, a memory suddenly came back to me. I actually remember seeing Paperboy for the NES somewhere when I was very young. I don't remember if somebody was playing it or if I was playing it, but I vaguely remember it.
I've really been into the NES/Famicom lately. The NES was before my time, I'm almost 25, but I do have a lot of nostalgia for it. I remember going over to family friend's house and playing Duck Hunt, Mario 1, and The Legend of Zelda. Those are the 3 first games I ever played.
+Omega Rugal Yup. Watch The Gaming Historian episode on it here on TH-cam. The request even showed up in the newspaper. You can search and read the actual article on Google.
I do love this console and it is either my fourth or fifth favorite. Ironically though, my two favorite games are actually for the Famicom, those being Mother 1 and Final Fantasy 3; third is of course SMB 3. I do love it, and the Famicom, and still play both to this day. I can always just throw in SMB 1 and speed through to World 7 or so and then shut it off or throw in SMB 3 and speed through the first 3 worlds and feel just really good afterwards. It has charm all it's own.
Hey Adam, What are your thoughts on the Analogue Nt? It's not exactly an emulator, but rather its the original hardware from a NES and Famicom taken apart and put together as one single unit. I don't have one, but from what I've read it supports PAL and NTSC NES games as well as Famicom games, it can also output through component or HDMI.
+Jarrah White That's one of the few "clone consoles" that actually seems like it's not a turd. Which it better be for that price. But no, I haven't used it.
+AdamKoralik There seems to be a cheaper option than the Analogue Nt. Retro-bit made what they call a "RetroPort adapter". You insert an NES game into the top and then insert it into the top of the cartridge slot on the SNES. Unfortunately it doesn't output through the SNES, it has it's own AV cable that you plug into the side of the adapter. It's only outputs composite, but if you were using an original NES that was the best you got anyway. Again, this adapter eliminates the flimsy VCR style design of the original console. What are your thoughts on this adapter?
I'm glad I'm old enough to have grown up in the 80's and played NES....great console IMO best games I played: Battletoads Blades of Steel castlevania castlevania 3 Double Dragon 2 The Revenge Dr Mario Gradius Ikari Warriors Low G man Mendal Palace Metal Gear Metroid Mike Tyson's Punch Out [not the altered Punch Out version] Mission Impossible Ninja Gaiden Paperboy Super Mario Bros Super Mario 3 Tetris Tiger Heli Wizards & Warriors Wizards & Warriors 3 Zelda ---- I'm likely forgetting a lot but these were the majority of my fave NES games
I was so looking forward to your review of the third gen and the nes specifically. I have been watching your recaps starting with current gen and going backwards. I really like your stuff and I know you a busy man but I hope you spend some quality time with nes sometime and make another video. Thanks
This was my very first game system ever. My dad when me my older brother and sister had the NES because my dad bought the top loader with a bunch of games to go with it, games I remember were Mario 1 2 and 3, Megaman 6, Zelda Metroid, Jaws, and Ducktales just to name a few. This was in the early 90s. I never even knew about SNES, Genesis or any other system but NES. Until 1996 when we got Nintendo 64. Holy crap did Mario 64 blow my mind when I was a kid.
I started playing video games at age 5 (1988). I didn't know many people who owned more than a few games for their system. We mostly rented games from the same place you rented movies. There wasn't much information on when new games were going to come out, no previews or much hype with the exception of Super Mario 3. Most games couldn't save either, so my friends and I would have a notebook with passwords from all the games we rented. Some of the passwords were really long and complex, and if anything was off or wrong it wouldn't work.
Very interesting your feelings with the Nintendo NES, I am older than you and I had at the time exactly the same feeling with this machine, I never owned it and I never wanted to press the start button on ... I have better memories of the Master System andl my first console was ... a Super Nintendo which I thought was awesome. I also agree with you regarding Mario All Stars, I loved this game as a kid, still great after playi Super Mario World.
+AdamKoralik Wow this vid was really interesting. I know you collect stuff like more recent xbox/ps games and such, but this is so interesting compared to that in my opinion. It's crazy that they sort of released the NES so timidly and tested the waters too. Also I never even thought about the strange "VCR" way you put cartridges into it and why it's so awkward to begin with when you could have a design that's much more straight-forward and reliable.
Awesome video. Although this was not my first console, it was certainly the one I've played the most. I know you don't talk about the stuff you don't have but I feel that the video was not complete without mentioning the ridiculous amount of accessories this thing had. The Roll N Rocker, the LaserScope, the Power Glove, the Power Pad, the U -force, just to name the ones I had, were just crazy and years ahead of their time. I could care less about what critics say about them. Many of my fondest childhood memories are of me and my friends playing Punch Out with the U -force and knocking the thing off the table and other things like that. My favorite games for it were the Dragon Warrior games, the Final Fantasies, Megaman, Contra, BattleToads (hardest game ever), Turtles II, and the list goes on...
+tsangpogorge not really, the extra 12 pins sit in the center and dont really do much. for example the 60 to 72 pin adapter splits the 60 in to 30 on each side with 12 blank pins right in the middle.
+tsangpogorge Yes I did. I may not have elaborated enough. As I said, some of the pins were for the 10 NES chip. The rest were largely unused. They could have been for things like modems, disk drive expansions, but they never came to be.
I replaced the 72 pin connector on my NES when the lockout problem started, and while it works wonderfully when the cart is inserted it, for whatever reason, doesn't work at all if I push the game down. I've not been able to find any reason that this should be the case, it's just rather weird. Still, it works fine otherwise so not a big deal. :p
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles was fun, just super hard. The worst this about it was jumping sucked, which I would say is actually bad programming rather than just being hard. Donatello rocked though.
I have a lot of respect for the NES. When I was 9 I went to a mall one day and saw someone playing Contra and I thought it looked badass. My Mom bought me an NES clone console that had 30 games on it. My favorites were Duck Hunt, Contra, SMB, Mappy, Balloon Pop, Ice Climbers, and Muscle. Compared to the Gamecube it was just something fun to pass an afternoon. Over time I played NES games on emulators, but like you I never owned an actual NES until as of 3 months ago. My local retro shop was selling it for $45 and and I bought it right away.
when the top loaders were released many people complained about lines on their screen and Nintendo added composite to their systems for those who sent them in with that complaint.
Wish I still had my original Nintendo counsel which I regretfully abandoned. Can't believe you went that long without playing those two Zelda games btw.
Hi Adam! It's amazing that you can remember the first game and console you saw in your life. I can't remember mine, I think it should be Sonic or Alex Kidd for the master system. I was born in 1990 and here in Portugal was all about Sega. I knew Mario just because of the game boy. I didn't even know of the NES existence like until the late 90s.
+siIvermate I didn't play an NES or an N64 until my younger brother bought one this year. I've had a SNES and Gamecube since I was 8, but I had never played the other two consoles.
The Atari 7800 and Jaguar were made by Jack Tramiel's Atari Corporation. Atari was separated a year after the video game crash. Atari Corporation did not revamp itself into a third-party publisher and Atari Games used the Tengen name due to the Atari name used on the consumer division. As a result of making unlicensed games, Tengen made a few Sega titles that were originally ported to the Master System, such as After Burner.
I can't wait for part 2, about Master System... that was a huge success here in Brazil (believe or not, you can still find some strange versions of it in stores!). I even found for sale in Europe (Portugal) a lot of cartridges that are produced in Brazil... I don't know why, maybe for the language in the manuals or whatever. Ah, the 80's/90's...
+John DiLoreto Wait, Tetris DX is Gameboy Color? I had and still have it for my Gameboy. It is a black cart, but just like all Gameboy carts, it has the chip in the corner of the plastic that they took out for GB Color.
+CreeperCrew jakethefake Some Game Boy Color games could be play on the original GB. The GBC games that had the black cart still used the GB bio thus allowing them to be play on the original black and white system and the Super Game Boy.
+Mike Oliver That version was pretty weird with all them animal wallpaper pictures on each level. Me I prefer the version that came bundle with Dr. Mario for the Super NES and the one that came launch with the original Game Boy. The Tengen NES version is still better than the Nintendo NES one though, you can't play 2-player on the Nintendo one.
Paperboy was the first game you ever saw and you still got interested in video games? Man, I got to give it to you, that's a hard bridge to cross for me. And shave the damn beard
I pretty much skimmed over the video game crash in 83 and didn't even know it was happening at the time. I grew up, as a kid, during the 2nd gen. Our first console as a family was the Atari 2600, and then eventually my dad just gave it to me, so it was sort of a hand-me-down console. After that though, instead of buying a 5200 or Colecovision, I bought an Atari 800XL computer which was basically a resigned Atari 800. Much of the games I had for that were basically identical to the 5200 except I could attach a floppy drive, a modem, and a printer to it. I use to use log on to Bulletin Board Systems (BBSs) back then. (pre-internet) I eventually bought a used C64 along with a couple boxes worth of floppy disks with games an other software. So that's basically what I was playing with during the 80s. I've played NES games at my friends house a few times but I wasn't that impressed with it enough to go by one. In 90 or 91 I bought any Atari ST along with a bunch of games for that. It wasn't until I played Sonic the Hedgehog on a friend's Sega Genesis that I got back into console gaming. And then evetually I also bought a SNES but similar to your experience, I when to a local Funcoland and they selling used NES systems for like $20 so I finally did get one but by this time the Saturn was already out and the Playstation was about to be released. Sorry if this comment is long but your story with the NES was almost similar to mine.
weird tho. I never had a master system as a child. never heard of it but I had an nes. later I bought the master system and honestly the colors and graphics are wayyy better and it had amazing games. mind you I'm a lover of all systems. I personally as a kid was very impressed with the turbografx 16. I remember I lived in Los Angeles and there was a shop where you can pay by the hour to play game systems. they have Sega Genesis nes Super Nintendo you name it. that the first time I saw a turbografx and in Master System and they both blew my mind. I remember being the only kid in there playing the turbografx with the hue cards thinking this was the most futuristic thing ever. two very underrated consoles in America. also Adam I love your videos please continue to make as many as possible. you have made my shopping to upgrade video quality on my retro systems the best.
My first game console was the Famicon, man i loved it, my mother stressed the hell out with me, because my life was around it. Couple years later i saved a bunch of money and since i was always moving, i bought the Sega Game Gear, man, it sucked so much, what a disappointment, few games launched, 6 AA batteries that lasted for like one hour, shit, i hated it, i ended up trading the Sega Game Gear for a Game Boy with a bunch of games, and... i loved it, a ton of cool games, batteries lasted for ever, had so much fun with it. After some years, my next console was the Sony Playstation, it was offered by a cousin of mine, because it read burned games (piracy all the way), played music Cd´s, since i was in another town because of the University, that was cool, i could listen to my music without bringing whole stereo with me, and plus i could play games (burned), i had a ton of games, played the hell out, but it was not that great, it was ok, the game magic was lost, i thought that it was because of my age... I bought the PS2, just because it was the cheapest DVD player at that time, the guy that sold me the console (he worked for sony) he was my friend, and when the console was launched, he inserted the chip on it, and i could read burned games, i used it mainly for movies and gave up on consoles... So a couple years back, i bought a Nintendo 2DS for my daughter, and bought also the game New Super Mario Bros 2, and, bam, i had the same feeling back when i played the Famicon... I bought another 2DS for me and the New 3DS XL also, and every game i buy, and every game i play, i have the same feeling back in the famicon time, boy what a company Nintendo is... Sure, there are more powered consoles on the market, more enhanced games graphics wise but, Nintendo is my favorite gaming company...
Unfortunately, you will never feel the way we all felt when the Nes came out. Once you go back after exposed to Psone and so on. When the Nes came out, there was nothing like it, so imagination of possibility went wild. You will never witness that unfortunately But good video though
Hey Adam,, I've been a fan of your videos for a couple of years now. I just started my retro collection. I saw your video on how to improve video quality but I'm a bit confused about a couple of things.. do you have an email I can contact you about extra information?? I need more information about the rgb outputs and scart cables.
+AdamKoralik I agree with the mega drive that was more popular here than snes, at least for early part of that generation/war, it was out earlier had lots of games and was cheaper by time snes got here...but nah I def feel the nes was by far more popular here than the master system. Everyone in my class at school for example had the nes, one guy had a master system. Cousins, uncles...all nes guess certain areas may have been different
My funny experience of Super Mario Bros 3 was I was in Kauai. We went to an arcade and there it was on the Nintendo Game choice machine. It wasn't even released in North America yet on cartridge (of course I found out later it was released 2 years earlier in Japan.) I remember pointing out SMB 3 to my mom totally baffled like, how the hell do I get that game??? lol
I was born into the late 5th gen, pretty much around the same time you first bought and owned one. But it's funny because it's the first console I actually saw and played as well. Since my Dad was cool enough to have it with the classic Super Mario Bros/Duck Hunt Cartridge with the gun and all. We also found TMNT at a garage sale, I didn't really like it though lmao. That was the only game console my Dad really played at length, and the game he played the most was Legend of Zelda. He never really picked up and played a game after that.
It was a nice system, indeed but picking it another time would be a money killer, I suppose. Playing SMB1, Kid Icarus and Gauntlet however was fun back then. Great video again, Adam.
It's funny how the NES had strict quality control yet the NES is the most covered console on AVGN lol.
dude you lay down knowledge like a boss and your humor is much appreciated
Thank you sir.
true
I wonder if the NES would rank even higher on the most units sold list if you could count up all the pirate versions and clones of it sold in China, Taiwan, South America, Eastern Europe, etc. Hell, they're probably still doing business selling some in low-income parts of the world, blowing peoples' minds with pirated versions of Arkanoid, SMB1 and Excite Bike. Which is kind of a cool thought in a sense.
It also occurs to me that in its way, Duck Hunt especially was a sort of Wii for its time. The average dad would never try Super Mario Bros on their kids' system, but shooting pixel ducks with a toy gun was immediately accessible. The first time me and my brother played with our NES, we ended up having an impromptu Duck Hunt tournament between a dozen different family members, because everyone wanted a go.
nope, only official consoles from the actual maker count....
we can sorta gauge conmtinued popularity by the retrons and designer consoles but I wouldn't count the knock off's as anything but a rip off, a doorstop and nothing more lol
though I wonder if in a few years someone will do a Retron like console for PS3 and PS4 and what not lol
I honestly think modern games are kinda frakked for that cus think about it, PS3 wouldn't even run the game if you didn't have a profile, the X360 would let you run an offline profile no prob and IDK how PS4 does it cus i never tried to play without a profile, I was unable to run anything without the update though lol gotta love that man, even the consoles this gen weren't finished before they shipped and required an update LMAO
NES we can just pop a game in and if the console works it'll play, newer consoles there's issues attached LMAO
I really enjoy the experiences you share. It gives me a new way to look at these consoles.
+Rabid Thanks for watching!
While the NES is the reason I am a 38 year old collector who consists his collection more of a library than a museum, the 2600 was my first (before the 86 nes launch...my parents actually feel for the "fun is back" campaign and bought me a jr, not knowing it was the same system as my woodgrain vcs lol), and sega holds my heart. And I always had both consoles so it wasn't the "what I had" effect. I actually bought a Saturn in 96 and a Dreamcast at launch. I loved Sega. Still do.
I'm an Australian. And, honestly, I have no childhood or even teenage memories of the NES. Back in the day, we owned a Sega Master System and a Sega Mega Drive. In fact, all my relatives and friends owned at least one of those two Sega consoles. Absolutely not one person I knew back then or even now owned an NES. Not one. Granted, I have friends from the United States who owned an NES back in the day and I've been told countless times how popular it was in the US at the time. But I can't say for sure if the same is true for Australia. I've seen a second hand NES on display at Gametraders, so I know they were at least sold here. But I don't know if it was even well known down here. I never even heard of "Nintendo" until I received a VHS copy of Toy Story as a gift and the advertisement for Sega Mega Drive and Super Nintendo tie in came on before the movie. I guess the Sega Master System was for the Australian population what the NES was for the American population.
+Jarrah White Yeah it was, the predominant company in Australia was Sega because their distributor Ozisoft did a far better job of marketing and selling to the local market. Mattel had the licences for here and parts of Europe (including the UK) and in all regions Mattel had, the console(s) did poorly. The high price of NES and SNES in Australia was a factor in that. I know at least one person who owned a NES, possibly more. Nintendo made far more inroads once they took over distribution/marketing.
+Jarrah White Yeah, Nintendo pretty much owned Japan and North America. Europe and Australia was Sega's market. In fact, as a kid, the NES was so popular in America to the point where Nintendo became the name for video games. Kids used to say I'm playing Nintendo" rather than saying "I'm playing video games". Parents who didn't know the difference between consoles used to call everything a "Nintendo". Come to think of it, I don't think I even saw a Master System console until my older brother bought one at a yard sale in the late 90's.
The same could be said for Britan or for my country Hungary where the C64 was the most popular thing ever.
it's like reading history from a paralell universe hehehe, I'm in uruguay, the first sega thing that existed here was megadrive, nobody knew master system existed, in fact, over here it came out AFTER megadrive, i remember tv ads and brand new master systems for sale in stores even by 1998. hahahaha.
oh, by the way, like 8 out of 10 people had famicom instead of the north american NES, it was a lot cheaper and cartridges were cheaper too, the same game on nes format costed twice what it costed on famicom format. what we all did was having famicom consoles and getting a cheap adaptor to play nes cartridges.
MrNorbert1994 nah, Sega and Nintendo were more even in the UK/Europe with Nintendo edging them out.
Adam blesses us with another video. :')
praise lord gaben
+Sunderland Gaming In this context, praise lord Adamk
+Sunderland Gaming Wrong gaming community since "Lord Gaben" is a fat ugly sloth who the Pirate Cheapskates Disaster Race Virgin community worships. Plus those who worship "Gaben" hates console gamers & console gaming in general.
+The Ninja-X³ twas a joke man chill
Sunderland Gaming Alrighty...lol
I don't think saying Super Mario Bros. 3 is the greatest game of the era is very controversial--- that's a pretty widely regarded opinion, and the game typically ranks #1 of all-time on top NES games lists. I actually had one major gripe with the game (which was fixed on the All-Stars remake): The game was huge and yet there was no save feature.
+Motorheadache95
*Warp whistles to the end*
Woo! Thanks Adam. Your generation recaps are one of my favorites series on youtube! Keep up the awesome content.
I remember playing Super Mario Bros 3 for the first time. I had never heard of it at the time, never knew it was out. My brother told me a friend was coming over and bringing it over. I was so happy to be playing a new Mario game....I played the hell out of the first one...no matter what games we had for the NES, i'd still pop in Super Mario Bros on a regular basis.
I really liked Super Mario 2. Probably because it was different than all the rest. I also agree with Mario Bros 3 being one of the best games for the NES and 3rd generation as a whole. Many Many hours sunk into that.
That was the 1st Mario game I ever played. I played it on my blue GBA.
Shane Singleton Yeah,Mario 3s kind of my least favorite of the three.Its more of a rehash of part one,and I find the world map pretty annoying,as are the little side games,because it slows down all the platforming.Also you can choose between four characters in part 2.Which I really liked.
Ahhh, finally!! You're the greatest! Been waiting for this 3rd Gen recap forever!
I loved hearing about your first experience with the NES because it resonated SO MUCH with me.
My very first memory ever is when I was 3 (I was able to confirm this with my mother lol)
My older brother (6 at the time) is losing his mind with excitement over this weird grey box.
It's in front of our big wooden-cabinet floor-bound CRT.
I'm mesmerized watching him jump on mushrooms and shooting fireballs.
I remember him handing me a controller because it was my turn, and I got to be the green one.
The timing is a little different, as this was 1991. I didn't even know 'other' game consoles existed until 1994 when we moved and a neighbor kid showed me his Sega Genesis and Sonic 2 and BLEW MY MIND lol. Fast forward a few years and I'm soliciting my body to science for the 300$ I needed to get a Dreamcast, Sonic Adventure, and a VMU - the rest is history. Pretty much my whole life has gone the direction it has because of the influence video games had on me.
@Jarrah White not at all correct. I'm also Australian, had an NES, everyone I new had an NES. I knew only one kid with a master system. The NES was definitely dominant, I'm not sure if you remember shops at the time, BigW etc, but NES was everywhere, much easier to find games for today aswell. Not the same with Megadrive obviously, it was huge, maybe bigger than SNES, not sure on that but I knew roughly the same number of people who had Megadtive vs SNES.
Mario 3 was my first game and the one I got after getting an NES. I still have both.
Hey Adam once again great video man, when you showed Castlevania. I had a little bit of a flashback of me playing that game with my dad. The thing is that was the only game that I can remember that he would actually sit down and play with me he loved it for some reason. Lol. and I had totally forgotten about that till now. I think that's part of why your videos are so great.you never know what fond memory can surface that you totally forgot about. I found myself checking the time on the video. not cuz I was in a rush for it to end. but the opposite I wanted it not to end, and that's priceless. so just wanted to thank you for the great video.
My favorite kind of video, YOUR personal relationship with the console is what I want to hear. Great video as always man
+andy ehmann Thanks dude.
Another excellent video Adam! The NES was my introduction into video games and holds a special place in my heart. I think it's awesome you actually have the same system you first saw as a little kid!
+Jon Barrett Thanks for watching!
Nes was the first system I've ever played, was about 3 or 4 yrs old and my brother was playing Mario. it was awesome at the time. One of the first games I got was Robocop.
We had to blow on the cartridge and then wiggle it once it was in, and then hope it would work.
I wish I had my childhood console, they are lost to time!..Alas!...Great coverage, Hella fascinating!😁
I remember an uncle bought it with Super Mario Bros./Duck Hunt/track n field and literally being soo blown away. I was crying once he packed it up and took it home. Literally. I also was 6 years old. Adam, you must be younger since you never experienced the NES at it's peak. Cause to me, it was the chet. Of course the SNES put me on a natural high for months.
Me and you both saw the same console first. When I was 4 I saw my brother play super Mario Bros 1 and Tetris. Awesome memory. Thank you Adam for doing these awesome videos..
No Contra, Double Dragon or Mega Man? Aww...
Well, Super Mario Bros. 3 is definitely the best. 18 million people can't be wrong. Takashi Tezuka, the level designer for the Super Mario Bros. series, even said that it is his masterpiece. I've seen plenty of people in the game industry say that if you want to get into level design: play and take inspiration from Super Mario Bros. 3.
It's because of Super Mario Maker, I'm starting to realize how subtlely brilliant Super Mario Bros. is.
Why empty blocks floating in mid air? Why not stairs? Well if you had that area blocked off, it would be like being told no when you really want to go somewhere. Less options means less fun.
Why a bottomless pit? Why not spikes? If you had spikes then that would mean the artist would have to spend extra time drawing a sprite, then a programmer would have to code it and color it in and then it would just eat up more memory. Why not just have nothing there? I've seen tons of ROM hacks and levels that stick spikes/munchers in without a thought or care in the world and they look so bad.
Super Mario Bros. is the Star Wars of our generation.
Hideo Kojima said that he wanted to be a film director because of John Carpenter. At a Sony press conference or some gaming event I forget, when asked by a fan what his favorite game was he replied Super Mario Bros. The Sony reps looked so angry at him for saying that but then they made a face like, "Well, he said it already." It was so awkward and amusing.
Just like him and a lot of other people, Super Mario Bros. inspired us to get into gaming. It truly was the genesis of the modern video gaming era.
My most favorite game console of all time. Another excellent video, Adam! Always look forward to these in my sub box.
+ABH Thanks for watching!
Paperboy is great. I loved playing it back in the late 1980s and on occasion now. In my opinion it stands the test of time.
Still got my ROB the robot too, gave him a polish only yesterday with all this spring cleaning. :D
I think to a lot of people, the NES was the first system they ever own that was marketed for them. I remember playing the Atari 5200 before getting a NES but the 5200 was my parents system that I was allowed to play on. The NES was my system and while my dad did buy it for himself, I was the one asking to get games on it while the 5200 I never asked games for it. I was born in 82 so I have a lot of great memories with it and even remember buying it with my dad. It also had to be during the time that the school yard culture also helped. Every kid I knew had a NES and we'd all take time in the afternoon after school to play it at each others house. It was also everywhere, cartoons, shirts, cereal, books, even movies for just Nintendo and only Nintendo. It was OUR video game console and was the only console for kids that was directly marketed towards kids so we just grew up with it.
+AdamKoralik one thing I've found very fascinating about Famicom/NES history is how many different versions there were. The NES had the European, Mattel, Spanish (or Italian? I forget, but one for a very specific region), along with a Hong Kong and Asian version. Additionally, the Famicom had three known versions: the Japanese version, Hong Kong version (and a HK Disk System, which seems to be the same model # as the Japanese one, as the HK Famicom has a dif model number) and a Taiwanese version, which wasn't really known till the past five years and still is quite vague.
Thanks for an awesome video! ^_^
I'd never thought about how the NES was styled to look like a VCR until a few months ago when I saw an early 80's NEC betamax player at a goodwill that looked EXACTLY like a NES.
Hey Adam! I have my old "retro" (I say retro in quotations because many people have different versions of the word, mine definition is any system that received arcade points, first being the 2nd gen, last being the dreamcast, with the rest of the 6th gen not getting ports.) systems hooked up to CRT TVs, giving an exception to the DC, as the whole VGA part makes me put it on a HD TV. I was wondering if there were RGB Scart CRT TVs so that I could keep the 80/90s feel of a CRT without losing the video quality of RGB Scart. If such a thing does exist, I do imagine that shipping prices would be high because of CRTs being giant lead cubes with lights and electricity.
You know, after watching this video, a memory suddenly came back to me. I actually remember seeing Paperboy for the NES somewhere when I was very young. I don't remember if somebody was playing it or if I was playing it, but I vaguely remember it.
+N64Lain Glad I could help. :P
Adam there is a rack made by Hudson that holds the famicom and disk system together
I've really been into the NES/Famicom lately. The NES was before my time, I'm almost 25, but I do have a lot of nostalgia for it. I remember going over to family friend's house and playing Duck Hunt, Mario 1, and The Legend of Zelda. Those are the 3 first games I ever played.
I missed getting this one. I went from Intellivision to SNES.
Yes Super Mario 3 is the best game of that generation and perhaps of all time.
Is it true that Tengen engineers showed up at the patent office claiming to be Nintendo´s employees and requested the files for the nes10 chip?
+Omega Rugal
Yup. Watch The Gaming Historian episode on it here on TH-cam. The request even showed up in the newspaper. You can search and read the actual article on Google.
I do love this console and it is either my fourth or fifth favorite. Ironically though, my two favorite games are actually for the Famicom, those being Mother 1 and Final Fantasy 3; third is of course SMB 3. I do love it, and the Famicom, and still play both to this day. I can always just throw in SMB 1 and speed through to World 7 or so and then shut it off or throw in SMB 3 and speed through the first 3 worlds and feel just really good afterwards. It has charm all it's own.
Hey Adam,
What are your thoughts on the Analogue Nt? It's not exactly an emulator, but rather its the original hardware from a NES and Famicom taken apart and put together as one single unit. I don't have one, but from what I've read it supports PAL and NTSC NES games as well as Famicom games, it can also output through component or HDMI.
+Jarrah White The silver box that costs like $500?
Yeah, that. It certainly looks better built than the faulty VCR style loading system of the original NES and has better AV outputs.
+Jarrah White That's one of the few "clone consoles" that actually seems like it's not a turd. Which it better be for that price. But no, I haven't used it.
+AdamKoralik There seems to be a cheaper option than the Analogue Nt. Retro-bit made what they call a "RetroPort adapter". You insert an NES game into the top and then insert it into the top of the cartridge slot on the SNES. Unfortunately it doesn't output through the SNES, it has it's own AV cable that you plug into the side of the adapter. It's only outputs composite, but if you were using an original NES that was the best you got anyway. Again, this adapter eliminates the flimsy VCR style design of the original console. What are your thoughts on this adapter?
I'm glad I'm old enough to have grown up in the 80's and played NES....great console IMO
best games I played:
Battletoads
Blades of Steel
castlevania
castlevania 3
Double Dragon 2 The Revenge
Dr Mario
Gradius
Ikari Warriors
Low G man
Mendal Palace
Metal Gear
Metroid
Mike Tyson's Punch Out [not the altered Punch Out version]
Mission Impossible
Ninja Gaiden
Paperboy
Super Mario Bros
Super Mario 3
Tetris
Tiger Heli
Wizards & Warriors
Wizards & Warriors 3
Zelda
----
I'm likely forgetting a lot but these were the majority of my fave NES games
I was so looking forward to your review of the third gen and the nes specifically. I have been watching your recaps starting with current gen and going backwards. I really like your stuff and I know you a busy man but I hope you spend some quality time with nes sometime and make another video. Thanks
I've got like 5 CRT's laying around. #Melee4Lyfe
+RealNigga19 He must be buff because those things can be fucking heavy.
RealNigga19 There are plenty of kids at my school who do that. I just bring a controller and play with them.
+ThePokemaniacZach I use a CRT... PC monitor. CS at 160Hz for dirt cheap ftw.
My first video game memory was the NES. My mother bought one and was playing Dragon Warrior- I still have the original console and cart.
This was my very first game system ever. My dad when me my older brother and sister had the NES because my dad bought the top loader with a bunch of games to go with it, games I remember were Mario 1 2 and 3, Megaman 6, Zelda Metroid, Jaws, and Ducktales just to name a few. This was in the early 90s. I never even knew about SNES, Genesis or any other system but NES. Until 1996 when we got Nintendo 64. Holy crap did Mario 64 blow my mind when I was a kid.
I started playing video games at age 5 (1988). I didn't know many people who owned more than a few games for their system. We mostly rented games from the same place you rented movies. There wasn't much information on when new games were going to come out, no previews or much hype with the exception of Super Mario 3. Most games couldn't save either, so my friends and I would have a notebook with passwords from all the games we rented. Some of the passwords were really long and complex, and if anything was off or wrong it wouldn't work.
thank you for this video! I've been hoping you would make an nes video eventually and there it is. I applaud this video
Very interesting your feelings with the Nintendo NES, I am older than you and I had at the time exactly the same feeling with this machine, I never owned it and I never wanted to press the start button on ... I have better memories of the Master System andl my first console was ... a Super Nintendo which I thought was awesome. I also agree with you regarding Mario All Stars, I loved this game as a kid, still great after playi Super Mario World.
Thank you so much for doing this generation!
+jeremy van hise Thanks for watching!
+AdamKoralik Wow this vid was really interesting. I know you collect stuff like more recent xbox/ps games and such, but this is so interesting compared to that in my opinion. It's crazy that they sort of released the NES so timidly and tested the waters too. Also I never even thought about the strange "VCR" way you put cartridges into it and why it's so awkward to begin with when you could have a design that's much more straight-forward and reliable.
We got a test release in late 85 in Los Angeles too.
Awesome video. Although this was not my first console, it was certainly the one I've played the most. I know you don't talk about the stuff you don't have but I feel that the video was not complete without mentioning the ridiculous amount of accessories this thing had. The Roll N Rocker, the LaserScope, the Power Glove, the Power Pad, the U -force, just to name the ones I had, were just crazy and years ahead of their time. I could care less about what critics say about them. Many of my fondest childhood memories are of me and my friends playing Punch Out with the U -force and knocking the thing off the table and other things like that. My favorite games for it were the Dragon Warrior games, the Final Fantasies, Megaman, Contra, BattleToads (hardest game ever), Turtles II, and the list goes on...
My favorite console. Thank you for doing this video.
+Wheels8504 Thanks for watching!
+AdamKoralik You're welcome. Ever thought of doing videos on handhelds?
+Wheels8504 Maybe eventually.
+AdamKoralik That's cool. Just thought I'd ask.
Adam I love your videos. I, like you, am a 30+ years gamer and grew up with the NES. And a fellow Chicagoan. Keep up the good work.
+George Nelson Thank you.
You never spoke about the 60 pins on Famicom vs 72 on NES, does it make any difference?
+tsangpogorge not really, the extra 12 pins sit in the center and dont really do much. for example the 60 to 72 pin adapter splits the 60 in to 30 on each side with 12 blank pins right in the middle.
why have them then?
+tsangpogorge Yes I did. I may not have elaborated enough. As I said, some of the pins were for the 10 NES chip. The rest were largely unused. They could have been for things like modems, disk drive expansions, but they never came to be.
ok thanks. Do you write scripts for these vids? u rarely ramble or go off on tangents.
+tsangpogorge Flattering, but no, it's all just off the cuff. I plan certain items to be on the table, but beyond that, nah.
New fav channel. Thank you
I love these quick shoot series video game history
Any system to me before the Gamecube, Xbox, and PS2, I always perfer to play it on a CRT, it looks so good to me
I replaced the 72 pin connector on my NES when the lockout problem started, and while it works wonderfully when the cart is inserted it, for whatever reason, doesn't work at all if I push the game down. I've not been able to find any reason that this should be the case, it's just rather weird. Still, it works fine otherwise so not a big deal. :p
Great vids and I'm hype for your vid about the third year of wii u
These recap videos are so good
Hey I have been planning on getting an Nes should I get a model 2 or model 1
+Josh Sandum Boils down to personal preference honestly.
I had an NES around 1996 and loved playing North v South
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles was fun, just super hard. The worst this about it was jumping sucked, which I would say is actually bad programming rather than just being hard. Donatello rocked though.
I'll never forget unwrapping an NES for Christmas. It was, by far, the best Christmas I ever had.
Woo-hoo! My first 3rd gen console gets some covering! I still have it to this day.
can you make a video about the first VR virtual boy?
Adam have you played the original MSX metal gear
I have a lot of respect for the NES. When I was 9 I went to a mall one day and saw someone playing Contra and I thought it looked badass. My Mom bought me an NES clone console that had 30 games on it. My favorites were Duck Hunt, Contra, SMB, Mappy, Balloon Pop, Ice Climbers, and Muscle. Compared to the Gamecube it was just something fun to pass an afternoon. Over time I played NES games on emulators, but like you I never owned an actual NES until as of 3 months ago. My local retro shop was selling it for $45 and and I bought it right away.
when the top loaders were released many people complained about lines on their screen and Nintendo added composite to their systems for those who sent them in with that complaint.
Wish I still had my original Nintendo counsel which I regretfully abandoned. Can't believe you went that long without playing those two Zelda games btw.
Hi Adam! It's amazing that you can remember the first game and console you saw in your life. I can't remember mine, I think it should be Sonic or Alex Kidd for the master system. I was born in 1990 and here in Portugal was all about Sega. I knew Mario just because of the game boy. I didn't even know of the NES existence like until the late 90s.
Well dam your cousin reeks of awesomeness for giving you all that nes stuff!
Adam don't feel isolated, I didn't play A Link to the Past until 2012
+siIvermate I didn't play Contra til 2014.
AirCooledMan2006 Oh not cool bro
+siIvermate I didn't play an NES or an N64 until my younger brother bought one this year. I've had a SNES and Gamecube since I was 8, but I had never played the other two consoles.
Proto Stratos If you had a GameCube since you were 8, and the GameCube was released in 2001, then you probably aren't that old
Yeah, I'm only 21.
The Atari 7800 and Jaguar were made by Jack Tramiel's Atari Corporation. Atari was separated a year after the video game crash. Atari Corporation did not revamp itself into a third-party publisher and Atari Games used the Tengen name due to the Atari name used on the consumer division. As a result of making unlicensed games, Tengen made a few Sega titles that were originally ported to the Master System, such as After Burner.
I can't wait for part 2, about Master System... that was a huge success here in Brazil (believe or not, you can still find some strange versions of it in stores!). I even found for sale in Europe (Portugal) a lot of cartridges that are produced in Brazil... I don't know why, maybe for the language in the manuals or whatever. Ah, the 80's/90's...
i have a similar story, my first console i ever saw and play was the NES and then after the gamecube and i was 4 years old,
I've heard there are VERY FEW top loaders that came with a multi-out.
+GamerNRetro I've heard the same.
The Tengen version of Tetris is FAR superior to the Nintendo version.
+Indy The Great shut up
+John DiLoreto Wait, Tetris DX is Gameboy Color? I had and still have it for my Gameboy. It is a black cart, but just like all Gameboy carts, it has the chip in the corner of the plastic that they took out for GB Color.
+Mike Oliver To the point that someone actually tried to sell one for *wait for it*...
Points Pinky to face: One million dollars.
+CreeperCrew jakethefake Some Game Boy Color games could be play on the original GB. The GBC games that had the black cart still used the GB bio thus allowing them to be play on the original black and white system and the Super Game Boy.
+Mike Oliver That version was pretty weird with all them animal wallpaper pictures on each level. Me I prefer the version that came bundle with Dr. Mario for the Super NES and the one that came launch with the original Game Boy. The Tengen NES version is still better than the Nintendo NES one though, you can't play 2-player on the Nintendo one.
Paperboy was the first game you ever saw and you still got interested in video games? Man, I got to give it to you, that's a hard bridge to cross for me.
And shave the damn beard
I think that's cool that you own the first console you saw I wish I still own that Genesis
I pretty much skimmed over the video game crash in 83 and didn't even know it was happening at the time. I grew up, as a kid, during the 2nd gen. Our first console as a family was the Atari 2600, and then eventually my dad just gave it to me, so it was sort of a hand-me-down console. After that though, instead of buying a 5200 or Colecovision, I bought an Atari 800XL computer which was basically a resigned Atari 800. Much of the games I had for that were basically identical to the 5200 except I could attach a floppy drive, a modem, and a printer to it. I use to use log on to Bulletin Board Systems (BBSs) back then. (pre-internet) I eventually bought a used C64 along with a couple boxes worth of floppy disks with games an other software. So that's basically what I was playing with during the 80s. I've played NES games at my friends house a few times but I wasn't that impressed with it enough to go by one. In 90 or 91 I bought any Atari ST along with a bunch of games for that. It wasn't until I played Sonic the Hedgehog on a friend's Sega Genesis that I got back into console gaming. And then evetually I also bought a SNES but similar to your experience, I when to a local Funcoland and they selling used NES systems for like $20 so I finally did get one but by this time the Saturn was already out and the Playstation was about to be released. Sorry if this comment is long but your story with the NES was almost similar to mine.
weird tho. I never had a master system as a child. never heard of it but I had an nes. later I bought the master system and honestly the colors and graphics are wayyy better and it had amazing games. mind you I'm a lover of all systems. I personally as a kid was very impressed with the turbografx 16. I remember I lived in Los Angeles and there was a shop where you can pay by the hour to play game systems. they have Sega Genesis nes Super Nintendo you name it. that the first time I saw a turbografx and in Master System and they both blew my mind. I remember being the only kid in there playing the turbografx with the hue cards thinking this was the most futuristic thing ever. two very underrated consoles in America. also Adam I love your videos please continue to make as many as possible. you have made my shopping to upgrade video quality on my retro systems the best.
My first game console was the Famicon, man i loved it, my mother stressed the hell out with me, because my life was around it.
Couple years later i saved a bunch of money and since i was always moving, i bought the Sega Game Gear, man, it sucked so much, what a disappointment, few games launched, 6 AA batteries that lasted for like one hour, shit, i hated it, i ended up trading the Sega Game Gear for a Game Boy with a bunch of games, and... i loved it, a ton of cool games, batteries lasted for ever, had so much fun with it.
After some years, my next console was the Sony Playstation, it was offered by a cousin of mine, because it read burned games (piracy all the way), played music Cd´s, since i was in another town because of the University, that was cool, i could listen to my music without bringing whole stereo with me, and plus i could play games (burned), i had a ton of games, played the hell out, but it was not that great, it was ok, the game magic was lost, i thought that it was because of my age...
I bought the PS2, just because it was the cheapest DVD player at that time, the guy that sold me the console (he worked for sony) he was my friend, and when the console was launched, he inserted the chip on it, and i could read burned games, i used it mainly for movies and gave up on consoles...
So a couple years back, i bought a Nintendo 2DS for my daughter, and bought also the game New Super Mario Bros 2, and, bam, i had the same feeling back when i played the Famicon... I bought another 2DS for me and the New 3DS XL also, and every game i buy, and every game i play, i have the same feeling back in the famicon time, boy what a company Nintendo is...
Sure, there are more powered consoles on the market, more enhanced games graphics wise but, Nintendo is my favorite gaming company...
Are you Japanese?
Famicom RGB Scart video?
Weird; my Top Loader doesnt have RF out; its the SNES plug.
+Francois Roy You're lucky, that version is extremely rare.
Really? I always assumed it was just part of the new design.
The first video game console I ever saw was the Sega Genesis. Great stuff Adam.
+Justin'sMovies/Games Thanks for watching!
Unfortunately, you will never feel the way we all felt when the Nes came out. Once you go back after exposed to Psone and so on. When the Nes came out, there was nothing like it, so imagination of possibility went wild. You will never witness that unfortunately
But good video though
JoTokutora true
You should do a second gen console recap next.
Hey Adam,, I've been a fan of your videos for a couple of years now. I just started my retro collection. I saw your video on how to improve video quality but I'm a bit confused about a couple of things.. do you have an email I can contact you about extra information?? I need more information about the rgb outputs and scart cables.
23:07 Do you still have a CRT?
When you say the NES wasn't hugely popular in Europe can you be more specific? In the UK everyone had the NES, odd person had a master system.
+Christopher Kelly I mean a bunch of locals all told me that. I went there, witnessed it myself.
+AdamKoralik I agree with the mega drive that was more popular here than snes, at least for early part of that generation/war, it was out earlier had lots of games and was cheaper by time snes got here...but nah I def feel the nes was by far more popular here than the master system. Everyone in my class at school for example had the nes, one guy had a master system. Cousins, uncles...all nes guess certain areas may have been different
Same here. Everyone I knew had a NES. The NES was outselling they Master in the early 90s
Great video man! Just wondering though, how does disabling the 10NES chip make the console more reliable?
+Stephen O'Brien Watch my video about i, I explain it all there.
Nice vid man, I believe the NES was the first console I ever saw too because my brother had one when it was a new console.
so the 72-pin connector is like a pci-e riser
My funny experience of Super Mario Bros 3 was I was in Kauai. We went to an arcade and there it was on the Nintendo Game choice machine. It wasn't even released in North America yet on cartridge (of course I found out later it was released 2 years earlier in Japan.) I remember pointing out SMB 3 to my mom totally baffled like, how the hell do I get that game??? lol
I was born into the late 5th gen, pretty much around the same time you first bought and owned one. But it's funny because it's the first console I actually saw and played as well. Since my Dad was cool enough to have it with the classic Super Mario Bros/Duck Hunt Cartridge with the gun and all. We also found TMNT at a garage sale, I didn't really like it though lmao. That was the only game console my Dad really played at length, and the game he played the most was Legend of Zelda. He never really picked up and played a game after that.
I spent hours playing mario 3 man. definitely a part of my collection atm.
great video by the way
awesome series adam!
+Lisandro Brasolin Thanks!
YAAAASSSS! Super Mario Bros 3 all the way.
It was a nice system, indeed but picking it another time would be a money killer, I suppose.
Playing SMB1, Kid Icarus and Gauntlet however was fun back then.
Great video again, Adam.
Well it seems like you're not fond of the NES Metal gear but, what are your thoughts on Snake's revenge?