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Happy Birthday PlayStation (and Dreamcast)!


On 09/10/2015 at 02:09 AM by VisuaLIES

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So, September 9th happens to be the anniversaries of the US launches of two of my favorite consoles ever.

In fact, as you are probably aware, this year marks the 20th anniversary of the original PlayStation, the console that brought gaming out of the children's bedrooms and into the living rooms around the world.  If you were around in 1995, you might remember that gaming was not nearly as mainstream as it is today.  The PlayStation is one of the reasons for its acceptance.  Sony was the big shot tech company at the time, before Apple and Google made waves with their iPods and Android phones and tablets, and it leveraged that popularity to enter the lucrative videogame console business.  The brand spoke to young adults, and Sony developed and marketed games for them.  I still remember the original ads featuring fighting game character Sofia from the launch title Battle Arena Toshinden.  Nintendo had Mario, Sega had Sonic, and Sony had a leather clad dominatrix (Crash Bandicoot would come later).  Sony also leveraged their music industry connections by including a selection of songs on their first "demo" disc (the one with the T-rex), introducing those who obtained it to the nu-metal band Korn, and showing that yes, the PlayStation doubled as a CD player!  The point is, this was not a kid's gaming machine.

Right before launch, I was a diehard Nintendo fanboy, and began saving for the overhyped Ultra 64 (it had the power of a Silicon Graphics workstation!)  However, Nintendo delayed their system until the following year and I had all this money.  The Saturn had already been released but was too expensive and didn't have the greatest lineup of games.  All the gaming magazines (yes, print magazines!) were talking about the wonders of this Sony PlayStation that would soon be released, so I preordered it at Babbage's (which would one day become GameStop) and traded in my SNES to help pay for it (it was a bittersweet time, but I was ready for a change).  When launch day finally came, it was glorious!  I only got two games, the aforementioned Toshinden and Ridge Racer, but I played them constantly.  Looking back, those games were pretty shallow, but they looked better than any of the games in the local arcades (yes, we had those too, it was a crazy time).  I brought my PlayStation to my friend's house and he traded in his Genesis, Sega CD, and a ton of games and bought one that weekend.  This was the power of the experience.  The next 4 years were pretty much a golden age of gaming for me.  I had intended to get a Nintendo 64, but Mario and Zelda aside, Nintendo never gave me enough reasons, and with Twisted Metal, Resident Evil, Tomb Raider, Tekken 2, Final Fantasy VII, Metal Gear Solid, Street Fighter Alpha, Soul Blade, Xenogears, Parasite Eve, Silent Hill, Gran Turismo, and Castlevania: Symphony of the Night to buy and play, who had the money or time for another system?  While I skipped the N64 and Sega Saturn, I did have a brief love affair with Sega's next console, the Dreamcast.

In 1999, Sega launched the Dreamcast on the anniversary of the PlayStation.  I was never really a Sega fan, but the PlayStation was getting a bit long in the tooth, and Sega's new system had a lot going for it.  Well, for me it was one thing: Soul Calibur.  That game looked amazing.  I don't know how the wizards at Namco did it, but it put the PS-based arcade version to shame, along with Sega's own flagship fighting game, Virtua Fighter 3.  While I bought the system for one game, it became a treasure trove of Japanese gaming goodness, mainly from Capcom.  Capcom finally had a system capable of running all their famous fighting games without limitations, and put every single one of them on the system in about a 2 year span.  Fortunately for me, I happened to like fighters.  I also loved Crazy Taxi, Grandia 2, Resident Evil Code Veronica, and many other titles that came to Dreamcast long before they were ported to newer systems.  Alas, with the announcement of the PlayStation 2, I went back to gaming primarily on Sony, and then Sega abruptly left the hardware market after putting itself in a pretty good position (I honestly think they could have given Sony better competition during that console generation than the GameCube or the fledgling Xbox).  But it was not in the cards.  While Sega had the balls to release a game called Seaman, it didn't have the will to battle the much hyped PS2, and Dreamcast was killed off prematurely, despite having less jaggies and pioneering online console gaming.

I'll always remember September 9th fondly, as an early adopter of two of the best gaming consoles ever made.  Cheers.


 

Comments

Cary Woodham

09/10/2015 at 07:48 AM

I didn't get the PlayStation at first, but once I did a year or two later, it was one of the best gaming purchases I made.  I was reviewing games left and right for it after that.

I didn't get the Dreamcast right away either, but it was a Christmas/Graduation present in 1999 so it wasn't too far off.  That was the first SEGA console I owned, and it really made me respect SEGA a lot more.

I'm only sad that you had to trade in your SNES to get a PlayStation.  But then, I really like the SNES.

VisuaLIES

09/11/2015 at 12:24 AM

Yeah, I figured I could get the SNES back one day, but I didn't really miss it.  Most of my games were versions of Street Fighter or Mortal Kombat.  I do regret getting rid of Castlevania IV and Axelay, two of my favorites from the system, but I bought them on Wii Virtual Console and still love them.

SanAndreas

09/10/2015 at 11:06 AM

I ignored the PS1 until Final Fantasy VII came out. Didn't have any interest in Ridge Racer, Toshinden, or Tekken. I was kinda interested in Resident Evil but not Tomb Raider the following year. FFVII made the PS1 an irresistable proposition for me.

The Dreamcast I skipped out on. I bought Final Fantasy VIII on 9/9/99 instead. :)

VisuaLIES

09/11/2015 at 12:27 AM

Did FFVIII come out that day?  I played the crap out of that game, so I guess I was in gamer heaven during that time.  Man, I wish I had time to play games like that again.

KnightDriver

09/11/2015 at 02:46 AM

I distinctly remember picking up a Dreamcast just when Gamestop was getting ready to ship them all off to their warehouse. It was like $40. I grabbed a bunch of games and discovered a really fun system. I wouldn't let it go now for anything. 

PS1 was a great system with just loads of games for it. I used to have the PSOne slim deck, but let it go for some reason. Now I use my PS2 slim for all my PS1 games, but I kinda still want that PSOne slim deck. Next time I see one, I think I'll grab it. 

VisuaLIES

09/12/2015 at 02:05 AM

Yeah, the small white PS one was sexy.  I don't own a PS one or a Dreamcast anymore.  I still have a bunch of PS one games though, and can play them on my 2 or 3 whenever I want (but never do).  I regret selling a bunch of my Dreamcast games.  They were mostly Capcom fighters, and I didn't really have an attachment to them at the time, but most have never been released on any other system for some inexplicable reason (I would kill to get my Project Justice again).  I'm actually surprised Capcom doesn't release a fighting game collection with Street Fighter, Darkstalkers, Tech Romancer, Plasma Sword, Rival Schools, etc.  It would print money.

KnightDriver

09/17/2015 at 03:00 AM

i like those Darkstalkers characters. 

Matt Snee Staff Writer

09/12/2015 at 04:50 AM

I love the PSONE.  SO much.  I don't care if people say the graphics haven't aged well -- as far as I'm concerned, they're gorgeous.  I love everything about those games. I love the Final Fantasy Trilogy, and I love the extensive other JRPG's and I love the Resident Evil games, and on and on.  Love that system.

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