Im kind of a sucker for parallax. That matters to me more than color, which is why I tend to like the look of Genesis games more than SNES. You don't see the sort of crazy parallax effects as often on the SNES.
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Im kind of a sucker for parallax. That matters to me more than color, which is why I tend to like the look of Genesis games more than SNES. You don't see the sort of crazy parallax effects as often on the SNES.
Gundam W Endless Duel is the best graphics to me if you only count Super Famicom and Megadrive. I was really impressed with the size, detail, and animation of those sprites. Looked like a PSX game.
Exactly. The Neo Geo was arcade hardware, first and foremost. It's not very fair to directly compare it to the SNES, Genesis and TG16. Those were actual home consoles. The Neo Geo also lived much longer it's competitors. The Genesis pretty much died in 1995, the SNES in 1998 (was more like 96) and the Neo Geo (finally) in 2004. Do you still consider the Neo Geo a normal home console?
The Neo Geo's prettiest games, like Garou, Last Blade 2 and the SNKP titles, were all released well after the Neo Geo should have died. In fact, the Neo Geo should have been dropped from SNK's support after the release of the Hyper 64 in... 1997 I think. Those games were as amazing as they were because of a combination of ridiculously huge ROM chips and the Neo Geo's basic strengths. The Neo's only big limitation is cartridge size, which, as we have all seen, quickly became a non-issue.
That thing is fairly rough and only played the arcade version of games. The SNK AES home system had an entire home market and entirely different (cosmetically) games for home users and home game settings. It is more similar to a consolized Mvs. I see your point however it is indeed an extremely poor attempt at a home console with 11 games. The neo had exclusives, and then a cd unit with even more.
Should we separate cd hardware and rom based?
There are no exclusive AES games. Anything on AES was released on MVS as well. The opposite is different though, there are many MVS exclusives.
Even if the Neo Geo is a home console, it's still vastly different from any normal home console. Have you ever paid $200 - $250 for a new game on a SNES or Genesis? I didn't think so.
Not true according to the expert. The games were customized with options and other stuff to be compatible with the home hardware differences. The AES was also an extremely poor attempt at a home console, which is why it bombed so spectacularly. The problem was that it was just arcade hardware and games in a different box, prices and all. Not much different than buying a supergun and arcade pcbs.
Well this is "best graphic of the 16 bit era". So I guess that includes anything and everything from the era.