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DJ Clae

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Posts posted by DJ Clae


  1. Sorry I forgot to revisit after posting. 4 is a perfectly fine game, and I respect the idea of it being someone's personal favorite. Most of my nitpicking is from struggling initially as a kid, needing to use extra energy tanks to get through some of the levels and defeat some of the 8 robot bosses. The last section of Dust Man's stage particularly always had me pulling my hair out.

     

    Due to a perceived sense of higher danger, I have a general sense of unease during a lot of the initial eight stages of 4 that I don't feel while playing 5. I suppose you could consider that a good thing.


  2. I'm not going to pretend that 5 is better than the first three, but everyone is going to vote for 2, so I voted for 5 to even things out.

     

    I love and revisit all 6 of the NES originals frequently, but I find I enjoy the back 3 (4-6) more as an adult simply because I played 1-3 to death as a kid.

     

    4 can be a bit on the frustrating side at times, and 6 is just the final one, so 5 gets my vote just for being the most commonly overlooked, and therefore always surprisingly great to play. All 6 are equally worthy games.


  3. 1 hour ago, Mux said:

    As compared to getting throwing a scanlines + NTSC filter on the HDMI signal to make it look more 'real' 🙂

    Nope. I don't like the look of fake scanlines. Prefer sharp pixels.

     

    It has to be upscaled for that screen one way or another. Either you can use a high quality upscaler or let your TV do a crappy job.


  4. 5 hours ago, Flojomojo said:

    Do you think we are past the "Nintendo is for babies" and "Xbox is for real men" stuff? That seemed to be a common discussion point in the early 2000s when the Nintendo console looked like a little purple purse. 

     

    My guess is that's still out there, but only in places where I don't go. 

    As long as they continue to release hardware that isn't as beefy as the competition, and software that is strictly family-friendly, that probably won't change.


  5. When my brothers and I were kids we were really isolated as gamers. We lived in a small town where we had a small handful of friends who also played games, but none of them had the more fringe stuff we had like the TurboGrafx and a used 3DO. Our parents took us to the big city and we would go game shopping. On those trips they would take us clothes shopping, and we would still be talking about games. I guess we just assumed other people in the department store, for example, were stupid because they didn't care about the Turbo CD, etc.

     

    Now thanks to the Internet you can connect with people into the same stuff no matter where you live, so it feels much less isolated. That's the real difference. I still find it awkward on the rare occasion of going to events interacting with other gamers. It's just not something that was available to me as a kid, so I'm not used to meeting people who have different opinions about games than I do. I'm rather happy just having my basement of games with the occasional visitor.


  6. On 7/12/2019 at 1:59 PM, Mux said:

    There's really no need (other than convenience) to have HDMI for games that are essentially 256x224.🙂

    Except that most modern TV's won't handle the 240p signal correctly, instead usually treating it as 480i and then deinterlacing it. Not to mention the source signal (composite) is blurry, noisy and washed out to begin with. That's why you need an external upscaler to convert the 240p signal to HDMI.


  7. I compare it to setting up a new TV for the first time -- you have to know how to cut through the bullshit. Turn down the sharpness, turn off all of the digital "enhancements" meant to make the picture artificially more appealing in the store. Underneath all that fluff the savvy buyer is getting good tech for their money.

     

    The same is true when new tech is being advertised. Xbox One X is an extremely compelling package in terms of the raw GPU power on paper. You get significant graphic improvements (resolution, framerate and detail level), which varies by game, compared with the underwhelming base Xbox One. Not to mention all the X-enhanced backward conpatible games that you essentially get free support for.

     

    It's a great setup, it's just that they need talking points like "4K" to dumb it down for the masses.


  8. From what I understand, not a lot of bigger budget modern games actually run at a full 4K on the X (same with the PS4 Pro). In most cases though they still run at higher resolutions than 1080p. I guess the point is, lots of games are "X Enhanced", but are still not running at 4K.

    If most people think that X enhanced means all the games run in native 4K, then their marketing it as a 4K console is effective to the point of being misleading.

  9. I have an Xbox 360 controller adapter for Xbone. The Xbone pad is fine except the D pad always breaks if you use it to play games. I'm on my third pad, and now I exclusively use the 360 pad for D pad games.

     

    Yes, it's confirmed Scarlett has a disc drive. Matt Booty said so in his Eurogamer interview.

     

    The back compatibility only supports the games currently compatible with the Xbone, not the full library.

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