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From his looks Magus is Macho Man Randy Savage as an anime zombie. The black wind howls, and one of you will snap into a Slim Jim ooh yeeeah! -sonicblastpunch
how can we force our children to play through the games we grew up on first? Why would you want to do this? I don't watch the movies my parents watched, or listen to the music they listened to, and fortunately they never forced me to do it either.
I think the concern is that all of the old games that we love will become obsolete without the younger generations even giving them a chance, but I'm not sure that's well-founded. I think they'll still enjoy them as much as we did when they find them, and if they don't, then maybe we should rethink whether they truly have as much merit as we think they do. Most game companies, Nintendo especially, still loves re-releasing their old games, and if our kids become as attached to them as we do then that's a sign that they're truly time-tested and aren't going anywhere.
As with film, music, and every other medium... kids won't want to give the old stuff a chance, and they'll hate it when their parents try to force it on them. Once they're older, though, a decent chunk of them will want to at least try some of the classics. Plenty of teenagers today listen to The Beatles and watch classic films like The Godfather, so why wouldn't we expect future teens to play Super Mario Bros.?
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"Claire likes to say 'You can be part of the problem, or part of the solution.' But I happen to believe you can be both." - Phil Dunphy
From: Surskit | #005 Why would you want to do this? I don't watch the movies my parents watched, or listen to the music they listened to, and fortunately they never forced me to do it either.
Really? Your dad never had you watch Star Wars as a kid?
Because I think, as early adopters of the gaming phenomenon, we feel we have a duty to see the propagation of the medium, when we're still not quite sure that the gaming classics are really things that'll live forever, so we're kind of naturally worried about it. I think the most important thing is making sure that future generations will always have access to the classics, which is why, ironically, completely illegal emulation of games is the absolute most important thing for the long-term health of gaming's history going forward.
TheKnightOfNee | Posted 12/13/2011 4:43:16 PM | message detail | quote Did anyone's parents force them to start with the Odyssey and Atari 2600 when newer systems from Nintendo were out?
My mom was like 21 and had her own NES. I mean hell, it wasn't even mine. It was hers. We essentially grew up on the same things.