Final-Fan said:
The Neo-Geo did not start production in 2001; the Master System did not start production in 1998; the Genesis did not start production in 2002. These are the dates that the systems officially died but actually have somewhat lived on after. This is quite obvious from the context and previous posts, both of which are quoted above. Please reread them until you understand the words that are coming out of my |
A system dies out when the company stops official support of it right. Why does brazil and other south american countries matter, they're not major regions and the continued support is by companies who have bought the right to make unliscenced games and clone consoles or alternate third world versions (SG-1000 Mk5, etc). If you want I'm sure we could count the lifespan of counterfeit consoles in china as part of the lifespan too. If your argument has to go to south america or china though, I think we can be pretty sure you don't have an argument. And since on this website seems to weigh all three major regions as each being part of the official console's support line, whenever its released first or discontinued last, no matter the region counts as its official lifespan.
But I'm pretty sure most people on this website can agree that a console's lifespan is from when it is officially launched (no matter the country) to when it officially ends (liscenced game support or console production ceases).
Why is the PSX lasting from 1995 - 2005 so hard for you to stomach? If you want to ignore Japan or any other region to suit ideas you're comfortable with then you might be on the wrong website.







