[QUOTE="Allicrombie"]not sure if srs. The NES had many games that still hold up to this day as classics. darkdude2k12
I bashed the console...not it's games, simpleton. But since you're talking about it's games, other than Metroid, Zelda and Mario, there's really nothing left to play on NES. Just a ton of bad graphic'd games.
I can name plenty of awesome games for the NES that don't have Mario, Metroid, or Zelda in their name:
- Adventure Island 3
- Batman
- The Battle of Olympus
- Bionic Commando
- Castlevania 1-3
- Contra
- Crystalis
- Gradius 1 & 2
- LifeForce
- Mega Man 1-6
- Mike Tyson's Punch-Out
- Star Soldier
- Super C
- Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2 & 3
- Tetris
Furthermore, you have to take the NES for what it was during the time period. Before the NES came out, the U.S. video game market was all but dead. The NES brought video games back to life again. Without them there wouldn't be any Sega, Playstation, or XBox today.
Another fact that you have to take in context of the time period is the controller. Before the NES, most controller were Joysticks. The D-Pad of the NES was very innovative and made for a greater degree of control than we had beforehand in home consoles.
In addition to that, a lot of the most popular franchises today started on the NES like Super Mario Bros., Donkey Kong, The Legend of Zelda, Tetris, Contra, Castlevania, Mega Man, and others. The game library of the NES is fan-freaking-tastic.
One thing I can agree with the OP about is the hardware being bad. It was glitchy and touchy as heck, even back when they were new. Seems unacceptable since the Atari, Colecovision, Intellivision, and other consoles before it never had this issue. We all know it's because of the faulty design of the push-down method of starting the cartridges...so who let it go out that way and why did it take until the console was practically dead before they made a better model?
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