It's hard to believe that the Nintendo Entertainment System is 20 years old!
I remember getting the full setup with Rob the robot and the light zapper for Christmas 1986.
I was the first out of all my friends to get one and they were always over at my house in our basement with me playing it.
Gamespot.com (http://www.gamespot.com/), is in my opinion THE BEST game website out there.
They recently put up a really cool & funny video that showcases the original NES.
The people at Gamespot talk about everything from the Game Glove, Nintendo Power Magazine, video game thumb, Metroid, Super Mario Bros. 3, The movie "The Wizard"(remember that one?), Contra and more!
This video brought back so many memories for me.
They really go in depth.
WATCH THE "FLASHBACK NES" VIDEO HERE (http://www.gamespot.com/features/6144735/index.html?autoplay=6144869)
What do you think?
i love the NES. i'd buy a console, but it's easier to emulate the stuff.
"Are you a bad enough dude!?"
I always could never beat Nintendo games, only a few exceptions.
The two Nintendo Godzilla games were really the only games I truely put my heart into playing. I first spotted an advertistment for the Godzilla game in a magazine. It looked so cool! I was only about six or seven and already a huge Godzilla fan. The advertistment had Godzilla with King Ghidorah flying in the back ground (actual costumes not drawing) I don't if there were any other monsters in that advertistment but right away I went up to my parents and asked if I could have it. They said the dreaded words "Maybe when it's your birthday." Time seemed to go on slowly however my B-day came and shockingly I got the Godzilla game! And I'm sure I beat it when I was younger.
One fond memory I have was once when I was playing Godzilla two, a strategy game where you were the military and you had to fight Godzilla and other monsters. The first time I beat one of the scenarios I ran all over the house telling everyone I could that I had won, I was thinking about how everyone was cheering at the end of Terror of Mechagodzilla "HE MADE IT! HE MADE IT!!!"
And in Punch Out I could only beat Glass Joe. A few years later (about 14) I played it again and made it as high as Soda Popinski. And once again I've played it and I nearly defeated the scary Sandman.
Go NES!
punchout has some funny timing secrets.
Ugh and Mike Tyson (or Mr. Dream) is like a trying to fight a god.
One hit and you're on the floor!
I've beat most of those games they talked about including Mike Tyson's Punch Out, Contra, and Dragon Warrior.
Tyson is pretty easy once you figure out his patterns.
daveblackeye15 Wrote:
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> "Are you a bad enough dude!?"
>
>
> I always could never beat Nintendo games, only a
> few exceptions.
>
> The two Nintendo Godzilla games were really the
> only games I truely put my heart into playing. I
> first spotted an advertistment for the Godzilla
> game in a magazine. It looked so cool! I was only
> about six or seven and already a huge Godzilla
> fan. The advertistment had Godzilla with King
> Ghidorah flying in the back ground (actual
> costumes not drawing) I don't if there were any
> other monsters in that advertistment but right
> away I went up to my parents and asked if I could
> have it. They said the dreaded words "Maybe when
> it's your birthday." Time seemed to go on slowly
> however my B-day came and shockingly I got the
> Godzilla game! And I'm sure I beat it when I was
> younger.
>
> One fond memory I have was once when I was playing
> Godzilla two, a strategy game where you were the
> military and you had to fight Godzilla and other
> monsters. The first time I beat one of the
> scenarios I ran all over the house telling
> everyone I could that I had won, I was thinking
> about how everyone was cheering at the end of
> Terror of Mechagodzilla "HE MADE IT! HE MADE
> IT!!!"
>
I loved those Godzilla games. I used to use the code "Destroy All Monsters" (substituting the 0's for O's) and take on the entire monster army in the first round. Monsters like Gezora, Mogera and Baragon made for an oddball mix, but man was it fun! :)
I beat all of the Super Mario NES games, the original Legend of Zelda, and even the NES version of Rampage (god, was that a tedious event).
I owned an Amstrad CPC and at that age (8) I just too byusy discobering the awful lot of arcade conversions available for that machine. I do like Nintendo's machines, but never particularly cared for the NES; whenever it was finally released in my country it was already the late 80s, and very soon afterwards the Genesis / Super NES were widely available.
What I didn't like of the NES is how crude the color palette was. The colors were so pale it almost felt like watching an Eastern Europe cartoon. This, however, didn't plague the later Nintendo systems. I have fond memories of the GameBoy I bought more or less at that time, and of the games I bought, susch as Navy Seals or the Super Mario series.
Hey people, wanna do something useful with your old Famicon stuff?
http://www.techeblog.com/index.php/tech-gadget/coolest-nes-mods-ever
Check this out.
NES videogames based on movies:
-Gremlins 2: The New Batch
-The Goonies
-Back to the Future 3
-Terminator 2: Judgement Day
-A Nightmare on Elm Street
-Friday the 13th
-Jaws
-Platoon
-Tron
-Who Framed Roger Rabbit?
-Ghostbusters
-Batman
-The Little Mermaid
-Star Wars
-Total Recall
-Hudson Hawk
-The Blues Brothers
-Fist of the North Star
What's really funny and odd is that we never had an original NES. We didn't have a video game system between the time our Coleco Vision finally broke down around 1990-1991 (Yeah we had that thing for nearly 9 years!) to when the Playstation 1 was finally released. My brother bought the first series of PS1 that had problems playing some of the games, and was able to get a replacement from his warranty.
LH-C,
Thank you for calling it a Coleco Vision instead of a ColecoVision. I'm a bit of a purist when it comes to video gaming, and I can't tell you how many times I've seen people call it a ColecoVision as if that was the model name. Just one of those things that never fails to irk me. Glad to know that someone else actually had respect and love for that machine.
Prologue to my e-mail -
The first video games we had my dad bought from Radio Shack (I think). We had video black jack and some other really lame games. We played this crap all the time. This was in the days of home Pong systems. Oh and it was in B&W.
Skaboi Wrote:
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> LH-C,
>
> Thank you for calling it a Coleco Vision instead
> of a ColecoVision. I'm a bit of a purist when it
> comes to video gaming, and I can't tell you how
> many times I've seen people call it a ColecoVision
> as if that was the model name. Just one of those
> things that never fails to irk me. Glad to know
> that someone else actually had respect and love
> for that machine.
Hell yeah I did! Of course I would go without playing it for six to eight months at a time. And I would hate it when my cousins would come over and hog it. (They eventually had their own, and some other cousins of ours had an Atari.) It was my game system! My dad bought it for me because I was just too young at the time (6 1/2 in 1982) to be at arcades. The first game I had for it was the Smurf video game. It was so fun! And of course we had Donkey Kong and quite a number of others. It was strange though to have a knockoff of another game - I'm talking about Ladybug by SEGA (I think it was). It was a knockoff of Pac Man. My all time favorite game for the Coleco Vision was Venture by SEGA. From what I remember it came out some years down the line after the game system was released. I was very good at this game, and it's one of the few games that I was actually very good at.
When NES came out, we were still playing with our Coleco Vision, but my brother was restless for an NES. Really I didn't care either way, although I did like any Mario Bros. games at that time.
As far as video games are today, I don't know. It's just so different now. The last video game I was really into was a PS1 game my mom bought me for Christmas 1996 called . I was really great at this game, and my brother ended up wrecking the disc.
Of course I still play Tetris on my phone. Who doesn't?
See, I never had a Vision as a kid. It came a bit before my time (I was born in '83), but I fell in love with it years later at a friend's house. He bought one at a flea mall one day for a couple of bucks and it ran great.
I remember begging for a NES when I was a kid, and woke up one Christmas morning with an Atari 7800 under the tree. It was the later Atari that they sold in the mid-80s as competition to the NES. At the time, I was disappointed but now I realize I was damn lucky to get it. I still have it hooked up and have well over 100 games for the system. Still runs fine to this day.
I eventually went on to pick up an Intellivision at a pawn shop for about 10 bucks and still play that on ocassion as well. In addition, I still have my SNES, Gameboy, PS2, GameCube, and Dreamcast and all work well. Even though I have these systems, I game more on my computer than anything. I'm almost 23, married, have a child and am still in love with video games. A bit sick isn't it?
Video games have changed quite a bit over the years, but I still find a lot of fun in them. It is nice though to go back to the 8-bit graphics and simple gameplay.
Just as a side note, if anyone has a functioning Atari Jaguar that they are looking to get rid of, then please please please let me know. :)
Oh and there was that one computer game called 'The 7th Guest'. I loved playing that.
LH-C,
LOL. I used to play 7th Guest on my first PC, right around 94-95. I remember thinking how awesome it was, way back when "Full Motion Video" was the new next best thing. I also played the sequel, The 11th Hour quite a bit as well. Every now and then you'll still find a game that uses in game video. I'm not sure why, since most of the games sucked.
Do you by any chance remember the most infamous of all "Full Motion Video" offenders: Night Trap? It had Dana Plato, and is the reason why we now have ESRB ratings on all games.
Night Trap: http://www.mobygames.com/game/sega-cd/night-trap
I remember hearing of 'Night Trap' at the time (and in years since), but never played it.
From what I've learned about it, it caused quite a controversy back when it was first released. Something about being too violent, or something like that. Of course, it wasn't a big departure to the games of the time, but what really concerned the censors was that being a FMV they imagined the same acts portrayed in other games would be far more accurate.
You can still grab the SegaCD version on the net, and play it via Fusion or Gens32, which now are the best emulators for that systems, but I never bothered to try it. Grainy video and limited gameplay has lost its appeal since those days.
When I finally bough my first PC around the early 90s I almost inmediately became hooked to stuff like "F-29 Retaliator", "Stunts" (aka "4D Sports Driving") or "Syndicate". They had the kind of long-term gameplay other systems lacked at that moment.
Besides, you never get to see Dana Plato nude...
plan9superfan Wrote:
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> Besides, you never get to see Dana Plato nude...
LOL much ado about nothing, then.
Neville Wrote:
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> When I finally bough my first PC around the early
> 90s I almost inmediately became hooked to stuff
> like "F-29 Retaliator", "Stunts" (aka "4D Sports
> Driving") or "Syndicate". They had the kind of
> long-term gameplay other systems lacked at that
> moment.
>
Syndicate. I used to have a Super Nintendo port of that game. There is no telling how many hours I spent playing it. Great game!
Then you should try the mouse-controlled, un-censored PC/Amiga versions. Still one of my favourite games ever.
I was wondering....
Did any of you watch that video on Gamespot.com?
It's really good!
I did it was good!
Even if they didn't mention the Godzilla game!
But back about the NES -
Recently on 'I Love Toys' on VH1 (yeah just like 'I Love The '80s' or '70s' or '90s' or 'Holidays' - and I don't know why in the hell I even watched any of them), when they got to the NES (or was it just Super Mario Brothers I can't remember) on the countdown, Wil Wheaton was singing the music to the first Super Mario Brother game. I was absolutely dying, it was that funny.
Man I want one of those console alarm clocks... That's so cool...
Funny you should say that, it reminds me of this video I d/led once, I dunno if it was a "real" commercial or not, but because it showed a bunch of people in both scenes "singing" the two themes to Super Mario Bros (the "above" world and "below" world them) and they'd mimic it perfect (without a musical accompaniment, mind you) and then the video simply said, "Nintendo, raising your children."
Hehe...
If you want I could even email it ya, it was pretty funny... :)
Wow, what can I say that hasn't already been said?
AHHH the NES, how many hours of my youth did I waste with thee? Hehe.. How many triangle-shaped dents did I put in the wall by throwing the controller against the soft plaster?
I tell ya, what's really funny is with emulation I managed to get a chance to play all those games I only HEARD about but (for various reasons) never got to play.
Weird, I didn't think I'd miss any of the 8bit games when I sold my system, but I discovered emulating, I was d/ling as many games as possible... :)
I tell ya though, funny thing about NES games is that, at one point, I they become so cheap to make, that's they were literally making ANYTHING into a game. I mean, they had a Tom Sawyer game, a Barbie game, Seasame Street, even a freaking New Kids on the Block game!! And I didn't just play the "official" Nintendo games, I played a few from some knock-off companies, ones that came in blue cartridges. Hehe.
Ahh.. what else can I say? Great memories all around...