makingmusic476 said:
Statements like this make me wonder when exactly you started gaming. It was called the Nintendo 64, and it's one of the more innovative consoles in the history of gaming. The inclusion of an analog stick set a standard in console gaming that remains to this day, and Nintendo's innovation in gameplay design through Super Mario 64 and The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time have laid the ground work for all third person 3D games since. The most basic gameplay of Super Mario 64 was something that had never been seen before that point in time, and mechanics like the Ocarina of Time's targeting system have made appearances in literally hundreds of others games in the past 12 years. Hell, the reason we refer to the perspective from which you view your surroundings in games as "the camera" is because you literally had a guy on a cloud with a camera following you around in Super Mario 64, and the entire game is viewed from his perspective. The Nintendo 64 was also the first console to introduce rumble, another staple of modern day console gaming. The console suffered at the hands of other missteps from Nintendo execs (sticking with cartridges, ignoring third party developers), but to say there was no innovation during this period is blatantly false. And I agree with metallicube that there was a bit of luck in Sony's astounding victory in the fifth generation. Well, maybe luck isn't the right word, but Sony's victory was mostly thanks to numerous factors that were out of their control. Coming off the success of the SNES and still enjoying the ongoing success of the GameBoy, it was Nintendo's generation to lose. Their insistence on sticking with expensive and capacity-limited cartridges alongside their callous attitude towards third party developers essentially handed Sony the generation, much like Sony's $599 price tag doomed the PS3 to second place at best this generation. Sony didn't win the fifth generation so much as Nintendo lost it. Sony were, however, very effective in capitalizing on this loss (working with companies like Squaresoft to market titles traditionally on Nintendo platforms), which they do deserve significant credit for. Both the Nintendo 64 or PlayStation 3 should've been first place consoles in theory, and they certainly had all the potential to dominate the market yet again, but Nintendo and Sony fucked it up. |
But PlayStation made dual analog sticks though!!








