| Ostro said: ^yeah the seal of quality needs meaning again |
The seal never had any real meaning. It was just something Nintendo used to garner the trust of consumers after the console crash in the 80's caused people to lose respect. Anyone who grew up with the NES can tell you that console had its share of bad games too despite the "seal of quality". The seal always just meant you're getting a software that isn't too broken and will play in your system.







