Wow, I never new Jaguar hardware was that messed up:?. Atari really dropped the ball on that one.
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Not in the UK they were not, you don't listen at all. In the UK People bought an Amiga to play games, nobody bought a NES for anything, people who bought NES' in the UK were taken the piss out of by everyone else as consoles were seen as little kiddies toys, they were only owned by children under 11 (which is pretty much why my generation owned consoles, then when we grew up we stuck with them)
No you assume that just because home computers were never a force in the video game market in the US that you should only ever expect them to be low selling niche products that need to be separated from mass market consoles.
If someone put an Amiga in a cabinet with a controller coming out playing Rainbow Islands and someone else put a NES in another cabinet with Rainbow Islands and a controller coming out apart from load times THERE WOULD BE ABSOLUTELY NO DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE TWO.
Tamagotchis have nothing to do with anything, they are not comparable at all.
Home Computers and Consoles were exactly the same apart from the fact that home computers could be used for other things on top of gaming as a bonus. In fact, with that in mind home computers should be expected to sell more than consoles, not have people making excuses for them like "oh it's a completely different market, one is for people who want to play games and the other is for people who want to play games and be able to do other things as well"
But that's not what anyone was talking about. We were talking about the Amiga as against the DOS (and to a lesser extent, Macintosh and ST) game market. Once again, the Game Boy outsold both Genesis and SNES.
And as I explained earlier, computers aren't treated the same way in the US. It's easier to find a Master System here than it is to find a Commodore 64 -- and the C64 sold significantly more units than the SMS.Quote:
the only reason why this discussion started was just because I was saying to Blammo in case he didn't know, that Amiga's aren't owned by everyone in the US in the same way that they were in the UK and that it might not be that easy to get hold of an Amiga and a copy of Cannon Fodder for you lot in comparison to how ridiculously easy this is for us.
Nobody but you was ever talking about the UK, sorry.
There was a huge difference. Most home computers at that time in the US weren't bought for gaming at all. They didn't do other things as a bonus on top of gaming, they played games as a little-used bonus on top of doing other things. When the Amiga 500 came out, it sold for $600 -- and that was considered cheap. The only consoles to have that kind of price point were the Halcyon, Neo Geo, LaserActive, 3DO -- flops that sold fewer units than the Amiga in the US. Meanwhile, computers were commonly much more expensive. When the A500 came out, an equivalent Macintosh would cost around three times as much. And in terms of units sold, the Mac line was more popular here -- but the Amiga was the stronger games market, which brings us back to what we were saying originally.Quote:
No you assume that just because home computers were never a force in the video game market in the US that you should only ever expect them to be low selling niche products that need to be separated from mass market consoles.
If someone put an Amiga in a cabinet with a controller coming out playing Rainbow Islands and someone else put a NES in another cabinet with Rainbow Islands and a controller coming out apart from load times THERE WOULD BE ABSOLUTELY NO DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE TWO.
Tamagotchis have nothing to do with anything, they are not comparable at all.
Home Computers and Consoles were exactly the same apart from the fact that home computers could be used for other things on top of gaming as a bonus. In fact, with that in mind home computers should be expected to sell more than consoles, not have people making excuses for them like "oh it's a completely different market, one is for people who want to play games and the other is for people who want to play games and be able to do other things as well"
Better (if not more fun) 3-D titles than Skyhammer:
SkyHammer
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y2Jh79AdVSo
Battle Sphere (networked 8players in this video)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OogwE...eature=related
Tempest 2000 (Best Music of Any Version)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lf-RL...eature=related
Zero Five (I love this game 3modes of play)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6IjRi...eature=related
Phase Zero
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DOnv...eature=related
The sound effects on Tempest 2000 are too loud. Is there any way to lower the sound effects volume in the Saturn version?
you're basically saying that the Amiga was popular because it outsold loads of other systems that were really unpopular? :confused:
The C64 was selling 2 million a year during the mid 80s, thats over twice the lifetime sales of the "UBER" popular Amiga every year for 3-4 years
Even in 89' the aging C64 was still outselling the Amiga
Ok what is with this completely RETARDED comparison with the Gameboy?!?!? the Gameboy is not the same market as consoles/home computers, you do not buy a Gameboy to play at home on a TV, the gameboy market was based on PORTABILITY and there was no realistic competition for it whilst it was out.
Why do people buy consoles? to sit down, plug it into their TV grab a controller and play games
Why did people buy home computers? to sit down, plug it into their TV (or monitor if they wanted to) and play games and/or to do work on
The home computer demographic included the whole of the console demographic, the opposite is however not true as you can't do work on a console.
This is the same in the UK, I found my 1st Amiga thrown out with the garbage in the street and the 2nd one I found down a flea market for £3, people don't try to sell computers they just throw them away.
Yes and after a few years the price dropped and was affordable, exactly the same as it was here.
Lets just go over what we've had so far in this discussion -
me - But it was massively outsold by the NESQuote:
The Amiga was UBER popular
Me - But it was massively outsold by the IBM PCQuote:
No! The Amiga was an Uber popular computer
Me - The C64 outsold the Amiga by a substantial amount every year they were simultaneously on sale until around 91' right at the end of the US Amiga's lifetime, so the Amiga only really outsold it's inferior powered precursor for no more than around a year before it's US death.Quote:
Er, no, I meant to say it was an UBER popular computer FOR GAMING
Me - My good sir, you are running towards smaller and smaller, more and more specific market niches in an attempt to prove how popular the Amiga was, whilst in actual fact just proving how specific a niche market it actually catered to.Quote:
No, YOU DON'T UNDERSTAND, I meant the Amiga was an UBER popular 16 BIT computer used primarily for gaming
Why are you complaining? YOU'RE the one that said ANY game machine was a valid comparison. Now you're whining because someone made you look stupid? Can't have it both ways. If you can compare an old 8-bit console to a 16-bit home computer sold at different times, you'll have to accept a handheld console as well. :p
:owned:
Nobody needs to make you look stupid, you pretty much do that with every post you make yourself, I mean seriously, everything i've ever seen you write was subsequently disproved as being wrong about 2 posts later.
What? :confused: the NES and the Amiga were both being sold at the same time, in fact the NES actually came out just before the Amiga (I think) and lasted until well after it had died.
They're both bought to attach to a TV (or monitor in the Amiga case, though I never did that myself) and play games on, the Gameboy was bought so you could play games on the move how has that got anything to do with anything?
What about the Super Gameboy that could be played on the SNES? I'm sure some people who didn't own GameBoys bought that.
If Chilly Willy is dumb, I'd like to see smart! Imagine the 32X games we'd be playing then!
The Amiga was uber popular for computer gamers. People didn't buy it to do spreadsheets, word processing or bring their work home. The Amiga was a gaming computer and nothing more.
When the Amiga was hitting its prime, the games on it were far superior to anything the PC had to offer. I remember my PC friend going nuts over Harpoon (A big seller on the PC at the time) and when I saw him playing the game, I was totally floored by how piss-poor the game looked and sounded. Harpoon could just as easily been played on a C64 and it would probably have better sound.
The PC may have outsold (during that time) the Amiga, Atari ST and Mac computers, but 90% of those PCs were sitting in offices running spread sheets and office software.
The PC wasn't really a gaming computer, until real sound cards and video boards were introduced in the late 80s and early 90s. The Amiga and the other Motorola powered computers were the driving force behing the changes that happened in the PC gaming world.
I just listened to them both and I definitely prefer the CD version. The Jag sounds kind of tinny to me, like it doesn't have a large frequency response.Quote:
Originally Posted by nonner242
Jag with T2K hooked up on my Big TV or Stereo sounds perfect. Are you talking about the real hardware or youtube? If its the real deal make sure to pick up the stereo cables for jag////big difference from RF.
You're the one looking like an idiot here, and your statement just makes you look worse. You've been proven wrong, and now you're just flailing around making personal attacks since you don't have a leg to stand on. It's rather sad, actually. :shame:
Yeah, you're confused all right. The Amiga had several models out over a decade. They weren't the same, and were aimed at different markets. To say that they were ALL in competition with the NES just proves how little you understand the argument. :shame:Quote:
What? :confused: the NES and the Amiga were both being sold at the same time, in fact the NES actually came out just before the Amiga (I think) and lasted until well after it had died.
My Dish Network receiver attaches to a TV, and you can play games on it, so it's also part of the competition, right? That seems to be what you're saying. Come to think of it, my DVD player also hooks to the TV and plays games. Do you see the problem here? Apparently not. You just don't understand. :shame:Quote:
They're both bought to attach to a TV (or monitor in the Amiga case, though I never did that myself) and play games on, the Gameboy was bought so you could play games on the move how has that got anything to do with anything?