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Easily, I’d say the Nintendo 64 is the most overrated gaming platform of all time.

As for underrated? That’s a hard question. But for various reasons, I’d say these platforms are all candidates:

  • Commodore 64
  • Turbo-Grafx 16 / PC Engine
  • SEGA Naomi
  • Neo Geo Pocket
  • Adobe Flash
  • PICO-8

Which of these platforms do you think is most underrated?

  • Commodore 64 (0 votes)
  • Turbo-Grafx 16 / PC Engine (0 votes)
  • SEGA Naomi (0 votes)
  • Neo Geo Pocket (0 votes)
  • Adobe Flash (0 votes)
  • PICO-8 (0 votes)
Poll end: 3 days ago

in reply to M.S. Bellows, Jr.

@msbellows This should work on your PC. It’s well-regarded. Has a 97% positive rating.

Of course, as a lawyer, you might find it absolutely ridiculous—but you might enjoy it.

https://store.steampowered.com/app/787480/Phoenix_Wright_Ace_Attorney_Trilogy/

in reply to M.S. Bellows, Jr.

@msbellows No joke. Retiring soon. Trying to set up an unused laptop, bought during COVID, with my personal accounts only. Sigh. I have too many hours into it already and I dislike the laptop. (Keyboard issue). Considering a run to computer store to start over.
in reply to LittleTownJane

@LittleTownJane @msbellows What are you looking to do with your computer? What are your personal interests?

I might be able to find something for you.

in reply to Chris Trottier

@msbellows I will be doing word processing, email, and of course ordinary surfing. I have a path lined up with a local public official to work transcribing old cursive documents (just volunteer work).
in reply to LittleTownJane

@msbellows Part of the problem is that my fingers have typed a bazillion words on a particular style keyboard. I am a whole lot more accurate on that keyboard. Lol
in reply to LittleTownJane

@LittleTownJane @msbellows I’m going out on a limb here and guess that you might like narrative-driven typing games that engage your brain. So here’s recommendations:

Epistory: https://store.steampowered.com/app/398850/Epistory__Typing_Chronicles/

Her Story: https://store.steampowered.com/app/368370/Her_Story/

The Crimson Diamond: https://store.steampowered.com/app/1098770/The_Crimson_Diamond/

Nanotale - Typing Chronicles: https://store.steampowered.com/app/944920/Nanotale__Typing_Chronicles/

in reply to Chris Trottier

in reply to AJ Sadauskas

@ajsadauskas Yeah, the 7800 has an exceptional homebrew scene. It’s so good that the pack-in title for the new 7800+ started life as a homebrew. That’s a revival I’m fully on board with.

Regarding the Amiga, I think everyone into PC gaming would agree that it was way ahead of its time.

In a weird way, the Turbo-Grafx / PC Engine is the Japanese equivalent to the Amiga. When that thing came out, I remember everyone making fun of it. But it was huge in Japan, and sold more units there than the Master System and Genesis.

NEC is the Japanese equivalent to Commodore.

in reply to Chris Trottier

Here's one from left field for you: The MicroBee.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/MicroBee

Ask anyone in IT in Australia who's in their 40s or 50s what their first computer was, and there's a good chance the answer will be a C64, Vic20, or the MicroBee.

The very earliest ones came in kit form, and then later preassembled.

They were an 80-column Z80 machine, that later came in colour.

Lots of love from the UK for the Speccy, barely a word for the MicroBee.

in reply to Chris Trottier

@ajsadauskas wouldn't the "Japanese Amiga" be one of their indigenous computers that left a gaming/retrocomputing scene behind, like the PC-98 or the X68000?

But yes, the PC Engine was a great little 16 bit console that had a ton of many games, and a CD expansion that made more sense than the SEGA CD at the time. I still fire up the emulators to play Lords of Thunder and Final Soldier every now and then.

in reply to Varyag

@varyag @ajsadauskas The PC Engine is related to the PC-98 and PC-88 in that NEC made all those platforms.

But actually, PC Engine is not a 16-bit console. It’s actually an 8-bit console. This is partially why I regard it as underrated.

in reply to Chris Trottier

A really great example of why the Atari 7800 is (or at least was) so underrated is the new homebrew Dreadnought Assault.

Horizontally scrolling screen. A huge number of independently-moving sprites on screen at the same time. Broad colour palette.

With zero flicker.

#Atari #Atari7800 #RetroGames #RetroGame #Homebrew

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mCRiLk6wgRs