archbrix said:
The Genesis' faster CPU wasn't what allowed the console to do well against the SNES in the US. The Sega Genesis had a full two year headstart on the market, had good brand recognition, and amassed a strong library of titles before the SNES arrived, to say nothing of the Sega Sports line which did well for the Genesis. Heck, painting Nintendo as the more "kiddy" console did more for Sega than the "blast processing" commercials did. |
When you have all that, and you specs put the system in the same class, even if inferior (the Genesis, in the end was inferior and eventually lost to the SNES), you can be very competitive, which is what the Genesis was.







