
The Nintendo 64 Thirty Years Later! An LGR Retrospective
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Date: 2026-07-10
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Comments and reviews: 20
jwilphl
I got an N64 in 1997. Had to sell my SNES, unfortunately, because my parents would never let me have more than one gaming system at a time. I was 10 when it released, mind you, and had been following the teasers along with Nintendo Power. Didn't understand the technical jargon, only knew it was 3D and 64 bits. It had to be better!
I quite enjoyed my time with the system as a kid. Obviously, it hasn't aged as well as an adult compared to newer tech. I played it a lot in the late 90s, however. Never had a huge collection of games, relying more on Blockbuster to see what games were good. I couldn't afford to buy many, naturally. I'd usually get one or two for Christmas and then maybe buy one or two over a year.
Eventually, I got a Dreamcast and had moved on to CD-based systems. Never got a GameCube. Had the OG XBOX while my brother got a PS2 - he was in college, at this point. I wish I got to keep all the systems as a kid. I've repurchased a few in adulthood, including the N64. Such a unique system. Some of the games remain quite good. Goldeneye's control is incredibly dated in the FPS genre, but it works once you get used to it.
A lot of great N64 memories for me. Ranks up there with the SNES. I still remember my mom letting me have Goldeneye after my first day of 6th grade. What a treat and a privilege!
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I got an N64 in 1997. Had to sell my SNES, unfortunately, because my parents would never let me have more than one gaming system at a time. I was 10 when it released, mind you, and had been following the teasers along with Nintendo Power. Didn't understand the technical jargon, only knew it was 3D and 64 bits. It had to be better!
I quite enjoyed my time with the system as a kid. Obviously, it hasn't aged as well as an adult compared to newer tech. I played it a lot in the late 90s, however. Never had a huge collection of games, relying more on Blockbuster to see what games were good. I couldn't afford to buy many, naturally. I'd usually get one or two for Christmas and then maybe buy one or two over a year.
Eventually, I got a Dreamcast and had moved on to CD-based systems. Never got a GameCube. Had the OG XBOX while my brother got a PS2 - he was in college, at this point. I wish I got to keep all the systems as a kid. I've repurchased a few in adulthood, including the N64. Such a unique system. Some of the games remain quite good. Goldeneye's control is incredibly dated in the FPS genre, but it works once you get used to it.
A lot of great N64 memories for me. Ranks up there with the SNES. I still remember my mom letting me have Goldeneye after my first day of 6th grade. What a treat and a privilege!
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guardiane
I got the N64 right away when it released, and that's only because I was a Nintendo fan boy back then. not anymore. However, the issues I had with the system only surrounded the 3D aspects. I didn't like Super Mario 64 and the Legend of Zelda games because of the whole 3D perspective. I still wanted 2D. Now, don't get me wrong, I know I was wrong now, but back then, you couldn't convince me to accept it. I just couldn't get used to the controls and the viewing angles and it frustrated me beyond belief, so I never gave those great games a fair chance.
BUT I did fall in love with 007 Goldeneye, Turok 2, the WWF/WCW games, The New Tetris, Mario Party, you name it - it was the multiplayer - 4 player aspect that sold me. It had a slew of great games that I still own today. I just wish I gave all of the games a chance. I still haven't played their editions of Mario and Zelda.
Most people I knew owned an N64. It was the Sega consoles that nobody cared about over here. I eventually became a Sony fan boy, but that was until every single freakin' console became a $600 media player. I gave up on consoles since and just stick with PC.
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I got the N64 right away when it released, and that's only because I was a Nintendo fan boy back then. not anymore. However, the issues I had with the system only surrounded the 3D aspects. I didn't like Super Mario 64 and the Legend of Zelda games because of the whole 3D perspective. I still wanted 2D. Now, don't get me wrong, I know I was wrong now, but back then, you couldn't convince me to accept it. I just couldn't get used to the controls and the viewing angles and it frustrated me beyond belief, so I never gave those great games a fair chance.
BUT I did fall in love with 007 Goldeneye, Turok 2, the WWF/WCW games, The New Tetris, Mario Party, you name it - it was the multiplayer - 4 player aspect that sold me. It had a slew of great games that I still own today. I just wish I gave all of the games a chance. I still haven't played their editions of Mario and Zelda.
Most people I knew owned an N64. It was the Sega consoles that nobody cared about over here. I eventually became a Sony fan boy, but that was until every single freakin' console became a $600 media player. I gave up on consoles since and just stick with PC.
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IanSane
Something that's really nice about that era is that even the systems that underachieved sales-wise are worth owning today because the hardware is all so unique. Yeah, the Playstation was the clear winner that gen but the N64 and Saturn both have amazing libraries of exclusives, they just don't have the same volume of games. Even a gen later things started to blur. The Gamecube for example has a lot of games that are also on the PS2 and Xbox. And then you have now where the Xbox is a clear third place and there is also no reason to have one because it has virtually no exclusives. Its physical games are often incomplete so this isn't a great example but I wonder if collectors would care at all about a system like that 20 years from now. Meanwhile, as a collector, if you're offering me some unsuccessful console like a Jaguar or TurboGrafx-16, I'm totally interested because it was some unique stuff that no other system has.
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Something that's really nice about that era is that even the systems that underachieved sales-wise are worth owning today because the hardware is all so unique. Yeah, the Playstation was the clear winner that gen but the N64 and Saturn both have amazing libraries of exclusives, they just don't have the same volume of games. Even a gen later things started to blur. The Gamecube for example has a lot of games that are also on the PS2 and Xbox. And then you have now where the Xbox is a clear third place and there is also no reason to have one because it has virtually no exclusives. Its physical games are often incomplete so this isn't a great example but I wonder if collectors would care at all about a system like that 20 years from now. Meanwhile, as a collector, if you're offering me some unsuccessful console like a Jaguar or TurboGrafx-16, I'm totally interested because it was some unique stuff that no other system has.
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DRJuicyBear
- Tries to show mario 64
- Goes quiet and has fun
Yes, we understand lol, the game was FUN.
It looks bad, but the whole thing was gameplay and game feel, gameplay and gamefeel ALWAYS win over graphics, you can see the sheer design of how mario 64 is, the first court yard gives you a small intro and THAT'S IT, you are straight INTO THE GAME, this is something game devs forget about, the open space had no music, it was calm and had mechanics for you to play and test, it didn't give you nag screens, it didn't give you anything, it's all about the FEEL.
If more game devs played and analyzed how these games are, you would understand how to make your game so much better, AND they have 3D menus, that's interactive that's GLORIOUS, it upsets me that we don't get this feel anymore, it upset me enough to become an indie dev.
Also wompa stompa was cheats you been cheating haha.
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- Tries to show mario 64
- Goes quiet and has fun
Yes, we understand lol, the game was FUN.
It looks bad, but the whole thing was gameplay and game feel, gameplay and gamefeel ALWAYS win over graphics, you can see the sheer design of how mario 64 is, the first court yard gives you a small intro and THAT'S IT, you are straight INTO THE GAME, this is something game devs forget about, the open space had no music, it was calm and had mechanics for you to play and test, it didn't give you nag screens, it didn't give you anything, it's all about the FEEL.
If more game devs played and analyzed how these games are, you would understand how to make your game so much better, AND they have 3D menus, that's interactive that's GLORIOUS, it upsets me that we don't get this feel anymore, it upset me enough to become an indie dev.
Also wompa stompa was cheats you been cheating haha.
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matternicuss
I had a PS1 growing up and couldn’t afford to have another console, so all of my experiences with it were either at electronic store displays or friends’ houses. But every time I got to play an N64 it was like black magic.
Star Fox 64, Goldeneye, and Rogue Squadron especially blew my mind. Star Fox 64 with its advanced graphics yet buttery smooth 60 fps gameplay was so rare to see in a home console game back then (and weirdly still is. And Goldeneye looked and felt so realistic back then haha.
Also Wave Race 64 also had by far the most realistic water physics I’d ever seen in a game. The mid to late 90s was truly a special time in gaming history that can’t ever be replicated. We were seeing all these advances so quickly each and every year and it was really hard to keep up with everything coming out.
Great video!
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I had a PS1 growing up and couldn’t afford to have another console, so all of my experiences with it were either at electronic store displays or friends’ houses. But every time I got to play an N64 it was like black magic.
Star Fox 64, Goldeneye, and Rogue Squadron especially blew my mind. Star Fox 64 with its advanced graphics yet buttery smooth 60 fps gameplay was so rare to see in a home console game back then (and weirdly still is. And Goldeneye looked and felt so realistic back then haha.
Also Wave Race 64 also had by far the most realistic water physics I’d ever seen in a game. The mid to late 90s was truly a special time in gaming history that can’t ever be replicated. We were seeing all these advances so quickly each and every year and it was really hard to keep up with everything coming out.
Great video!
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WhatAHorribleNight
The perfect time to buy this stuff was late 2000s. I bought my buddy's n64 and all his games for $50 in 2007, he had almost all the classics (Mario 64, Goldeneye, Orcarina of Time, etc) - which was a great deal even back then, a lot like that could'd probably gone for $100 at the time. But now the classic games alone usually go for at least $50 on ebay and a working console in good conditions with at least the basic peripherals goes four around $100 on it's own. It was, in retrospect, a beautiful time - you could peruse garage sales and find this stuff everywhere for great prices. Anyway, I still have it all and plan to hook it up for my kids when they're old enough to appreciate it. I bust it out for some Goldeneye with my brother once or twice a year just to make sure it still works.
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The perfect time to buy this stuff was late 2000s. I bought my buddy's n64 and all his games for $50 in 2007, he had almost all the classics (Mario 64, Goldeneye, Orcarina of Time, etc) - which was a great deal even back then, a lot like that could'd probably gone for $100 at the time. But now the classic games alone usually go for at least $50 on ebay and a working console in good conditions with at least the basic peripherals goes four around $100 on it's own. It was, in retrospect, a beautiful time - you could peruse garage sales and find this stuff everywhere for great prices. Anyway, I still have it all and plan to hook it up for my kids when they're old enough to appreciate it. I bust it out for some Goldeneye with my brother once or twice a year just to make sure it still works.
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jasonreasoner4085
thanks for posting this! good nostalgia!
i worked at mom & pop video rental stores in the 1990s and when the N64 came out, i was there. made signs for the windows and everything. i took it home with some games and loved it. a few years later i got my own and started gathering games. my friends and i were die hard goldeneye, perfect dark, mario kart 64 fanatics. lots and lots of excellent grudge matches! also played a fair bit of XENA: WARRIOR PRINCESS - such a weird street fighter/mortal kombat type thing. i've still got that same N64 machine and assorted pieces in a tub in my closet. i haven't used it in many years and in fact it won't connect to my newer tv without some kind of adapter. but sometimes that's the way things go.
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thanks for posting this! good nostalgia!
i worked at mom & pop video rental stores in the 1990s and when the N64 came out, i was there. made signs for the windows and everything. i took it home with some games and loved it. a few years later i got my own and started gathering games. my friends and i were die hard goldeneye, perfect dark, mario kart 64 fanatics. lots and lots of excellent grudge matches! also played a fair bit of XENA: WARRIOR PRINCESS - such a weird street fighter/mortal kombat type thing. i've still got that same N64 machine and assorted pieces in a tub in my closet. i haven't used it in many years and in fact it won't connect to my newer tv without some kind of adapter. but sometimes that's the way things go.
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orbis75
Hey Clint! Been watching for years. I really hope you see this. In the video you say you got pretty much every game that was valuable. I don't want to be annoying but there's a couple of games that are really valuable and amazing that I hope you get at some point. 1. Paper Mario, super fun and relaxing. 2. Kirby Crystal Shards, this game is expensive and rare but it's really, really awesome. Nobody ever talks about it but I honestly think it's the best Kirby game I've ever played. 3. Bomberman Hero, I see you have the first Bomberman for the 64, but in my opinion, Bomberman Hero is the best Bomberman game I've ever played, super underrated and the soundtrack is freaking amazing. I hope you see this and possibly reply, that'd be really cool.
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Hey Clint! Been watching for years. I really hope you see this. In the video you say you got pretty much every game that was valuable. I don't want to be annoying but there's a couple of games that are really valuable and amazing that I hope you get at some point. 1. Paper Mario, super fun and relaxing. 2. Kirby Crystal Shards, this game is expensive and rare but it's really, really awesome. Nobody ever talks about it but I honestly think it's the best Kirby game I've ever played. 3. Bomberman Hero, I see you have the first Bomberman for the 64, but in my opinion, Bomberman Hero is the best Bomberman game I've ever played, super underrated and the soundtrack is freaking amazing. I hope you see this and possibly reply, that'd be really cool.
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pgr3290
For mid 1996 the hardware was pretty lame. It was 19 months newer than PS1 at a time where hardware was rapidly advancing. It should have been vastly more impressive but it just wasn't. What's worse was that on the games that did arguably look better on N64 most suffered from badly smeared image quality and very poor framerate. The easiest way to demonstrate how fast 3D hardware was advancing is compare N64 to PS1 which was a slight improvement, then compare Dreamcast to N64 which is an INSANE leap. DC games typically ran at 4x the resolution and 2x to 3x the framerate of most N64 titles. The gap to Dreamcast after N64 was 29 months, only 10 months more than the difference between PS1 and N64. Nintendo underwhelmed.
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For mid 1996 the hardware was pretty lame. It was 19 months newer than PS1 at a time where hardware was rapidly advancing. It should have been vastly more impressive but it just wasn't. What's worse was that on the games that did arguably look better on N64 most suffered from badly smeared image quality and very poor framerate. The easiest way to demonstrate how fast 3D hardware was advancing is compare N64 to PS1 which was a slight improvement, then compare Dreamcast to N64 which is an INSANE leap. DC games typically ran at 4x the resolution and 2x to 3x the framerate of most N64 titles. The gap to Dreamcast after N64 was 29 months, only 10 months more than the difference between PS1 and N64. Nintendo underwhelmed.
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HeadsetGuy
My very first experience with the N64 was at a cousin's house, where I played some racing game and watched my cousin play some FPS. I was so young and it was so long ago, I don't even remember which ones they were; all I remember was that I had no idea how to go forward and was constantly greeted with Wrong Way messages as a result.
My first true experience with the N64 was at a family friend's house. I had lots of fun playing Mario Party, Diddy Kong Racing, Ocarina of Time, Star Fox 64, and Ken Griffey Jr. Major League Baseball (an inside joke in my family from that game in particular is In today's game, it's. The Seattle Mariners! Versus. The Seattle Mariners)
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My very first experience with the N64 was at a cousin's house, where I played some racing game and watched my cousin play some FPS. I was so young and it was so long ago, I don't even remember which ones they were; all I remember was that I had no idea how to go forward and was constantly greeted with Wrong Way messages as a result.
My first true experience with the N64 was at a family friend's house. I had lots of fun playing Mario Party, Diddy Kong Racing, Ocarina of Time, Star Fox 64, and Ken Griffey Jr. Major League Baseball (an inside joke in my family from that game in particular is In today's game, it's. The Seattle Mariners! Versus. The Seattle Mariners)
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Cacodemonia
An interesting thing about Duke Nukem: Zero Hour is that it can use the Expansion Pak. but it comes at a big performance trade-off, and I didn't experience it until I got an Expansion Pak for the first time (which was well into my adulthood. The game already chugs a bit when there are lots of enemies or other things happening like smoke/fog effects. But with the Expansion Pak, the improvement is higher resolution graphics. at the same time, it actually LOWERS the framerate. So those parts where it already chugged became really bad. I really didn't understand why it was performing so poorly until I tried it without the Expansion Pak. Just strange!
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An interesting thing about Duke Nukem: Zero Hour is that it can use the Expansion Pak. but it comes at a big performance trade-off, and I didn't experience it until I got an Expansion Pak for the first time (which was well into my adulthood. The game already chugs a bit when there are lots of enemies or other things happening like smoke/fog effects. But with the Expansion Pak, the improvement is higher resolution graphics. at the same time, it actually LOWERS the framerate. So those parts where it already chugged became really bad. I really didn't understand why it was performing so poorly until I tried it without the Expansion Pak. Just strange!
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lazygamereviews
The nice thing about the carts that wasn’t obvious at the time is really showing 30 years later: durability.
If you want the original media and not just to burn a disk, they stand the test of time far better than CDs. Think of how many PlayStation 1 games simply don’t exist anymore becuase they got stacked or thrown around or stepped on and got scratched to hell or broken. N64 carts by comparison if they weren’t submerged in acid work just fine today, and 9 out of 10 that don’t can be brought back to life in 30 seconds with a quick Q tip of rubbing alcohol or in extreme cases, rubbing a pencil eraser on the contacts
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The nice thing about the carts that wasn’t obvious at the time is really showing 30 years later: durability.
If you want the original media and not just to burn a disk, they stand the test of time far better than CDs. Think of how many PlayStation 1 games simply don’t exist anymore becuase they got stacked or thrown around or stepped on and got scratched to hell or broken. N64 carts by comparison if they weren’t submerged in acid work just fine today, and 9 out of 10 that don’t can be brought back to life in 30 seconds with a quick Q tip of rubbing alcohol or in extreme cases, rubbing a pencil eraser on the contacts
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JamesRichardsPlays
I was 14 when I got one. I had been a PC gamer my entire life until the N64 arrived. I would have had a PlayStation, but my grand parents bought me a real Nintendo. They had no idea PlayStation was a console, not a Nintendo heheheh. Of course I appreciated it. It was new, same month of US release. I hadn't eveer had anything new until then. But it did get me into the idea of couch gaming. It made me buy the XBox when it released. I wonder what happened to that N64. I am trying to remember if I sold it or just left it with my mother when I moved out. Depression has killed my memmory of that age.
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I was 14 when I got one. I had been a PC gamer my entire life until the N64 arrived. I would have had a PlayStation, but my grand parents bought me a real Nintendo. They had no idea PlayStation was a console, not a Nintendo heheheh. Of course I appreciated it. It was new, same month of US release. I hadn't eveer had anything new until then. But it did get me into the idea of couch gaming. It made me buy the XBox when it released. I wonder what happened to that N64. I am trying to remember if I sold it or just left it with my mother when I moved out. Depression has killed my memmory of that age.
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lazygamereviews
I spent my adult life growing increasingly disillusioned with Nintendo, not realizing the newer games didn't appeal to my because all along, I was seeking the style of N64 games. Certain things like Mario Odyssey scratched the itch for its similarities to Mario 64, but it wasn't quite what I wanted. But then I started to emulate Mario 64 and OoT and Goldeneye roms, and picked up a home brew cart, and had an epiphany. I just wanted more N64 games. And they're being made by the tireless rom hacking community. And one can emu N64 games one did not have as a kid. So I just play those.
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I spent my adult life growing increasingly disillusioned with Nintendo, not realizing the newer games didn't appeal to my because all along, I was seeking the style of N64 games. Certain things like Mario Odyssey scratched the itch for its similarities to Mario 64, but it wasn't quite what I wanted. But then I started to emulate Mario 64 and OoT and Goldeneye roms, and picked up a home brew cart, and had an epiphany. I just wanted more N64 games. And they're being made by the tireless rom hacking community. And one can emu N64 games one did not have as a kid. So I just play those.
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ScarpoScarpo3
My n64 has almost 30 years of hard use! I have thousands of hours on that thing, hundreds on ocarina and mario alone. I got it christmas of 1996 when i was 9 and it was the coolest thing on earth, and still is. Nothing i own has such longevity and spirit as that thing, and it runs as good as it did 30 years ago. Not many 30 year old electronics of any kind can boast that. How many switch or ps5 are going to make it to 2056 Ive been through 2 switch, 3 ps2 and 3 ps3s, 3 game boys, and countless pcs. One n64 to rule them all! Every controller ive ever had works still. Suck it 2026.
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My n64 has almost 30 years of hard use! I have thousands of hours on that thing, hundreds on ocarina and mario alone. I got it christmas of 1996 when i was 9 and it was the coolest thing on earth, and still is. Nothing i own has such longevity and spirit as that thing, and it runs as good as it did 30 years ago. Not many 30 year old electronics of any kind can boast that. How many switch or ps5 are going to make it to 2056 Ive been through 2 switch, 3 ps2 and 3 ps3s, 3 game boys, and countless pcs. One n64 to rule them all! Every controller ive ever had works still. Suck it 2026.
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rildsilverlok
The N64 has bit of a problem wherein the capacitors do not age well if it is not stored properly ( over long time periods. The capacitors will leak which often damages the unit in a way much more difficult to fix than simply replacing the capacitors. I don't have a full data set but it seems to be that storing it in below freezing conditions ( multiple freeze cycles) is the most common cause.
In my local area this age/storage issue is beginning to affect the number and frequency of units one finds in the second hand stores and is becoming more the rule than the exception.
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The N64 has bit of a problem wherein the capacitors do not age well if it is not stored properly ( over long time periods. The capacitors will leak which often damages the unit in a way much more difficult to fix than simply replacing the capacitors. I don't have a full data set but it seems to be that storing it in below freezing conditions ( multiple freeze cycles) is the most common cause.
In my local area this age/storage issue is beginning to affect the number and frequency of units one finds in the second hand stores and is becoming more the rule than the exception.
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killergrooves2438
My experience was the opposite. I and everyone in my neighborhood had an N64 and none of us had a Playstation. I only got to play Playstation games because I got a PS2 on launch and it smartly had backwards compatibility, so I got a few classic PS1 games at lunch because they were much cheaper than PS2 games and the pickings were slim on PS2 for a while.
But N64 was the most fun console I ever played because of native 4-player support and all my friends had their own controllers they could bring if one of us didn’t have enough for 4 people at our houses.
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My experience was the opposite. I and everyone in my neighborhood had an N64 and none of us had a Playstation. I only got to play Playstation games because I got a PS2 on launch and it smartly had backwards compatibility, so I got a few classic PS1 games at lunch because they were much cheaper than PS2 games and the pickings were slim on PS2 for a while.
But N64 was the most fun console I ever played because of native 4-player support and all my friends had their own controllers they could bring if one of us didn’t have enough for 4 people at our houses.
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DefendingtheTruth
I was lucky enough to get one right when they came out here in the states. I remember walking into toys r us and grabbing one. Didn't have enough money to even buy a game at the time, I was stuck renting games from Blockbuster until I saved enough money up and bought Waverace64 after renting Mario64 and Pilotwinga64 multiple times between then. I'll always remember the first day playing my n64 because it was also the first official High School football game of the year when I was a Freshman in HS. So happy to have had a n64, crazy to think its been 30 years.
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I was lucky enough to get one right when they came out here in the states. I remember walking into toys r us and grabbing one. Didn't have enough money to even buy a game at the time, I was stuck renting games from Blockbuster until I saved enough money up and bought Waverace64 after renting Mario64 and Pilotwinga64 multiple times between then. I'll always remember the first day playing my n64 because it was also the first official High School football game of the year when I was a Freshman in HS. So happy to have had a n64, crazy to think its been 30 years.
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spilltur
I am in awe you first played Goldeneye in 2007, it was already a party favorite in the 90's, there really was no other 4 player split screen first person shooter like it back then.
I was just a kid back then, but as me and my brother grew into teenagers, we ofcourse continued the trend of getting Gamecube and 007 Nightfire which was also great fun in 4 player, but around that time gaming had already caught on and Timesplitters was all the rage, we of course bought Timesplitters 2 and Future Perfect for the Gamecube instead as that had 4 controller slots.
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I am in awe you first played Goldeneye in 2007, it was already a party favorite in the 90's, there really was no other 4 player split screen first person shooter like it back then.
I was just a kid back then, but as me and my brother grew into teenagers, we ofcourse continued the trend of getting Gamecube and 007 Nightfire which was also great fun in 4 player, but around that time gaming had already caught on and Timesplitters was all the rage, we of course bought Timesplitters 2 and Future Perfect for the Gamecube instead as that had 4 controller slots.
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lazygamereviews
I got the Pikachu n64 in 98/99 for Christmas and my younger bro got the PSX. I loved my 64 for awhile, but started to notice how much better the offerings were on my brother's console. I ended up with his console after a year or 2 and definitely preferred the PSX later in the systems lifecycles. I always had love for my 64, especially the wrestling offerings, but the PSX was the superior console. I still have a Pikachu n64 in box (I replaced it after it got stolen, but I find it hard to go back to.
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I got the Pikachu n64 in 98/99 for Christmas and my younger bro got the PSX. I loved my 64 for awhile, but started to notice how much better the offerings were on my brother's console. I ended up with his console after a year or 2 and definitely preferred the PSX later in the systems lifecycles. I always had love for my 64, especially the wrestling offerings, but the PSX was the superior console. I still have a Pikachu n64 in box (I replaced it after it got stolen, but I find it hard to go back to.
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