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Forums - Gaming Discussion - What is your gaming history?

'70s: Pong, Space Invaders, Breakout and others on arcade machines
'80s: A console with pong and other three simple games built-in, lots of games on arcade machines, Intellivision
Early '90s: ZX Spectrum, PC (not mine own yet), lots of arcade machines, still using my old Intellivision every now and then
Late '90s: My first PC!!!
2000: My second PC, the first I personally built!!!
2000s: upgrades to my second PC, my third PC (the second I personally built)
2010s: upgrades to my third PC (I'm still posponing assembling my fourth one), phone (very little, I like small phones, but their small screens suck for games), tablet (much more).



Stwike him, Centuwion. Stwike him vewy wuffly! (Pontius Pilate, "Life of Brian")
A fart without stink is like a sky without stars.
TGS, Third Grade Shooter: brand new genre invented by Kevin Butler exclusively for Natal WiiToo Kinect. PEW! PEW-PEW-PEW! 
 


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1993(ish) Master System
1995 PC ( mainly strategy and point n click)
1998 N64
1999 PS1 + N64
2000 Dreamcast
2002 PS2
2003 Xbox
2005 Xbox 360
2009 Gaming Laptop
2010 PS3
2012 Wii
2013 Wii U
2014 3DS
2014 PS4
2015 Xbox one
2016 PSVR
2016 Gaming Laptop
2017 PS4 Pro
2017 Nintendo Switch

Whew so um yeah guess i spent a lot of money on this shit.



1997 or 1998: PS1
1999: GameBoy Color
2003: Xbox
2007: Xbox 360 Pro (broke in 2010)
2009: PS3
2010: Xbox 360 Arcade
2013: Xbox 360 Slim (for my wife)
2015: Xbox One
2018: Xbox One X

And between that (especially 2000-2007) tons of different PCs.

Last edited by Barozi - on 08 September 2018

NES
Atari
SNES
Sega Genesis
Sega Game Gear
N64 (some PSX at friends)
Gameboy Color
Jaguar
Jaguar CD
GCN (some Xbox and PS2 at friends)
Gameboy Advance
Gameboy Advance SP
DS
Wii (some PS3 through roommate)
3DS
Playstation 4
Wii U
Switch
PC throughout

Last edited by zygote - on 08 September 2018

Sega Megadrive (genesis in other countries)
Snes
Sega Saturn
Sega Dreamcast
PlayStation 1
PlayStation 2
PlayStation 3
PlayStation 4/ Switch (switch is sold now though)



PSN ID: Stokesy 

Add me if you want but let me know youre from this website

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I got into gaming a bit later in life.

2003 - My mom bought me an NES from a garage sale, and came home to surprise me with it. Until then, I had never played a video game.
2004 - My cousin gave me her GameBoy (the original), with Super Mario Land 2.
2006 - Got a Gamecube and GameBoy Advance SP. This was a great year!
2007 - Got a PSP and a Wii. This was also a great year!
2008 - Won a Nintendo DS from an arcade.
2011 - Bought a Nintendo 3DS. First time buying a game console around launch (not day one, though).
2012 - Got an Xbox 360 as a Birthday gift. Also bought a Wii U.
2016 - Bought a PS4, with Bioshock: The Collection.
2017 - Sold my PS4 to buy a Switch, with BotW. First time buying a video game system AT LAUNCH.



   

I was born in 1984. Around 88 my Dad bought an Atari for my brother and me to play. We had several games that we played on an old black and white tube T.V. that wasn't more than 10 inches. The games we had were Pole Position, Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back, Pittfall, Mario Bros., and Combat. The game we liked the most was Combat, since it had multiplayer tank battles. You could go invisible with your tank, richochet shots, and hide behind cover. The game was a blast and IMO it still is. We knew the NES existed at this time, but my Dad didn't want to spend the money on it. We often played Mario, and Duck Hunt at friend's houses. I sucked at Mario. 

When I was seven years old my brother got a Sega Genesis for his birthday. Sonic the Hedgehog was a pack-in title for the system. Even back then, I thought Sonic was kind of a short game. This was because my neighbors had an SNES and Super Mario World was at least three times as long, with save files. My true love at the time was Street Fighter II, and later Mortal Kombat II. These fighting games were so easy to get into compared to modern fighters. Special moves took a lot of precedence over combos. As a result, I'm a zoning type of special move spamming player to this day in fighting games. In MK9 I was able to easy outzone Sub-Zero players with Reptile, because his moveset was so similar to MKII's Reptile. The Sega Genesis introduced me to my first JRPG, Phantasy Star II. I loved the game to death, but I just couldn't beat it due to the insanely confusing dungeons. We also played Earthworm Jim, Sonic 2, Sonic 3, UMK3, Jurrasic Park, Warlock, Kid Chameleon, Spiderman Maximum Carnage, and about twenty other games. I knew the SNES existed, and secretly knew it was better than anything Sega put out. 

For my 12th birthday I was given the choice to get either a Playstation or an N64. By this time I had figured out what Square RPGs were, and I picked N64 since I thought Nintendo would get the same games they had since the NES. I was dead wrong. To my surprise Castlevania, Square RPGs, Megaman, and Konami all jumped ship to Sony. I really can't put an emphasis on how shocking and surprising this was at the time. Sega was basically dead in the states with the Saturn, and Nintendo had half it's good games stolen by a competitor. Imagine if Microsoft died off, and then suddenly Sony lost half it's exclusive games to some *other* console. Now to add insult to injury, imagine that the PC is as expensive as it was in the 90's. Anyway I resented Sony for a long time for this, since I was too young to see the bussiness side of things. 

I enjoyed the N64 a lot. Goldeneye introduced me to the FPS genre. I borrowed Super Mario 64 and Ocarina of Time from friends, and at first I didn't see what the big deal was. I kept telling my friend's in art class that there was no way Ocarina of Time was as good as Turok 2.  Months later I was still playing both of Nintendo's games. I think that was the time where I stopped judging a game by it's cover. IMO at the time the N64 was a much better system than the PS1. It had true analog from the start (a lot of PS1 games don't even use the analog sticks as anything more than glorified D-Pad inupts). It had 4 controller ports for multiplayer awesomeness. It had revolutionary games like Goldeneye, SM64, and OoT. 

In high school I had a Gamecube, and my brother had an Xbox. I really thought he Gamecube was a huge dissapointment at the time. The Mario game used wierd cleaning mechanics. The Zelda game only had 6 dungeons. Rare was nowhere to be seen. Looking back I really like the Gamecube for entirely different reasons though. Metroid Prime and Resident Evil 4 are classics. I prefer the Gamecube for ports of multiplatform games, since Original Xboxes don't really offer much for a collector these days. The game that I truly fell in love with during my later high school years was Morrowwind on the Xbox. Sure it plays pretty badly today, but at the time it was revolutionary. 

Around 2005 I was long out of high school and I picked up a 360 since Sony completely botched the PS3. It was at about this time that I discovered a Mom n' Pop used game store and started growing my retro collection. It's also around this time that I started paying attention to reviewers. Gamespot's Greg Kasavin just seemed to nail every review he wrote. Finally this was the time where I became the type of gamer that plays on anything and everything.I bought a PS2, a DS, a PS3, etc. I even delved into PC with Civ IV (and loved it). This was a few years before the PC Gaming Master Race meme started taking off, and I just wanted to play good games. This was also back when you could still buy a PHYSICAL version of a PC game. 

Eventually I ditched my 360 collection of around 20 games and combined my PS3/360 library into a PS3 library for the sake of having it all on one system. I loved Microsoft's gaming division from 2001 to 2011, and I could go on about how much they did to improve the gaming landscape, but that's for another thread. 

I got a 3DS XL in 2013 as soon as the price dropped to $200. At this time, I was very skeptical of games rated below 85 on Metacritic. Despite this, the cover of Etrian Odyssey IV called out to me, and I decided to make a rare exception. EOIV blew my mind, and completely changed what I considered a good game. Sure, I had bought, played, and enjoyed other games rated below 85, such as Tales of Vesperia, Chromehounds, etc. But this was the first game rated so low, that immediately wound up on my personal list of Greatest Games  of All Time. I went out and started buying other games rated in the 80 to 84 range, that were from genres that I liked. 

I bought a Wii U shortly before Pikmin 3 launched, and it was a good system for the time. But by mid 2018, I was regretting it. Out of my initial 15 game Wii U collection, all but 5 games got ported over to Switch. I started double-dipping on ports, in order to merge the Switch and Wii U collections into one Switch Collection. Owning a Wii U in 2018 felt like owning a Saturn or Dreamcast.

I also, bought a PS4 in 2015, and a PS4 Pro in 2018. Xbox failed to attract my interest during the 8th generation, and I doubt they will ever get it back.

 From 2011 to 2017, I resented the PC Gaming Master Race for pushing graphics over gameplay, embracing digital distribution (which I consider to be a ripp off), and claiming that the platform you play on makes you superior, and not the number of, or quality of games that you've enjoyed. But in the latter half of 2018, I got over it, and reverted to my old habits of simply buying games I like, no matter the platform. These days I still play on pretty much everything except phones. I'm currently building a new PC just to play the RTS and Strategy titles that are exclusive to the platform.

Last edited by Cerebralbore101 - on 08 September 2018

First list = main systems second list = other systems a mix of new and used some at launch others accumulated overtime so can't remember the dates.
Main = C64 - Amiga 600 - PS1 - PS2 - PSP - PS3 - Vita - PS4 - PS4 Pro - various PC builds
Other= snes - Saturn- DC - N64 - GC - Xbox - Wii - GBA - 360 - 3DS -Wii U- Xbox one - Switch  

Last edited by mjk45 - on 09 September 2018

Research shows Video games  help make you smarter, so why am I an idiot

My first main console was the NES, when Inwas like 3 years old. Still have my old games to this day. I also had a Game Boy, but no longer have that library.

After that I jumped ship to Sega Genesis. My collection was not huge with this console, but I did a lot of renting and played the hell out of the games I did own. I also had a Game Gear with a similar sized library. I eventually got a SNES for games like Chrono Trigger and Final Fantasy, but that was late into the next Generation.

Then it was time to return to Nintendo with the N64. I had a blast with this one, and have a lot of fond memories. Sadly however, I no longer have this library of games in my collection. I would eventually get a Playstation at the end of the generation for JRPGs as well. I was also pretty big on the Virtual Boy, and only learned later that I had gotten almost every game that was even released on it, not knowing how bad the system tanked in reality at the time.

Now most of the next generation I gamed on the PS2 almost exclusively. We had a Game Cube in the house, but I only ever played the Zelda games on it.

The following generation led me to get a PS3. Much like the generation before it, I gamed primarily on Playstation. I had a Wii, but it was only for playing Skyward Sword. Eventually I would have a 360 provided to me from LensOfTruth during my time as a reviewer so that I could review exclusive 360 games as well. I got a WiiU as well, but it was mainly played by my Ex wife and I only really used it for...you guessed it...the Zelda remasters. There was also a stretch at this time where I got heavy into PC MMORPGs as well.

Now we have the current Generation. Year 1 I had both a PS4 and an X1, but after Sunset Overdrive and Titanfall, my X1 became a glorified netflix machine. The exclusives are just lack luster to me and even though I bought every exclusive game through Halo 5, I just cannot get into what MS has to offer. Most of this Generation I have been once again, a Playstation gamer. I also aquired a 3DS and a VITA for portable JRPGs, remote play, and Zelda games.

HOWEVER, things changed a bit when the Switch came out. Now my primary console flips back and forth equally between my PS4 Pro and my Switch, favoring the Switch slightly overall. I have gotten back into Nintendo games and even picked up the old handhelds I missed out on for retro gaming Nintendo games from previous generations as well. I plan on playing many of the old 1st party Nintendo games I skipped as well. I also got a Philips CDi player...for the non canon Zelda spinoffs...

And that about sums it all up in a nutshell. I have played other consoles as well briefly, but it was always at a friend's house so I felt no need to include them on the list.



Nintendo Switch Friend Code: SW-5643-2927-1984

Animal Crossing NH Dream Address: DA-1078-9916-3261

1990 - NES, I barely have memories of this one. I just remember barely playing Super Mario Bros and Duck Hunt.

1997 - SNES. I got this bundled with the black Killer Instinct cartridge. Along the way, I got Super Mario All-Stars and Super Mario World, which gave me the fondest memories of Nintendo. I also got Aladdin, which was a truly masterful game.

1998 - Game Boy Pocket. Bundled with Tetris Attack, I got Pokemon: Blue Version as a birthday gift that year, which I took everywhere. I loved the hell out of that game.

1999 - PlayStation. I was quite the late bloomer with the PlayStation. Got it as a gift on Christmas that year with Gran Turismo 2. I remember renting out a ton of games at Blockbuster during this period. Smackdown 2, GTA2, Rayman, Driver 2... I remember having a lot of fun with Gran Turismo 2, which expanded my knowledge about cars even further.

2001 - N64. Santa back then was a poor fellow, so he couldn't promise my brother and I a PS2. So we got a secondhand Nintendo 64 with Super Mario 64 and WWF No Mercy, which gave me  tons of hours of fun. Never managed to find the last star in the castle .

2002 - PS2. Managed to finally get one by Christmas with WWE Smackdown: Shut Your Mouth. I was also ecstatic it doubled as a DVD player, which we didn't have yet. A week or so later, the Three Kings left a gift for us on our uncle's house. It was Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, and it blew our tiny minds. I remember playing that and GTA III at our cousin's house, but having it for ourselves to endlessly experience it was such a joy. It was a true leap forward for us. And it got better. Ratchet & Clank: Going Commando, Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty, True Crime: Streets of LA, Hitman 2: Silent Assassin, Smackdown: Here Comes the Pain, Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater, Ratchet & Clank: Up Your Arsenal, Need for Speed Underground 2, Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, and even more! When people look at me like I'm crazy for saying I had my best experience with a PS2, they don't understand the joy it brought me.

2009 - PS3. It was the first console I managed to buy with my own money. I wanted Grand Theft Auto IV, but it was sold out everywhere in my mall, so we had to wait an entire day to get it on a farther Best Buy. I still remember the tune waiting for the game to install. The game was truly something else. Not to mention the PS3 bootup sequence which, in my opinion, is one of the best bootups of any console, if not the best. Bioshock, Resident Evil 5, Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots, Midnight Club: Los Angeles... we were progressing slowly. I still remember the employee from Babbages recommending my brother and I to get Uncharted: Drake's Fortune since the second one was releasing later that year, a decision I never regretted. Then, I got DSL, and we were introduced to the world of online gaming. And then the bootup changed, and online was unforgiving (mostly because we had 2Mbps). But then Uncharted 2 happened, and it blew my mind that Christmas morning when I got it. And it only got better ever since.

2015 - PS4. My brother and I went to Best Buy to look for something. We go to the videogame section to check the stuff like we always did. He went in front of some PS4's, and after inspecting them, he just picks one up, which honestly took me by surprise. He got the Arkham Knight bundle, which was an excellent way to start. It got better and better since then. GTA V, Assassin's Creed IV, MGS V, Uncharted 4, Fallout 4... right now having 48 digital games and 28 physical games. And it just keeps getting better.