What do you consider to be 'retro gaming' and why?

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Lance Boyle
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Re: What do you consider to be 'retro gaming' and why?

Post by Lance Boyle »

Paradigm wrote:
njiska wrote: of or designating the style of an earlier time: retro clothes.
This.

Pac Man CE is a perfect example of a retro game. SNES, NES, C64 or however far back you want to go are not retro consoles/computers by definition, they're simply old.
OR

IN OTHER WORDS

EDIT: oh fuck I did *not* want top post D:
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Skykid
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Re: What do you consider to be 'retro gaming' and why?

Post by Skykid »

Lance Boyle wrote: IN OTHER WORDS
My eyes!!

Best thing about this thread so far is that no-one can agree on a definite 'retro' period, but most people agree the word sucks ass. That's good enough for me.

I also realise why such conversations should probably live and die in the pub. :)
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Obiwanshinobi
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Re: What do you consider to be 'retro gaming' and why?

Post by Obiwanshinobi »

Retro games? Games doing things ancient way (ancient when they come out), such as Castlevania: Symphony of the Night and Contra: Shattered Soldier.
Retro gaming? Just playing old games.
Personally I'm more interested in the past of gaming than in the future of it. Not for the heck of it being old; rather, I think contemporary gaming abandons the old ways too hastily without having anything better in store. The more I play games (old and new alike), the more I know there's bad game design and there's good game design, and there's not much else to it.
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drauch
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Re: What do you consider to be 'retro gaming' and why?

Post by drauch »

Skykid wrote:Best thing about this thread so far is that no-one can agree on a definite 'retro' period, but most people agree the word sucks ass. That's good enough for me.
Yeah, I dig that.
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Ed Oscuro
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Re: REAL TALK

Post by Ed Oscuro »

What do you consider to be a semantics discussion and is it enjoyable?

Real talk
Randorama
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Re: What do you consider to be 'retro gaming' and why?

Post by Randorama »

Skykid wrote:So last night I engaged in heated and gradually more drunken videogaming debate with RupertH in a central London bar. In the light of day I can't really remember the finer points except that, once again, two incredibly like minded gamers managed to find something to disagree on (and had one too many beers to figure out a resolution.)
If I get a job in London, we should hang out :)

The general question looming around wrote: So, what is retro?
A few days ago I had a discussion with a Le Coq Sportif PR in Australia, when I was buying a new bag at a local chain of import stores (called "Glue").

Basically, he told me that "retro" is usually considered anything that belongs to the father/older brother generation of a current market generation. In raw terms of years, it is (on average) the vintage of 2-3 decades past. Since stores like "Glue" sell to 18-25 australian urbanites, "retro" is a general label that applies to anything that looks 70s-80s (earlier 80s is better than later 80s, but still).

Simply put, it is the stuff your dad was wearing/listening/playing when he was in this age. Ironically, I doubt that the fathers of the said Australian kids wore Le Coq (or anything else retro), when they were late teens/twentysomething, especially when they are sons of immigrants.

The definition on wikipedia can give you an idea: here. Game-wise, I think that the label is a bit problematic because videogames and gameplay styles changed much faster than the "standard" styles in other media. Roughly put, there were something like 3 generations of gaming when other media had just generation, e.g. '80s electronic music covered the same decade as Atari/Famicom/S-Famicom, more or less.

I wouldn't say that these kinds of definitions aim for thorough mathematical precision. Also, this generation-oriented definition tends to be orthogonal to the nature of the various media. Retro gym shoes are nevertheless gym shoes, it's just that they look like your father's gym shoes. So, if for games only graphics are relevant, then 2-D should be retro or, say, extremely basic 3D (e.g. Atari's Hard Drivin'). I don't think that retro as an all-encompassing label can be easily applied to games.

Whether it is a derogatory term or not, it's up to the individual and his oddities, I'd say. I can't see what sound and valid reason there should be in making the equation "retro/old=bad". Maybe the 4D-lizards want us to buy *only* the new and cool stuff?
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Re: What do you consider to be 'retro gaming' and why?

Post by neorichieb1971 »

Retro game and retro console are two different things.

For console, if it includes retro gaming on it (lets stick to disc based games that are considered full price) then the Dreamcast does actually include itself in that era. As does the PS2.

But if you insert Crazy Taxi into said Dreamcast its hardly retro since it plays exactly the same as games today.

In 5 years time retro could mean <1m polygons or something ridiculous like that.


Obviously a cross over point from traditional 2D to 3D games did happen. Therefore the DC was part of the evolution process in a rhetoric kind of way.

Forgetting consoles. I believe retro gaming is any game on a 2D plane no matter what the hardware is. My friend said to me a few weeks ago about Dead nation on PS3 "This is just asteroids with zombies".. And he's right.
This industry has become 2 dimensional as it transcended into a 3D world.
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monkeyman
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Re: What do you consider to be 'retro gaming' and why?

Post by monkeyman »

I would generally consider anything up to Megadrive/SNES era retro, as games were primarily 2d back then when now games tend to be 3d.

That said, I would agree the term is misused as these are technically 'old' games. I think to use the term appropriately you would be talking about games which are designed to look or feel like they are from a different period (Scott Pilgrim the video game comes to mind).
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Herr Schatten
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Re: What do you consider to be 'retro gaming' and why?

Post by Herr Schatten »

Dragoforce wrote:I don't consider any kind of gamin to be retro. I never really understood why people label older games with it. Following the retro game logic, Casablanca is a retro movie and Edith piaf is retro music. Games are games, labeling older games as retro diminishes their value, both artistically and gameplay-wise.
This is something I can largely agree with.
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Re: What do you consider to be 'retro gaming' and why?

Post by neorichieb1971 »

"Retro" describes the era though. If your friend takes you to the cinema and your thinking your going to watch Tron Legacy and you end up watching Casablanca I think you would be disappointed. Just like you would if you went to a gaming convention expecting Crysis and getting Dig Dug.
This industry has become 2 dimensional as it transcended into a 3D world.
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