What Do You Think of PS1 FPS Games?

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alienlegion

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#1 alienlegion
Member since 2010 • 241 Posts
So I went into my local game shop this weekend and walked out with 8 games for about 15 bucks. 4 of these were FPS games, Colony Wars and Colony Wars Vengeance, Disruptor, and Brahma Force: Assault on Beltlogger 9. | So far I'm really impressed with them. Disruptor is probably my least favorite so far, but I jsut got past the training missions and things are starting to get more challenging. Colony Wars is pretty awesome, though the controls are a little hard to get used to, even though I have the option of using the analogue stick to aim. But I have to say Brahma Force is my favorite pick of these games. The combination of sluggish mech combat, corridor FPS, platforming and upgrading weapons with loot makes for a very enjoyable experience. I'm looking forward to replaying it on the secret hard mode. | I'm looking at picking up Star Wars Dark Forces (I know about the blurry graphics) and Quake 2, and possibly some alleged stinkers like Kileak 1 and 2. Also planning to rebuy Descent in addition to the sequel, and the G-Police games. | It seems to me that the PS1 has some pretty intersting FPS games. What do you guys think? I know they can't stack up to modern games in terms of graphics, but these games offered a much more original take on FPS. I guess because the genre hadn't yet become a monster and developers could still do something different without fear of going bankrupt!
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nameless12345

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#2 nameless12345
Member since 2010 • 15125 Posts

Well I think Medal of Honor is quite terrible today and even Quake II, while playlable, has nothing on the PC version (perhaps it's only more colorful but PC mods say hello). "2.5D" shooters like Doom, Dark Forces, Duke 3D, ect. are also all superior in the PC versions. You may only want to play FPS games on the PS1 if you really have to play them on the console and if you for some reason like them better.

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jsh020

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#3 jsh020
Member since 2010 • 1168 Posts

yah those old fps's are quite terible, i mena ide rather play them over the crap now but still they relay cant hold up,

granted both duke nukem and doom are still pretty fun just to put in and play for a little

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SilverSignal

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#4 SilverSignal
Member since 2011 • 551 Posts
The only FPS's I remember owning on the PS1 were the first two Medal of Honor games. I may be wrong but I think the rest I owned were RPG's, racers, platformers and the like. I thought they were great though. I'd like to play them again actually. :)
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alienlegion

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#5 alienlegion
Member since 2010 • 241 Posts
Yeah, it's pretty much given that the PS1 port of a PC game will be inferior, though I read that Descent, Final Doom and Ultimate Doom had some minor advantages. What about the one's I mentioned? Is there any love for the Psygnosis games, or Descent?
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SilverSignal

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#6 SilverSignal
Member since 2011 • 551 Posts
Well you mentioned Colony Wars but they were space combat games with multiple view points.
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patton101

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#7 patton101
Member since 2003 • 446 Posts
Dark Forces was ok, looking back at it now the graphics are unbearable though. I enjoyed the Medal of Honor games and Alien Trilogy was a good scary one.
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aryoshi

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#8 aryoshi
Member since 2007 • 1729 Posts
I can hardly stand to play them. Now, there are a few I can tolerate on the N64 like Goldeneye and Turok of course, and even better are the old PC shooters like Doom, Wolfenstein, Catacomb Abyss, etc. But most of the PSX shooters are just.. Argh.
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AcidSoldner

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#9 AcidSoldner
Member since 2007 • 7051 Posts
Some PS1 FPSs may have aged terribly but one I still enjoy playing to this day is Medal of Honor. Sure it doesn't have a lot of the standards of todays FPSs but it still plays damn good. Still need to play Medal of Honor: Underground; maybe I'll download it now that the Playstation Store is back up.
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#10 BuryMe
Member since 2004 • 22017 Posts

I don't like FPSs in general, but I generally prefer old ones over new ones.

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SilverSignal

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#11 SilverSignal
Member since 2011 • 551 Posts
[QUOTE="AcidSoldner"]Some PS1 FPSs may have aged terribly but one I still enjoy playing to this day is Medal of Honor. Sure it doesn't have a lot of the standards of todays FPSs but it still plays damn good. Still need to play Medal of Honor: Underground; maybe I'll download it now that the Playstation Store is back up.

If you're not a graphics obsessive that needs everything in shiny HD, they're still fun games to play. :)
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alienlegion

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#12 alienlegion
Member since 2010 • 241 Posts
Well you mentioned Colony Wars but they were space combat games with multiple view points. SilverSignal
I guess you're right. But it starts you out in FP and it's a shooter, just not a Doom clone, so I was thinking FPS. Well I thought their was a niche fanbase for this stuff after watching some youtube vids, but I guess I was wrong, or those fans just aren't here at GS. Up until 2 years ago I'd only played Goldeneye, Perfect Dark and Black. Since then I've started to explore FPS games, mostly on the PS3 and PS2. I'm finding I like the older ones better, since they don't seem to be built around constant auto saves and regenerative health. BTW got my a-- handed to me this morning playing Colony Wars. That doesn't happen to me much with the newer games. I'm liking the challenge. Well thanks for the input so far everybody. I guess this means I shoudn't have too much trouble building a collection for cheap if the games aren't very well regarded.
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alienlegion

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#13 alienlegion
Member since 2010 • 241 Posts
[QUOTE="SilverSignal"][QUOTE="AcidSoldner"]Some PS1 FPSs may have aged terribly but one I still enjoy playing to this day is Medal of Honor. Sure it doesn't have a lot of the standards of todays FPSs but it still plays damn good. Still need to play Medal of Honor: Underground; maybe I'll download it now that the Playstation Store is back up.

If you're not a graphics obsessive that needs everything in shiny HD, they're still fun games to play. :)

Yeah that pretty much describes my taste. Though the PS1 games look great on the PS3 with smoothing on. Also, I like the old FMVs. Something about them. I remember playing these games in the 90s going "Just think, one day the in-game graphics will be as good as this!" Little did I know...
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M3tr4nk0

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#14 M3tr4nk0
Member since 2008 • 889 Posts

I haven't played many FPS's on the PS1. The PC is by far the best platform for the genre, for old and new games.

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#15 SilverSignal
Member since 2011 • 551 Posts

[QUOTE="SilverSignal"][QUOTE="AcidSoldner"]Some PS1 FPSs may have aged terribly but one I still enjoy playing to this day is Medal of Honor. Sure it doesn't have a lot of the standards of todays FPSs but it still plays damn good. Still need to play Medal of Honor: Underground; maybe I'll download it now that the Playstation Store is back up.alienlegion
If you're not a graphics obsessive that needs everything in shiny HD, they're still fun games to play. :)

Yeah that pretty much describes my taste. Though the PS1 games look great on the PS3 with smoothing on. Also, I like the old FMVs. Something about them. I remember playing these games in the 90s going "Just think, one day the in-game graphics will be as good as this!" Little did I know...

I don't have a PS1 console so rely on emulators for my needs. Thankfully you can make the games look much better than they used to. That's probably all I'm allowed to say about them on here.

Yeah the FMV's in Final Fantasy VIII were amazing when I first played it. Amazing how the graphics are even better than those now. :)

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Kage1

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#16 Kage1
Member since 2003 • 6806 Posts

I love Doom & Final Doom. And I still play them sometimes. Also I likes Quake 2 and Powerslave.

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Emerald_Warrior

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#17 Emerald_Warrior
Member since 2008 • 6581 Posts

Well I think Medal of Honor is quite terrible today and even Quake II, while playlable, has nothing on the PC version (perhaps it's only more colorful but PC mods say hello). "2.5D" shooters like Doom, Dark Forces, Duke 3D, ect. are also all superior in the PC versions. You may only want to play FPS games on the PS1 if you really have to play them on the console and if you for some reason like them better.

nameless12345

I agree, the PC versions are superior in every conceivable way. Definetly go for the PC versions. They're not expensive, in fact they're dirt cheap. And if you're just too used to console controls, you can always get a PC controller.

In regards to 2.5D, we've had this discussion before. But you don't seem to understand what 2.5D is really, not if you're calling Doom and Duke Nukem 3D 2.5D. Just because the 3D doesn't look all that great, doesn't make it 2.5D. These games couldn't be further from 2.5D. They take place in a fully 3D world, it's not even questionable like Crash Bandicoot (which is what was being discussed the first time), because of Crash's limited room in a 3D level. Doom and Duke Nukem do not have limited room, it's most-definetly 3D.

2.5D is a game that mostly plays on a 2D field, however there may be a background or foreground as well like a handful of the levels on Crash Bandicoot (The Gate levels specifically), or a few of the SNK fighting games that had multiple 2D fields. Or 2.5D is a game the mostly plays on 2D field, but turns and twists perspectives of that field making it seem 3D; stuff like Nights Into Dreams and Klonoa.

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KillerJuan77

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#18 KillerJuan77
Member since 2007 • 3823 Posts

Medal Of Honor, Disruptor, Alien Trilogy and Rainbow Six are pretty good, I still have to play Codename Tenka though...

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#19 Megavideogamer
Member since 2004 • 6554 Posts

I played Broken Helix and the original Medal of Honor. Playstation 1 FPS games are OK. The graphics and gameplay don't quite hold up very well. But then again it is early in the genre. The 3D gameplay and graphics are very primitive. They have not aged very well.

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Megavideogamer

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#20 Megavideogamer
Member since 2004 • 6554 Posts

I played Broken Helix and the original Medal of Honor. Playstation 1 FPS games are OK. The graphics and gameplay don't quite hold up very well. But then again it is early in the genre. The 3D gameplay and graphics are very primitive. They have not aged very well.

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TheRaiderNation

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#21 TheRaiderNation
Member since 2007 • 1653 Posts

Unfortunately PS1 FPS games have not aged well at all.

medal of honor

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nameless12345

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#22 nameless12345
Member since 2010 • 15125 Posts

[QUOTE="nameless12345"]

Well I think Medal of Honor is quite terrible today and even Quake II, while playlable, has nothing on the PC version (perhaps it's only more colorful but PC mods say hello). "2.5D" shooters like Doom, Dark Forces, Duke 3D, ect. are also all superior in the PC versions. You may only want to play FPS games on the PS1 if you really have to play them on the console and if you for some reason like them better.

Emerald_Warrior

I agree, the PC versions are superior in every conceivable way. Definetly go for the PC versions. They're not expensive, in fact they're dirt cheap. And if you're just too used to console controls, you can always get a PC controller.

In regards to 2.5D, we've had this discussion before. But you don't seem to understand what 2.5D is really, not if you're calling Doom and Duke Nukem 3D 2.5D. Just because the 3D doesn't look all that great, doesn't make it 2.5D. These games couldn't be further from 2.5D. They take place in a fully 3D world, it's not even questionable like Crash Bandicoot (which is what was being discussed the first time), because of Crash's limited room in a 3D level. Doom and Duke Nukem do not have limited room, it's most-definetly 3D.

2.5D is a game that mostly plays on a 2D field, however there may be a background or foreground as well like a handful of the levels on Crash Bandicoot (The Gate levels specifically), or a few of the SNK fighting games that had multiple 2D fields. Or 2.5D is a game the mostly plays on 2D field, but turns and twists perspectives of that field making it seem 3D; stuff like Nights Into Dreams and Klonoa.

Well Doom and Duke 3D were, infact, regarded as 2.5D shooters back then. That's because they aren't real 3D games but use a lot of 2D stuff (like monsters, weapons, ammo packs, ect.) and also because their engines aren't really 3D (they use fake 3D method called ray casting). The first fully 3D FPS was Quake 1. Also it's noteworthy to say that most of those old 2.5D FPSes didn't allow you to look free with the mouse or had a strange perspective distortion (Duke 3D). That too was something that Quake 1 pioneered (although Descent did it before).

But I'm personally not a fan of the expression in the first place. A 2D game is a 2D game and a 3D game is a 3D game imo. If you want a more fancy expression you can also say "pseudo 3D".

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SilverSignal

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#23 SilverSignal
Member since 2011 • 551 Posts

Unfortunately PS2 FPS gaems have not aged well at all.

medal of honor

TheRaiderNation

Don't you mean PS1?

I was just playing MoH last night after reading this thread. You can play it with both the analogue sticks so it's very comfortable and playing it on a much more modern screen with high res textures makes it look better that it used to. Sure it still looks pretty ugly but so what? It's still fun to play.Plus it has really good sound for a PS1 game.

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lensflare15

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#24 lensflare15
Member since 2010 • 6652 Posts

The Medal of Honor games are great... Other than that I don't know.

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Darkman2007

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#25 Darkman2007
Member since 2007 • 17926 Posts

[QUOTE="TheRaiderNation"]

Unfortunately PS2 FPS gaems have not aged well at all.

medal of honor

SilverSignal

Don't you mean PS1?

I was just playing MoH last night after reading this thread. You can play it with both the analogue sticks so it's very comfortable and playing it on a much more modern screen with high res textures makes it look better that it used to. Sure it still looks pretty ugly but so what? It's still fun to play.Plus it has really good sound for a PS1 game.

I hear the same complaints leveled at Duke Nukem 3D , Quake , Quake 2 etc.

I have Quake and Duke 3D on the Saturn (also Quake 64), and Quake 2 on the PS1, all of them are perfectly playable games, they run smoothly, have great level design and great action.

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alienlegion

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#26 alienlegion
Member since 2010 • 241 Posts

Yeah I read some pretty good things about Quake 2 on the PS1. I've never played it, so it doesn't sound like I'll be too disappointed when I pick it up. I guess some of the things I like about these FPSs are that they offer a departure from the type of gameplay that became mainstream in the years to come. Also the sci-fi atmosphere is more appealing to me than the WWII, modern combat stuff that is so popular now. The more I play Brahma Force, with it's eerie atmosphere and closed in spaces, the more I wonder why I never got into this earlier. I was also looking at Codename Tenka and thought it looked cool. It's getting some mention so it's probably pretty good?

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#27 mattykovax
Member since 2004 • 22693 Posts
Personally I feel the only game at the time that was good was goldeneye on the 64 and that is horrible by todays standards. the big issue for me though is not graphics or crappy ports. even by the time most XBOX devolpers had figured out the interface for controllers most the PS2 FPS games still controlled like crap. I dont think I would play anything before PS3 For FPS on a sony system.
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#28 Mau-Justice
Member since 2008 • 4907 Posts
nausea enducing Old FPS games are the only ones to ever give me motion sickness.
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Emerald_Warrior

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#29 Emerald_Warrior
Member since 2008 • 6581 Posts

[QUOTE="Emerald_Warrior"]

[QUOTE="nameless12345"]

Well I think Medal of Honor is quite terrible today and even Quake II, while playlable, has nothing on the PC version (perhaps it's only more colorful but PC mods say hello). "2.5D" shooters like Doom, Dark Forces, Duke 3D, ect. are also all superior in the PC versions. You may only want to play FPS games on the PS1 if you really have to play them on the console and if you for some reason like them better.

nameless12345

I agree, the PC versions are superior in every conceivable way. Definetly go for the PC versions. They're not expensive, in fact they're dirt cheap. And if you're just too used to console controls, you can always get a PC controller.

In regards to 2.5D, we've had this discussion before. But you don't seem to understand what 2.5D is really, not if you're calling Doom and Duke Nukem 3D 2.5D. Just because the 3D doesn't look all that great, doesn't make it 2.5D. These games couldn't be further from 2.5D. They take place in a fully 3D world, it's not even questionable like Crash Bandicoot (which is what was being discussed the first time), because of Crash's limited room in a 3D level. Doom and Duke Nukem do not have limited room, it's most-definetly 3D.

2.5D is a game that mostly plays on a 2D field, however there may be a background or foreground as well like a handful of the levels on Crash Bandicoot (The Gate levels specifically), or a few of the SNK fighting games that had multiple 2D fields. Or 2.5D is a game the mostly plays on 2D field, but turns and twists perspectives of that field making it seem 3D; stuff like Nights Into Dreams and Klonoa.

Well Doom and Duke 3D were, infact, regarded as 2.5D shooters back then. That's because they aren't real 3D games but use a lot of 2D stuff (like monsters, weapons, ammo packs, ect.) and also because their engines aren't really 3D (they use fake 3D method called ray casting). The first fully 3D FPS was Quake 1. Also it's noteworthy to say that most of those old 2.5D FPSes didn't allow you to look free with the mouse or had a strange perspective distortion (Duke 3D). That too was something that Quake 1 pioneered (although Descent did it before).

But I'm personally not a fan of the expression in the first place. A 2D game is a 2D game and a 3D game is a 3D game imo. If you want a more fancy expression you can also say "pseudo 3D".

No, you're just not getting it. Bad looking 3D is not 2.5D. Doom and Duke Nukem 3D are not 2.5D nor were they EVER considered it like you just stated. The name of the game is Duke Nukem 3D for crying out loud. I kind of doubt you've even played Duke Nukem 3D if you think you can't look around.

This is 3D (from Duke Nukem 3D):

Duke Nukem 3D

Notice how everything moves on a 3D Plane. And he's not just running from left to right. Yeah, it looks pixelated and poorly done compared to modern games. But in no way does that make it 2.5D.

This is 2.5D:

Klonoa

Notice how things are in 3D, but the game is actually being played on a 2D field. Klonoa is moving in a left to right direction despite the 3D graphics.

And this is just plane old 2D:

Super Mario World

Oh, and BTW, here's a shot of Duke looking up:

Duke Looking Up

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JuarN18

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#30 JuarN18
Member since 2007 • 4981 Posts
Personally I feel the only game at the time that was good was goldeneye on the 64 and that is horrible by todays standards. the big issue for me though is not graphics or crappy ports. even by the time most XBOX devolpers had figured out the interface for controllers most the PS2 FPS games still controlled like crap. I dont think I would play anything before PS3 For FPS on a sony system.mattykovax
The timesplitters games are still good by today's standards, imo
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alienlegion

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#31 alienlegion
Member since 2010 • 241 Posts

Personally I feel the only game at the time that was good was goldeneye on the 64 and that is horrible by todays standards. the big issue for me though is not graphics or crappy ports. even by the time most XBOX devolpers had figured out the interface for controllers most the PS2 FPS games still controlled like crap. I dont think I would play anything before PS3 For FPS on a sony system.mattykovax

I don't quite understand the Xbox comment. PS2 FPS had horrible controls? Could you elaborate on that? I have a number of FPS games for the PS2, as well as the Armored Core games and some other 3PS and I never thought they were hard to control. Heck, I even beat Nine Breaker using the old shoulder button set up from the PS1 era. I've never had any issues with the analogue sticks.

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nameless12345

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#32 nameless12345
Member since 2010 • 15125 Posts

[QUOTE="nameless12345"]

[QUOTE="Emerald_Warrior"]

I agree, the PC versions are superior in every conceivable way. Definetly go for the PC versions. They're not expensive, in fact they're dirt cheap. And if you're just too used to console controls, you can always get a PC controller.

In regards to 2.5D, we've had this discussion before. But you don't seem to understand what 2.5D is really, not if you're calling Doom and Duke Nukem 3D 2.5D. Just because the 3D doesn't look all that great, doesn't make it 2.5D. These games couldn't be further from 2.5D. They take place in a fully 3D world, it's not even questionable like Crash Bandicoot (which is what was being discussed the first time), because of Crash's limited room in a 3D level. Doom and Duke Nukem do not have limited room, it's most-definetly 3D.

2.5D is a game that mostly plays on a 2D field, however there may be a background or foreground as well like a handful of the levels on Crash Bandicoot (The Gate levels specifically), or a few of the SNK fighting games that had multiple 2D fields. Or 2.5D is a game the mostly plays on 2D field, but turns and twists perspectives of that field making it seem 3D; stuff like Nights Into Dreams and Klonoa.

Emerald_Warrior

Well Doom and Duke 3D were, infact, regarded as 2.5D shooters back then. That's because they aren't real 3D games but use a lot of 2D stuff (like monsters, weapons, ammo packs, ect.) and also because their engines aren't really 3D (they use fake 3D method called ray casting). The first fully 3D FPS was Quake 1. Also it's noteworthy to say that most of those old 2.5D FPSes didn't allow you to look free with the mouse or had a strange perspective distortion (Duke 3D). That too was something that Quake 1 pioneered (although Descent did it before).

But I'm personally not a fan of the expression in the first place. A 2D game is a 2D game and a 3D game is a 3D game imo. If you want a more fancy expression you can also say "pseudo 3D".

No, you're just not getting it. Bad looking 3D is not 2.5D. Doom and Duke Nukem 3D are not 2.5D nor were they EVER considered it like you just stated. The name of the game is Duke Nukem 3D for crying out loud. I kind of doubt you've even played Duke Nukem 3D if you think you can't look around.

This is 3D (from Duke Nukem 3D):

Duke Nukem 3D

Notice how everything moves on a 3D Plane. And he's not just running from left to right. Yeah, it looks pixelated and poorly done compared to modern games. But in no way does that make it 2.5D.

This is 2.5D:

Klonoa

Notice how things are in 3D, but the game is actually being played on a 2D field. Klonoa is moving in a left to right direction despite the 3D graphics.

And this is just plane old 2D:

Super Mario World

Oh, and BTW, here's a shot of Duke looking up:

Duke Looking Up


First off, let me clarify something: "2.5D" is a made-up term and comparable to the word "pseudo-3D". I know it refers mainly to 3D games played in a 2D field but you're missing something here - the graphics engine. Klonoa is a lot more of a "true" 3D game than Duke Nukem 3D is when we're talking about the tech behind it. Sure, it's gameplay is essentially "3D" but the graphics engine is not a true 3D engine. It doesn't consist of polygons but rather uses ray casting, a method where a 2D map is turned to appear 3D (the same method was used by all FPSes prior to Quake 1, save for a few exceptions like Descent). So it's actually a fake 3D game if we're discussing the tech behind it. Also notice how the freelook in Duke 3D is strangely distorted and how many objects are simply 2D (same goes for, for example, Mario 64 but that game had a real, polygonal 3D world).

In the end it's certainly not the most important thing but do know that Quake 1 was the first real 3D FPS while FPSes prior to it were not (perhaps only Descent and Future Shock but those still used quite some 2D objects).

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#33 Darkman2007
Member since 2007 • 17926 Posts

agreed, if its not a 3D engine, its not a 3D game, it might have gameplayin a pseudo 3D world, but its not 3D on a technical level.

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#34 riou7  Moderator
Member since 2007 • 10842 Posts

I don't think I ever played FPS game on PS1 lol.

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nameless12345

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#35 nameless12345
Member since 2010 • 15125 Posts

agreed, if its not a 3D engine, its not a 3D game, it might have gameplayin a pseudo 3D world, but its not 3D on a technical level.

Darkman2007

The interesting thing is that the Saturn version supposedly uses a real 3D engine (although the enemies, weapons and many objects are still just 2D sprites).

You can make the PC version of Duke 3D into a real 3D game via mods. Here you can see the difference.

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Darkman2007

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#36 Darkman2007
Member since 2007 • 17926 Posts

[QUOTE="Darkman2007"]

agreed, if its not a 3D engine, its not a 3D game, it might have gameplayin a pseudo 3D world, but its not 3D on a technical level.

nameless12345

The interesting thing is that the Saturn version supposedly uses a real 3D engine (although the enemies, weapons and many objects are still just 2D sprites).

You can make the PC version of Duke 3D into a real 3D game via mods. Here you can see the difference.

yes, I have the Saturn version of Duke3D , and it does use a real 3D engine, the slavedriver engine later used for Saturn Quake. I would say that while the PS1 version is closer to the PC in terms of content (the Saturn version lacks things here and there due to the engine), the Saturn version looks sharper, runs smoother and is just generally more fun (the PS1 version looks like a choppy, pixelated port of the PC)
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Darkman2007

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#37 Darkman2007
Member since 2007 • 17926 Posts

here is a video comparison to show the differences

http://uk.gamespot.com/users/Darkman2007/video_player?id=d3Flw2Ot5bMPvD_a

I also have the N64 version , but it has its own issues and advantages

the worst would have to be the PS1, its closest to the PC , but it doesnt run well , and looks quite grainy, at least the Saturn and N64 versions run well and look good.

also , the Saturn version has lighitng effects which are not present in the other versions, including the PC, for instance during an explosion or when firing a gun.

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#38 MathMattS
Member since 2009 • 4012 Posts

Indeed, the PSX had some great FPSs. In fact, one of my first two games for the PSX was Medal of Honor, definitely the best of the MoH series. Medal of Honor: Underground was awesome, too.

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nameless12345

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#39 nameless12345
Member since 2010 • 15125 Posts

In fact, one of my first two games for the PSX was Medal of Honor, definitely the best of the MoH series.

MathMattS

That's highly debatable. The game feels primitive and limited now. Many who played all the MoH games would agree that the best one was Allied Assault for the PC. That game also influenced other WW2 shooters like Call of Duty. The MoH series did start on the PS1 but that doesn't mean that the first game in the series is also the best.

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#40 Aero5555
Member since 2006 • 1333 Posts

Rainbow Six is pretty good.

KillerJuan77

I have to disagree. The PSX port was barely passible even back then. Now it's pretty much unplayable IMO.

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#41 SilverSignal
Member since 2011 • 551 Posts

[QUOTE="MathMattS"]

In fact, one of my first two games for the PSX was Medal of Honor, definitely the best of the MoH series.

nameless12345

That's highly debatable. The game feels primitive and limited now. Many who played all the MoH games would agree that the best one was Allied Assault for the PC. That game also influenced other WW2 shooters like Call of Duty. The MoH series did start on the PS1 but that doesn't mean that the first game in the series is also the best.

Well of course it's going to feel primitive these days. It's not going to play like Battlefield 3. But back then it was a brilliant game. And still is if you can get over the graphics.
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#42 lordlunch2
Member since 2006 • 544 Posts
I remember medal of honor underground. I used to play it non stop lol, I can't really remember what it was like though. Might have to youtube that one...
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nameless12345

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#43 nameless12345
Member since 2010 • 15125 Posts

[QUOTE="nameless12345"]

[QUOTE="MathMattS"]

In fact, one of my first two games for the PSX was Medal of Honor, definitely the best of the MoH series.

SilverSignal

That's highly debatable. The game feels primitive and limited now. Many who played all the MoH games would agree that the best one was Allied Assault for the PC. That game also influenced other WW2 shooters like Call of Duty. The MoH series did start on the PS1 but that doesn't mean that the first game in the series is also the best.

Well of course it's going to feel primitive these days. It's not going to play like Battlefield 3. But back then it was a brilliant game. And still is if you can get over the graphics.

Sure, it was a very good shooter back then. But for PS1 standards. And like I said it's questionable if it's really the best MoH game out there. For example Allied Assault on the PC was a whole new experience.

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Darkman2007

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#44 Darkman2007
Member since 2007 • 17926 Posts

[QUOTE="SilverSignal"][QUOTE="nameless12345"]

That's highly debatable. The game feels primitive and limited now. Many who played all the MoH games would agree that the best one was Allied Assault for the PC. That game also influenced other WW2 shooters like Call of Duty. The MoH series did start on the PS1 but that doesn't mean that the first game in the series is also the best.

nameless12345

Well of course it's going to feel primitive these days. It's not going to play like Battlefield 3. But back then it was a brilliant game. And still is if you can get over the graphics.

Sure, it was a very good shooter back then. But for PS1 standards. And like I said it's questionable if it's really the best MoH game out there. For example Allied Assault on the PC was a whole new experience.

if I had to pick my personal favourite FPS on the PS1, its either Doom or Quake 2, though admittedly I haven't played enough FPS games on the system.
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#45 nameless12345
Member since 2010 • 15125 Posts

[QUOTE="nameless12345"]

[QUOTE="SilverSignal"] Well of course it's going to feel primitive these days. It's not going to play like Battlefield 3. But back then it was a brilliant game. And still is if you can get over the graphics.Darkman2007

Sure, it was a very good shooter back then. But for PS1 standards. And like I said it's questionable if it's really the best MoH game out there. For example Allied Assault on the PC was a whole new experience.

if I had to pick my personal favourite FPS on the PS1, its either Doom or Quake 2, though admittedly I haven't played enough FPS games on the system.

Well Doom and Quake 2 were also the most interesting ports since they had different levels, more lighting and a new soundtrack. But I still prefer the PC versions over them.

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#46 Darkman2007
Member since 2007 • 17926 Posts

[QUOTE="Darkman2007"][QUOTE="nameless12345"]

Sure, it was a very good shooter back then. But for PS1 standards. And like I said it's questionable if it's really the best MoH game out there. For example Allied Assault on the PC was a whole new experience.

nameless12345

if I had to pick my personal favourite FPS on the PS1, its either Doom or Quake 2, though admittedly I haven't played enough FPS games on the system.

Well Doom and Quake 2 were also the most interesting ports since they had different levels, more lighting and a new soundtrack. But I still prefer the PC versions over them.

well 9/10 times the PC version is always better.....if you had a good enough computer to run it. the annoying thing about Quake 2 on the PS1 ,is that it loads alot, not just between levels, but also during levels, there are certain corridors you go through in the levels which pause the game to load, and it happens multiple times during a level too. at least Saturn Quake doesnt do that, and just loads between levels, same for the N64 version.
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nameless12345

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#47 nameless12345
Member since 2010 • 15125 Posts

[QUOTE="nameless12345"]

[QUOTE="Darkman2007"] if I had to pick my personal favourite FPS on the PS1, its either Doom or Quake 2, though admittedly I haven't played enough FPS games on the system.Darkman2007

Well Doom and Quake 2 were also the most interesting ports since they had different levels, more lighting and a new soundtrack. But I still prefer the PC versions over them.

well 9/10 times the PC version is always better.....if you had a good enough computer to run it.

That's not really a problem for Doom and Quake 2 because they run well even on ancient PCs ;)

The long load times probably have to do with PS1's low memory of only 2 MB RAM. But perhaps it's also loading graphics stuff from the CD.

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Darkman2007

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#48 Darkman2007
Member since 2007 • 17926 Posts

[QUOTE="Darkman2007"][QUOTE="nameless12345"]

Well Doom and Quake 2 were also the most interesting ports since they had different levels, more lighting and a new soundtrack. But I still prefer the PC versions over them.

nameless12345

well 9/10 times the PC version is always better.....if you had a good enough computer to run it.

That's not really a problem for Doom and Quake 2 because they run well even on ancient PCs ;)

The long load times probably have to do with PS1's low memory of only 2 MB RAM. But perhaps it's also loading graphics stuff from the CD.

well I was talking about computers in 1998/99. so if the PS1 can run Quake 2 with shortcomings like that, what made you think the Saturn couldnt? its got even more RAM in the VRAM department.
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#49 nameless12345
Member since 2010 • 15125 Posts

[QUOTE="nameless12345"]

[QUOTE="Darkman2007"] well 9/10 times the PC version is always better.....if you had a good enough computer to run it.Darkman2007

That's not really a problem for Doom and Quake 2 because they run well even on ancient PCs ;)

The long load times probably have to do with PS1's low memory of only 2 MB RAM. But perhaps it's also loading graphics stuff from the CD.

well I was talking about computers in 1998/99. so if the PS1 can run Quake 2 with shortcomings like that, what made you think the Saturn couldnt? its got even more RAM in the VRAM department.

Actually the PS1 version looks like the PC version running in software mode, just that it has more lighting. Even a low-end 1998/99 PC could handle that. Infact if you had a solid PC with a 3dfx Voodoo graphics card back in the 90s you always got the best versions of multiplat games.

I don't say Saturn couldn't run Quake 2 but it would probably need a custom engine and some other sacrifices would have to be made.

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#50 Darkman2007
Member since 2007 • 17926 Posts

[QUOTE="Darkman2007"][QUOTE="nameless12345"]

That's not really a problem for Doom and Quake 2 because they run well even on ancient PCs ;)

The long load times probably have to do with PS1's low memory of only 2 MB RAM. But perhaps it's also loading graphics stuff from the CD.

nameless12345

well I was talking about computers in 1998/99. so if the PS1 can run Quake 2 with shortcomings like that, what made you think the Saturn couldnt? its got even more RAM in the VRAM department.

Actually the PS1 version looks like the PC version running in software mode, just that it has more lighting. Even a low-end 1998/99 PC could handle that. Infact if you had a solid PC with a 3dfx Voodoo graphics card back in the 90s you always got the best versions of multiplat games.

I don't say Saturn couldn't run Quake 2 but it would probably need a custom engine and some other sacrifices would have to be made.

I remember the PC I had at the time had no 3D card, and it seems most people didn't either, but the games still looked good. and I don't know what sacrafices the Saturn would have needed to make that the PS didnt , Saturn Quake had plenty of lighting , though I suppose the transparencies would have been reduced (the water in Saturn Quake are the weakest part of the visuals) I would also be interested to see wheter the 3DO or Jaguar could run Quake or Quake 2, that would have been interesting to see.