Here's Why The NES Is The Most Important Console Ever Made

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  • čas přidán 6. 10. 2018
  • The Nintendo Entertainment System was released at a time when video games were at an all time low and considered a passing fad. The Japanese company decided to release a game console anyway and with the help of great games managed to revive a market that had seemingly moved on from games. Today we'll be looking at the legendary console.
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    #Nintendo #NES #TechWave
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Komentáře • 803

  • @vuppet5684
    @vuppet5684 Před 5 lety +172

    It shaped the face of gaming. It showed what technology can do. It’s not just a console, it was a stepping stone that will most likely continue for decades to come. All because Nintendo showed the world what technology can do

    • @myke7613
      @myke7613 Před 5 lety +2

      Very well said.

    • @weaverquest
      @weaverquest Před 5 lety +5

      @@isturbo1984 It brought home console market back and specifically in the US market. PC gaming genres were quite different than consoles back then.

    • @Dovahkiif
      @Dovahkiif Před 5 lety +11

      It did shape the face of gaming and saved the American console industry, but Atari and early computers showed the world what technology could do first...

    • @Link200767
      @Link200767 Před 5 lety +1

      remember that Nintendo was doomed even before entering the console market and was destined to fail. also Nintendo doing well equals them failing according to the haters.

    • @jonnybiggs1756
      @jonnybiggs1756 Před 5 lety +6

      Only in the US you forgot to mention

  • @zerowing087-2
    @zerowing087-2 Před 5 lety +11

    When people ask me "How are you so good at jumping puzzles and parkour?"
    I send them to Super Mario Bros 2.

  • @OttawaHunter22
    @OttawaHunter22 Před 5 lety +109

    Old nintendo consoles are amazing, my favorite is the SNES by far!

    • @Xnerdz1
      @Xnerdz1 Před 5 lety +2

      That's my first console! I respect the NES a lot, but the Snes is the very first thing that could plunge me into a virtual world and gave me a passion for gaming as a whole.

    • @MalarkeyMan
      @MalarkeyMan Před 5 lety +3

      All Nintendo consoles are amazing🙂

    • @pieta9097
      @pieta9097 Před 5 lety +3

      Mine is N64

    • @da_gamers_loft0941
      @da_gamers_loft0941 Před 5 lety +2

      Agree! But gamecube was way underrated!!

    • @DaleKamp
      @DaleKamp Před 5 lety +5

      I remember Christmas of '94, I opened up a present and saw the Nintendo branding thinking I'd be getting an NES as it was all I knew for gaming consoles besides Atari at age 7, but it was an SNES. That system really catapulted my love of gaming.

  • @nomad4k
    @nomad4k Před 11 měsíci +2

    The “expansion slot” at the bottom was actually a port used to test the boards and see metrics on a computer screen before placing it in the casing. They developed a bunch of computers that could be hooked up to these boards and it made testing much easier, saving costs.. you did not have to put a cartridge in, connect the power and do everything else to make sure the board functioned. That part was left to later in the production line, effectively eliminating the possibility of a faulty board making it through all the way to the end with the casing and all, and only then find out that the board itself was faulty to begin with

  • @darioodde8590
    @darioodde8590 Před 5 lety +68

    If there's a company that is good at preserving the glories of the past for the new generations it's Nintendo. They know how valuable those games and IPs are. My nephews might not like nes games as much as fortnite, but they know about them. I don't see any other company caring that much about keeping their library alive. They even worked gorgeous 2D gameplay and graphics in Mario Odyssey in a way that is both new and vintage. That's a lot of effort, and I think it's paying off.

    • @failuresum-watch2757
      @failuresum-watch2757 Před 5 lety +2

      Another company that really cares about old ips is thq nordic, they're buying up all of thqs old ips and re releasing them (or planning on it) like destroy all humans and time splitters

    • @Kevinb1821
      @Kevinb1821 Před 2 lety +1

      I have to say in America we never said snez or what ever crap the English say. We said regular Nintendo and Super Nintendo. Or saying each Letter one at time snes or nes sometimes.

    • @breadone_
      @breadone_ Před 2 lety +1

      @@Kevinb1821 who asked

    • @bryanx0317
      @bryanx0317 Před 2 lety

      @@breadone_ lol! Well I'll admit it made me think about it... Did I call it a nes when I was a kid in America?? Then I realized who cares 😂

    • @marccaselle8108
      @marccaselle8108 Před 2 lety

      @@Kevinb1821 This was my experience also. We called it Nintendo or Super Nintendo.

  • @jspike96
    @jspike96 Před 5 lety +34

    I like this different style video. Good stuff Spawn!

    • @818loko
      @818loko Před 5 lety

      J. Spike That's Mr. Wave to you.

  • @LionOfJudah83
    @LionOfJudah83 Před 5 lety +78

    Why would anyone dislike this video? Spawnwave is one of if not the most elite gaming channels on the net. Awesome work Spawn Wave. My 5 and 2 year olds are starting to play the nes and other classics with me and they already care more about gameplay than graphics. Much respect!

    • @ElComanche
      @ElComanche Před 5 lety +2

      Johnny Rosado just hating bitches.

    • @ElComanche
      @ElComanche Před 5 lety +4

      isturbo1984 biased to what exactly. He likes everything about gaming.

    • @projectdaaltaran
      @projectdaaltaran Před 5 lety +1

      Yeah people dont like gaming news hosts to be video game fan boys. Retro fanboy. Modern fanboy. How dare he discuss all gaming platforms and design his studio around all things currently gaming.

    • @LionOfJudah83
      @LionOfJudah83 Před 5 lety +7

      @@isturbo1984 News flash everyone had a bias. It's call likes and opinions. Get over yourself.

    • @jvgaming4826
      @jvgaming4826 Před 5 lety +3

      Spawn wave is awesome!!!!
      It comes nature!!

  • @potatolol4579
    @potatolol4579 Před 5 lety +9

    As someone who's now 22 years old and my first ever console being a Sega Master System which was handed down to me by my sister, even I knew how important the Nintendo Entertainment System was. It's an icon of gaming, a symbol. Being in the UK, the NES wasn't really ever a popular console over here, it was mostly home computers and Sega Systems that took the country by storm. But it's undeniable how huge of an impact it had in the States, their clever tactic to bundle it with ROB was essentially their Trojan Horse, if it weren't for that spark of ingenuity from the marketing team, I doubt gaming would've had come back as powerful as it did. Or at least if it did, it'd be by someone else.
    I'd always wanted to get my hands on an NES to experience it for myself, but since the NES Mini was around, it was the perfect choice for someone like me, I'd much rather let someone who had the system beforehand have the actual console and me to have the Mini.
    I'm grateful for what Nintendo did back then and revitalised gaming to the mainstream audiences again, I just hope we don't have to suffer another video game crash again, the video game industry has become such a giant success, it's very easy to forget what made it special in the first place.

    • @broken1394
      @broken1394 Před rokem

      Love your comment Potato - your right about the NES not being super common in the U.K - the big winner in the 80s with me and a lot's of other peep's were the home computer's (thinking mid 80s here) the Commodore 64 and Spectrum.
      Happy gaming.
      🙋🏻‍♂️

  • @gc4408
    @gc4408 Před 3 lety +1

    I’m 42 yrs old , just got back into collecting, I appreciate the valuable information in these videos ...... I received a NES for Christmas in 1989 , with the recent craziness in America, these are a great escape.... I hope they don’t “cancel” video games. May the Schwartz be with you......

  • @JesseAndMike
    @JesseAndMike Před 5 lety +14

    Awesome! Another great video! :D

  • @RelyeaGaming
    @RelyeaGaming Před 5 lety +14

    11:10 I can’t tell you how much I blew into my cartridges... I would hate to see the rust buildup now

    • @hannahc3317
      @hannahc3317 Před 5 lety

      People have experimented on it... blow vs no blow. Blowing on the cartridge encourages dust and mold buildup and it rusts.

    • @kickthejamz
      @kickthejamz Před 5 lety

      That's because you got some people that blow with a gallon of spit everytime and you got some that just use air. I never let anyone else clean mine because of that and more then likely always worked.

  • @iamnothuman27
    @iamnothuman27 Před 5 lety +15

    I was born in 1990. So my last memory of this system. I always had a sega. And 64 and ps1. My earliest system. But when i had to go to my grand mothers house in the summer. She had one where my cousin use to live with here. So i have spend many nights over there nothing elese to do running mario all night. Good memories

  • @John6-40
    @John6-40 Před 5 lety +66

    How old are you Spawn? I'm 37 and anyone around my age knows you're spot on. The NES saved video gaming after the early 80's crash. It also established the most important gaming IP's ever. Mario. Zelda. Metroid. Megaman. Castlevania. Metal Gear. On and on. It also established the blueprint for the modern controller. Up to that point, we'd had joysticks (Atari) and even a remote (coleco vision). The NES controller sat in your hand the same way current controllers do. They also invented the d-pad.
    Oddly enough, the NES was even designed to have primitive internet capabilities. There was a service where you could check your stocks from your NES, although I believe that was only available in Japan. Read the book "Game Over: Nintendo's Battle to Dominate Video Games". I learned a lot of interesting info from that book.

    • @RunicSigils
      @RunicSigils Před 5 lety +10

      D-pads existed before the NES.
      Yokoi only came up with the cross design which, depending upon your preferences, may be considered a downgrade because the Intellivision did 16 directions. I own it so I would definitely know.
      But even for 8 directions it was only the first console to do it. It was on several handheld systems previously, including Nintendo's own Game and Watch which was also not the first one to do it.
      Nintendo modified and popularized it, they didn't create it.

    • @cdlelondon
      @cdlelondon Před 5 lety +18

      By "crash" you mean the US gaming crash , Europe had no such gaming crash

    • @geox30x
      @geox30x Před 5 lety +6

      @@cdlelondon
      I am 40yo and been gaming since I was 8.I wasn't even aware of the existence of game consoles until a few years down the road. I started with the CPC 6128 and the Amiga. Home computers were all the rage in Europe.

    • @Mundus66
      @Mundus66 Před 5 lety +6

      Metal Gear is not a Nes game. The Nes port of the MSX game Metal Gear is terrible and Kojima had nothing to do with it. In the real game snake swims in like in MGS1, in the NES version he arrives by plane and there are 3 other soldiers with him who are never seen again. Also in the NES version you never fight Metal Gear.
      The Nes version of Metal Gear is something that should be forgotten by history since its not a good game and never was.

    • @opligangaa292
      @opligangaa292 Před 5 lety +9

      Deric gregory bullshit the crash only happened in the us and pc gaming was booming at the time

  • @kurisu7885
    @kurisu7885 Před 5 lety +6

    The design of the American NES was also meant to resemble something many already had in their homes, a VCR. That's why it was that and not a top loader, the top loader still resembled the older consoles and made retailers wary of it, so they went with a VCR type design

    • @MicklowFilms
      @MicklowFilms Před 3 lety +1

      Fun fact: The Atari 2600 had the wood veneer in the front to mimic the look of home stereo systems in the 70s and 80s.

    • @zabtronics
      @zabtronics Před rokem

      I'm pretty sure this is also why they made the cartridges so large despite the board being pretty small

  • @CraigAznoe
    @CraigAznoe Před 5 lety +3

    Loved the endless repeat of Megaman 2 theme. I could listen to that clip all.day.long. Good vid!

    • @kickthejamz
      @kickthejamz Před 5 lety +1

      Thank you for this comment I was trying to figure out which game it was from! Love the old classic 8 bit music

  • @arkanoid77
    @arkanoid77 Před 5 lety +4

    Good work on spreading a very important piece of gaming history. But I have to say that even if it wasn't specifically a "gaming console", the Commodore 64 was way more important for our generation in Italy (and I'm sure other parts of Europe too). It had similar specs but what I'm most fond of were the AWESOME audio chip (way better for my tastes). The transition that you explain from Atari 2600 (or VCS) was massively passed to Commodore at the time. That was a time when there wasn't any PC gaming so, keyboard or not, all gaming platforms were competing directly. And just a little note, we had D-pads on some of the Nintendo Game&Watch series and they were extremely popular so I wasn't "shocked" at the NES controller (probably 4 directions only tho). But I admit it was an advancement over most of the joysticks.

  • @dacohov
    @dacohov Před 5 lety +24

    As much as I hate to say it, The Atari was just as important for popularizing the idea of the "home video game console". The Nintendo really saved the day in North America when it came to the crash for sure. I seem to remember somewhere they designed the look of the North America version very specifically to make it seem less like a video game machine are more of a general appliance. Think it was from the Norm guy over at TheGamingHistorian.
    A lot to take in when considering the importance of each console. Lessons learned from failures and successes alike.

    • @paranormalskeptic3893
      @paranormalskeptic3893 Před 5 lety +4

      BG3 The Atari 2600 can never be overlooked, it would be quite a different industry if the Atari 2600 didn’t exist. They were the first to come out with interchangeable games using cartridges. Brilliant system, that I spent a zillion hours on. Extremely important system, and up there with the NES as far as importance, I’d say it’s a tie.

    • @fixman88
      @fixman88 Před 5 lety

      @scott rand The Fairchild Channel F was the first console to have interchangeable cartridges, and came out a year earlier. It used a CPU that Fairchild developed themselves (Fairchild Semiconductor was one of the *founding members* of Silicon Valley) and it had a unique controller design, but only about half the power of the VCS. Once the VCS came out it mopped the floor with all comers, the Channel F included. By the time Fairchild quit selling it in 1983 it was regarded as a relic that almost nobody knew about.

    • @TheRestartPoint
      @TheRestartPoint Před 5 lety

      Why would you hate to say it? The Atari was equally important of course

    • @countingsheeple2428
      @countingsheeple2428 Před 4 lety +2

      @Rooflesoft Games The Atari was definitely important, but near THEIR end, the games were just crappy....the problem was that Atari, and a lot of other companies, didn't know where the gaming industry was headed. And Atari DID NOT gamble in the favor OF the gaming community. Nintendo did. Nintendo stepped in without money or reputation, where Atari and Sega could have... Nintendo raised the bar.

  • @budthecyborg4575
    @budthecyborg4575 Před 5 lety +4

    I still count the generations of gaming history starting from the release of the NES.
    Nintendo single handedly created the industry we have today (a publishing model where the platform holder approves software), and they did it at a time when Videogames had been largely abandoned in the US.

  • @ScatterbrainPete
    @ScatterbrainPete Před 5 lety +4

    If the NES was so important to the video game market, then I'd love to see Spawn take apart some old home computers like Commodore 64, Amiga, Atari XE, Atari ST, ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC, 486 PC, etc., if only so we can see what he has to say about them.

  • @Awesome_Force
    @Awesome_Force Před 5 lety +1

    I still have my original NES and I think 26 games. Ice Hockey is still my favorite hockey game to this day.

  • @mrniceguy7168
    @mrniceguy7168 Před 4 lety

    It’s funny how a video where Spawn Wave is extremely passionate about something gets relatively low views but a GameStop unboxing gets a million, lol. Appreciate the work, good video.

  • @ritoion5120
    @ritoion5120 Před 5 lety +1

    The expansion port was for the Famicom Disc system in Japan, which they had plans to take to the west but didnt

  • @Fille-lj1qv
    @Fille-lj1qv Před rokem

    goh,i have a small museum here,think almost 40 retro consoles,and then all handhelds,got a lot of work with them for modding them and maintenance,but they are fully working and maintenaced on the inside,new caps-voltage regulators ect...,love todo it.

  • @Cee_Nelly
    @Cee_Nelly Před 5 lety

    Dude this is awesome!!!! More of these, please.
    Oh, and I LOVED icons! I think I may have some of the episodes ripped from my replayTV. Lol

  • @AaronHerbst
    @AaronHerbst Před 5 lety

    I love this new format going in-depth. I'm a daily watcher of the spawnwave 🌊. Thanks for your channel!

  • @Amon_Gus799
    @Amon_Gus799 Před 5 lety +44

    Can you do more videos like this but for Nintendo’s other consoles

    • @ericschmidt1987
      @ericschmidt1987 Před 5 lety +2

      Big Bergoglio agree I really love these history videos of my childhood

    • @ericschmidt1987
      @ericschmidt1987 Před 5 lety

      Big Bergoglio agree I really love these history videos of my childhood. I remember playing the nes in the Philippines with my rich cousin.

    • @RhythmGrizz
      @RhythmGrizz Před 3 lety +1

      Great idea
      I would love if he did that

  • @chungusmogus8832
    @chungusmogus8832 Před 5 lety

    I love when you make these type of videos! I love your gaming news videos as well but these are a nice change every now and then!!!

  • @blownclutchgaming1726
    @blownclutchgaming1726 Před 4 lety +3

    I have two OG NES systems one in my game room and the other in living room for the kids to play

  • @UsernameU222
    @UsernameU222 Před 5 lety

    I might be wrong, but was that expansion slot for the disk drive?

  • @megamatt1915
    @megamatt1915 Před 5 lety

    Your videos are seriously so entertaining and quite analytical. Keep it up!

  • @lain328
    @lain328 Před 5 lety +1

    I'm sure someone's already mentioned it but that expansion slot in the back was utilized in Japan for a floppy disc drive

  • @enriquepinero707
    @enriquepinero707 Před 5 lety +1

    You never cease to amaze with your analysis. knowledge and experience. Excellent video.

  • @sodarulz
    @sodarulz Před 5 lety

    Love your channel man I always learn something!

  • @WhyYouMadDough
    @WhyYouMadDough Před 5 lety

    Does anyone know what the expansion slot was for? If not we should try to find out

  • @mzaratez
    @mzaratez Před 5 lety +1

    My first console when I was 4 years old in 1989. I’ve been a Mario fanatic ever since and gaming has been an integral part of my life.

  • @ericschmidt1987
    @ericschmidt1987 Před 5 lety

    You need to do more of these history of video games videos. Thumbs up I enjoyed it.

  • @csk485
    @csk485 Před 5 lety

    This was a really awesome video, I liked the history part and appreciate how much work you put into this video! Keep up the great videos👍

  • @Robbo1900
    @Robbo1900 Před 5 lety +1

    My first console I had as a child. Fell in love with Nintendo after that to where I now own every single console.

  • @HyruleSwordsmen
    @HyruleSwordsmen Před 5 lety +1

    Great video man I love retrospectives on video game history

  • @Defectee
    @Defectee Před 5 lety

    Excellent video! Loved the history lesson! Would enjoy seeing videos like this for other systems!

  • @skyplaysgames2292
    @skyplaysgames2292 Před 5 lety +1

    Man I wish my dad knew about boiling it before he had to throw away his nes because the cartridge slot wasnt working right when he was younger

  • @DG-sf9ei
    @DG-sf9ei Před rokem +1

    It was milestones ahead of anything at the time or before it. I like Atari too, but I remember when the Nintendo NES was released, it was the 1st video game system you could sit down for hours and just play 1 game without getting bored, because so many of the NES games had multiple levels/worlds and hidden hacks.

  • @beaks527
    @beaks527 Před 5 lety +1

    While I've heard this story before, loved the format while going with the tear down and talking about not only them bringing back the industry in the US but also the technical details and really putting the whole picture in perspective.

  • @lyconxero457
    @lyconxero457 Před 5 lety

    You should probably have labeled this as a techwave video for the search results. Otherwise, a very good outing. I definitely remember this console from back in the day.

  • @retrosoul8770
    @retrosoul8770 Před 5 lety +5

    17:28 Not *entirely* true actually Spawn. The Snes has unbalanced hardware between graphical power and processing power. In order to cut costs, the Snes uses an underclocked Ricoh chip running mostly at a paltry 2.68 mhz to 3.68 mhz and in some games it runs even slower, this resulted in alot of slowdown in early games like Gradius 3, Super R-Type, Castlevania 4. Even Lttp, MMX, Contra 3, and Super Metroid etc struggle with slowdown occasionally when there isn't even that much happening on screen. As a result, despite releasing 2 YEARS after the Genesis, it can't hold as many sprites, render as smooth animation or scroll as much parallax as the Gen can. The Snes's lack of processing power is something that ppl in their personal love/bias towards it, ignore. It does host some beautiful graphics however, and possess the Mode 7 ability however, which is a neat advantage.
    N64, has power on paper but the 64s architecture has a memory contention problem which bottlenecks cpu performance. Basically the cpu and gpu both compete for ram and only one can access it at a time, very stupid design decision, hence most N64 games run at low or poor frame rates ala Goldeneye, Zelda and many others.
    Ps1 runs more consistently and has more 60fps games despite having a much lower cpu clock speed. (Forsaken 60fps on Ps1, 30 on 64) for ex.
    The Gamecube and the Nes were really the only Nintendo home consoles that were well engineered, powerful and balanced between graphics and performance for their respective eras. Despite their shortcomings, the Snes and 64 still did push the industry forward in their own unique way.

    • @brainglick9768
      @brainglick9768 Před 5 lety

      "Not entirely true" is not a phrase worth saying

    • @retrosoul8770
      @retrosoul8770 Před 5 lety +2

      Opps, sorry I hope I didn't hurt your precious image of the "almighty Snes or N64". But facts are facts mate. The consoles are still great despite their shortcomings though.

  • @MrLion1
    @MrLion1 Před 5 lety

    G4 Icons!! Deep cut. That show was the bomb. I was majorly into Metal Gear Solid at the time and I remember hugging my TV during the Hideo Kojima episode bc I loved him that much..

  • @looooongnek407
    @looooongnek407 Před 5 lety +1

    The fact that so many kids at my school have no idea about anything concerning the NES, SNES, heck even the gamecube makes me kinda sad because there are so many amazing games that are just overlooked for not being current or flashy and popular.

  • @jweissy
    @jweissy Před 5 lety

    i dont understand why the subscriber count is so low.. This channel is the only source for gaming and news i look too. Great quality and always ontop of the news ASAP

  • @FloatingSunfish
    @FloatingSunfish Před 2 lety +3

    I'm so proud that this legendary console was my childhood. 🥲
    Most games still hold up to this day!

  • @evanj571
    @evanj571 Před 5 lety +1

    I used to clean the inside of my cartridges with a q-tip and some alcohol. This system brings back old memories (sigh)

  • @JustGamesville
    @JustGamesville Před 5 lety

    Great job Jon! I can tell u worked hard on this!

  • @robertoperezjr.1119
    @robertoperezjr.1119 Před 5 lety +1

    I remember being in awe of the NES. I loved playing Atari and Colecovision at the time. But when I first saw the commercial for the NES I was blown away! I never imagined that video games could be so realistic (heheheheeee).

  • @jessepatterson8897
    @jessepatterson8897 Před 5 lety

    you can never go wrong with mega man 2 music. ever. at weddings. funerals, inaugurations. it's the best.

  • @williamjohnson8608
    @williamjohnson8608 Před 5 lety

    Great video! Enjoy hearing your prerecorded VO on the scripted segments too.

  • @thecowboyofscience
    @thecowboyofscience Před 5 lety

    Dude! I’m sure it was much more work than normal, but this is the best console break-down I’ve ever seen.

  • @DaemonCaedo1
    @DaemonCaedo1 Před 5 lety

    Is there anywhere to actually get an OEM connector besides ebay or simliar places these days?

  • @zero9112
    @zero9112 Před 5 lety +1

    Cannot stress this enough but the big video game crash was something that was mostly impacted only the US. PAL regions was not hurt too much since they had the Master System.

  • @jh6025
    @jh6025 Před 5 lety +1

    Spawn wave has moved up to number one on my list of people I'd love to meet.
    The guy is like a walking encyclopedia. It would be fascinating to talk with him for hours and hours about the past 30 years in gaming.
    I got my NES in 1990. I was four.

  • @pushlive
    @pushlive Před 5 lety

    Here in the UK we called it a NEZ and SNEZ dor the super NES - never really known 2 consoles be called so many different names lol, we and a NES , and an Atari, ZX Spectrum, and an Amiga 500/600/1200 :) I love the old consoles that people just never even think about, i was addicted to so many games on the Amiga as they had a lot of the sega mega drive games that i didn't have that console - awesome video :)

  • @homer_thompson5090
    @homer_thompson5090 Před 3 lety +1

    The NES front-loading design was actually meant to simulate a VCR, which Americans at that time were more familiar with.

  • @PetriDishB
    @PetriDishB Před 5 lety +45

    I'm 13 and i like the nes a lot and lot of people my age don't even care

    • @PetriDishB
      @PetriDishB Před 5 lety +5

      @Vegito Charmara one of my teachers in my nursery had a SNES and she used to lend it to my aunt with a couple of games. I loved that thing whenever I went to my grandma's I hoped they had it because all I had was flash games that took 20 minutes to load because I lived in a village. Super Mario world and donkey Kong country were my favourites. In August when we did go to Hungary we borrowed it to play on and it sure was fun

    • @TheMindOfThomas
      @TheMindOfThomas Před 5 lety +5

      Also 13 here. And yeah same thing here.

    • @attackofthetheeyecreatures3472
      @attackofthetheeyecreatures3472 Před 5 lety +2

      As old and clunky as the NES is, the good games that are on the console are STILL good. Some games are just timeless.

    • @budthecyborg4575
      @budthecyborg4575 Před 5 lety +4

      It's good to appreciate it but really, as someone who grew up with the NES, I'm glad the 8 bit era is over.
      Now the 16 bit era, that is where gaming really came into its own. To this day Super Metroid is still worth playing.

    • @karnagefails333
      @karnagefails333 Před 5 lety +3

      That says you're not into "instant gratification" or getting a reward and "exp" for losing. Your reward for gaming is the playing the game and defeating the game itself.
      It says something about your character. You're old school.
      And that is a good thing these days.

  • @sherekhangamedev
    @sherekhangamedev Před 5 lety

    Good retrospective analysis Jon. A piece of history indeed, the one that revitalized the industry.

  • @QueenParity
    @QueenParity Před 4 lety +1

    The expansion port was used! There was a module that was used for gambling iirc

  • @susanfit47
    @susanfit47 Před rokem +1

    The Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) is the most important console ever made because it's my favorite video game and Nintendo system of all-time and is described as "America's Favorite Home Video Game System" and "The World's Most Popular Home Video Game System". I'm hoping to get more games and accessories for the system soon.

  • @jackyling3590
    @jackyling3590 Před 5 lety

    Another quality, in-depth discussion. Well done.

  • @Tony......
    @Tony...... Před 5 lety

    Thanks for linking to my icon episode. "Most important system ever made"? Highly contentious but, perhaps it's personal nostalgia talking, I'd almost have to agree since it's one of the most highly influential systems. They did many things right and what's often not talked about is how well they knew and catered to their real market, the kids. You could write in and they'd respond and go to good lengths to help you out if you were stuck in a game. And of course they had their own official magazine, Nintendo Power, that entertained and spoke to their real customer base and at least superficially pretend to listen to your criticisms when writing in. They also gave you the opportunity with Power Points, I think it was called, collected by maintaining an NP subscription, that allowed you to get free stuff as I once did such as a N64 shirt. Nintendo understood the business aspect pretty well and that the "magic", or the immaterial such as the culture surrounding their product, was just as much the material product. I think that customer catering is seen manifested to this day by the many loyal 30+ adults that still look highly to Nintendo and buy their products.
    Very informative channel, btw.

  • @ktsubasa5645
    @ktsubasa5645 Před 5 lety +4

    great video, a little of history lessons will make us appreciate what we have now.

  • @mikerampagebyrne
    @mikerampagebyrne Před 5 lety

    Love this video. Any chance you would do more in depth looks at old consoles in the future?

  • @otaquid
    @otaquid Před 5 lety +1

    My first console ever, lovin it. Tennis was my first game. Glad to see it again in Switch

  • @Kay-ml4ij
    @Kay-ml4ij Před 5 lety

    28 here, I will always love the glory days of nes SNES Sega n64 Dreamcast PlayStation. Amazing video spawn. One of the best content creators by far!

  • @An2nyLake1
    @An2nyLake1 Před 5 lety

    Great video!
    Would love to see more like these from you 👌

  • @betacrest10
    @betacrest10 Před 5 lety +1

    Now if we trace it all the way back to Japan. It's known as the Nintendo's Family Computer. Nice little top loader with the wired controller fixed with the console at the sides. So yes, the NES was supposed to be a top loader originally and got a top loader model later on.

  • @fizzys26
    @fizzys26 Před 5 lety

    I’m looking forward to seeing you fix it. I need to get mine working again too.

  • @SrtRacerBoy
    @SrtRacerBoy Před 5 lety +1

    They made it a front loader so it resembled something we all already had in our living room.

  • @Cubelightfilms
    @Cubelightfilms Před 5 lety +1

    Embarrassing (but true) story: so, from 1984-1987 I lived in Japan. And in 1985, I passed by a countertop store display featuring Super Mario Bros. and the Famicom hooked up to a television. I picked up controller one, and I played with it for a while, but my attention wandered (I was 13-it happens), and concluded it wasn't for me.
    Eighteen years later, I buy my first Nintendo for unrelated reasons-the GameCube.

  • @paslotplayer
    @paslotplayer Před 5 lety +1

    Saved the USA video game market. The first game player to look like actual arcade video game cabinets.

  • @jacidstorm2592
    @jacidstorm2592 Před 5 lety +1

    As someone born 22 year later I don't get how someone could think it wasn't. Buttttt really it should be the Magnavox Odyssey as it was the first.

  • @justaguyonyoutube1937
    @justaguyonyoutube1937 Před 5 lety

    Icons reference i love that show back in the day

  • @grabakrfen9337
    @grabakrfen9337 Před 5 lety

    Awesome video. i love videos about consoles history, its so interesting. would be cool if you made videos of other consoles too

  • @fherxx
    @fherxx Před 5 lety +1

    Great episode Jon! Something diferent and good! Love the NES

  • @alexanderchilton911
    @alexanderchilton911 Před 5 lety

    This channel is becoming the gold standard.

  • @mathewsoltan8487
    @mathewsoltan8487 Před 5 lety +3

    Such an amazing system. Castlevania is still my favourite NES game

  • @tonymcneill7779
    @tonymcneill7779 Před 5 lety

    Man I miss G4. I would watch it all day. Icons was one of my fave. Electric Playground as well. Glad that show has a CZcams channel now. New content for the channel as well as old G4 content can be found there.

  • @Gatitasecsii
    @Gatitasecsii Před 5 lety

    Pretty awesome videos, you're like the doug demuro of gaming, and I love it!!

  • @MiniBeas
    @MiniBeas Před 5 lety

    Check out the video game historian. The port on the bottom was used for the famicon design. There was a disk addition where you could go and insert a floppy disk drive. You could take the disk and swap out games because catridges were expensive

  • @ORIOLESFan02
    @ORIOLESFan02 Před 5 lety

    What’s this song again in the beginning? Isn’t it a Mega Man song?

  • @Brond.
    @Brond. Před 4 měsíci +1

    My mom had an atari 2600. She told me she could only watch tv or play Atari on weekends for like an hour. But I really want an og nes

  • @cameronjoseph605
    @cameronjoseph605 Před 5 lety

    You should make this a series! Next try doing SNES, PS1, or Genesis.

  • @adamgardner28
    @adamgardner28 Před 5 lety +1

    There was an accessory that, I believe, used the bottom expansion called the "Telstar Command" if I remember correctly. I saw it advertised in EGM, but never saw it in action, or reviewed. I think it was a modem accessory that would allow multiplayer over the phone lines. Nowadays, you kids call it online multiplayer.

  • @Beavernator
    @Beavernator Před 5 lety

    I'm 39 and have saved all my games and systems over the years... I have 3 teen kids, and what we have always done since they were little, is that they play modern games but also play what I was playing at their age and time of release... It's been a REALLY fun experiment for them, and gives them great context and appreciation...

  • @jjm6187
    @jjm6187 Před 5 lety

    Would love to see you do a piece on each major console! Maybe even handheld

  • @indianscamgamer
    @indianscamgamer Před 5 lety +3

    it brought back gaming after the crash :')

  • @RGT85
    @RGT85 Před 5 lety +151

    Because it was RGT 85s first system. Without it I may have never got into gaming and then we would have a world without RGT.

  • @TheDMLink
    @TheDMLink Před 5 lety

    Wasn't the bottom connector for the modem that was never released in USA. Only in Japan which was used for horse racing up till just a few years ago.

  • @randallfernando6571
    @randallfernando6571 Před 5 lety

    Great video!! You should do more stuff like this

  • @Spokavriel
    @Spokavriel Před 2 lety

    the expansion port is system bus access, there are connectors for every non video connection. there was an adapter a fan made to break out the famicom functionality disabled in the NES to restore the controller port microphone and stereo audio functions. I'd link but youtube doesn't like them and the project is no longer sold.

    • @Spokavriel
      @Spokavriel Před 2 lety

      Project ENIO by Chykn80 he only ever posted 2 videos.
      I bought one but didn't try to get the cpu board.

  • @gamecubeguy01
    @gamecubeguy01 Před 5 lety +6

    I have only been alive for 17 years, and I also completely agree with this! I love the NES!

  • @daronofennell3474
    @daronofennell3474 Před 3 lety

    Man I love this video, nostalgia is great! Re watching lol

  • @jo7192
    @jo7192 Před 5 lety +1

    I still have mine from when I was a kid I have the Game Genie the books and most games

  • @JonathanTash
    @JonathanTash Před 5 lety

    I grew up with the Nintendo 64, Gameboy Advance, DS, Wii, and a little bit of SNES (we didn't own a SNES). In my teens, I bought A Gamecube and a Wii U, so I got to play both the original version Wind Waker, and the HD Remake. I really appreciate you showing us how revolutionary the original NES was.