View Full Version : Nintendo's big suprise: It plays CDs of every CDrom based non-Sony console
Survivor Charlie
03-25-2006, 01:15 AM
A couple places are now speculating that because the "Virtual Console" can play TG 16 CD rom and Duo CD roms (which Hudson/NEC has cryptically confirmed will be 'supported' by the Virtual Console) and with the upcoming annoucement that Sega CD games will be supported, all that's left is the annoucemnt that if you already own the game, just stick it in the Rev and it works.
The so called "Virtual Console" is done through firmware already on the Revolution, straight out of the factory (unless Nintendo is just blowing smoke, which they have been known to do). Now, if they have the drivers and the game system is disc-based, is it that much of a stretch that the Revolution can play the actual games of any disc based console, using the original disc? My god, think of the built in games base the machine would have. Turbo Graphx, Sega CD, Sega Saturn... SEGA DREAMCAST... 3DO, CDi, Jaguar CD (hell, why not?) Maybe even Neo Geo CD. I think Nintendo is ready to drop a huge bombshell at E3.
SteveMcQ
03-25-2006, 01:23 AM
Dreamcast, yes please. Even though I still have that system, it's one less I have to hook up.
Strell
03-25-2006, 01:32 AM
I thought my hardon could not get any more hardon-er.
THAT IS NOT THE CASE.
MUCH TO EVERYONE'S DELIGHT.
Links? Sounds interesting.
RAMSTORIA
03-25-2006, 01:37 AM
dont get too excited, this is speculation from a cag user.
but dont get me wrong id love to see this happen, but id lean more towards emulation. i mean the games they are talking about, nes, genesis, snes, etc arent that big in size and should be easily emulated on a powerful console. dreamcast though, jaguar, now youre pushing the limits of even current PCs.
SpazX
03-25-2006, 02:30 AM
I don't see that happening really, it would be nice if I was wrong, but I don't think they'd go that route. Plus, AFAIK, Dreamcast would be out since they used a proprietary 1gb disc that would require a different laser to read than a standard CD-ROM.
Survivor Charlie
03-25-2006, 02:38 AM
Well, Hudson has 100% confirmed that Turbo CD games will be on the Virtual Console.
According to an announcement by Hudson's Japanese office, the Virtual Console support for TurboGrafx games, announced yesterday, includes both card and CD-ROM games. The Hudson/NEC-designed system was known as PC-Engine in Japan, where it enjoyed far more success and is remembered for several classic games which were never released elsewhere. The system underwent numerous revisions, going from a solid-state storage format to a few different CD-ROM formats.
Today's announcement confirms that the Nintendo Revolution's emulation will cover games stored on ROM cards and at least one of the CD formats, known as CD-ROM2. Whether the Super CD and Arcade CD formats will be supported is currently not clear. Hudson notes that more than 670 games were released on the system over the years, 122 of which were published by Hudson itself.
Now that's the official annoucement that the Nintendo Revolution will play Turbo CD games, but via download? Those are some pretty big games for even a high-speed download.
But that's not all. Sega said at the conference, and I can't remember where I read it at, but they said (or Nintendo said) that Sega's Virtual Console support will not be limited to the Sega Genesis. Now obviously, that could just as easily mean the Sega Master System and Game Gear, but why stop there? If the Rev will support 200MB+ Turbo CD games, then certainly the door is open for Sega CD games, or Sega Saturn games, or maybe even Sega Dreamcast. Technically, it could be done. The system is disc based afterall, and can read at least four formats of media annouced already (Rev games, DVD movies, CD music, Gamecube ODs).
Look, obviously this wasn't something that was hatched at the 11th hour. Nintendo has planned this Virtual Console stuff all along. They've obviously been talking with 3rd parties about supporting it, and they're jumping into it. So is it THAT far fetched to say "Hey NEC, Sega, whoever the hell bought 3DO's IPs... how about letting people use their original disc-based games?" I would say that it's not a far-fetched theory at all.
Sleepkyng
03-25-2006, 02:46 AM
so you think the drive will be able to play gc disks that spin backwards as well as dc games with crazy disks and hes other cds?
i wish, but i dunno.
Vegan
03-25-2006, 02:47 AM
Dude, your thread topic is extremely misleading for a post that's pure speculation. I'd ask for a question mark to be added but even that would be giving more credence than it deserves.
SilverPaw750
03-25-2006, 03:01 AM
It plays CDs of every CDrom based non-Sony console
So I can pop in my Xbox games? ;)
paz9x
03-25-2006, 03:07 AM
So I can pop in my Xbox games? ;)
fo shizzle
Ikohn4ever
03-25-2006, 03:32 AM
what about my CD-I Zeldas, I have been hankering for Zelda since no Princess
Cao Cao
03-25-2006, 05:39 AM
Heh, I wonder if this includes those Zelda CD-I games.
http://www.kotaku.com/gaming/nintendo/two-horrible-horrible-zelda-beginnings-162757.php
http://www.kotaku.com/gaming/zelda/two-horrible-horrible-zelda-endings-162670.php
dayglo
03-25-2006, 06:16 AM
While this would be great if if it was true, I strongly doubt it will happen. It doesn't make sense for Nintendo to allow you to play older, non-Nintendo games off of disc media. The first problem, is that these games have not been in production for a while. The only copies of Sega CD and such games you will find will be used, which results in absolutely no profit for Sega. Secondly, if this was true, the sudden demand for non-Nintendo disc based media would sky rocket, and far surpass any supply a normal game store would have. Third, I think it is safe to say that anybody with a collection of such games, probably already owns the corresponding console.
Now, what would make sense, is Nintendo to sell roms through their online service, charging a fee. This creates new revenue for them and the original company (ie Sega), without much work beyond emulation.
I'm just really hoping they'll have NiGHTS into Dreams available at some time...
Edit: Damn spelling errors
ramprider0
03-25-2006, 06:30 AM
So I can pop in my Xbox games? ;)
Xbox games are DVD's not Cd-Rom's just an FYI.
b0bx13
03-25-2006, 07:48 AM
so you think the drive will be able to play gc disks that spin backwards as well as dc games with crazy disks and hes other cds?
i wish, but i dunno.
Why do people still believe the myth of the backward-spinning disc? That was dispelled ages ago.
niceguyshawne
03-25-2006, 09:15 AM
While this would be great if if it was true, I strongly doubt it will happen. It doesn't make sense for Nintendo to allow you to play older, non-Nintendo games off of disc media. The first problem, is that these games have not been in production for a while. The only copies of Sega CD and such games you will find will be used, which results in absolutely no profit for Sega. Secondly, if this was true, the sudden demand for non-Nintendo disc based media would sky rocket, and far surpass any supply a normal game store would have. Third, I think it is safe to say that anybody with a collection of such games, probably already owns the corresponding console.
Now, what would make sense, is Nintendo to sell roms through their online service, charging a fee. This creates new revenue for them and the original company (ie Sega), without much work beyond emulation.
I'm just really hoping they'll have NiGHTS into Dreams available at some time...
This would be a game collector's wet dream but I seriously doubt that the average gamer would run out and buy a bunch of 10 year old Sega CD games to play on his brand new Revolution. At best it would be a value added addition as they could say that their machine was backwards compatible with everything.
Personally, the Revo will be my first next gen console but not for the ability to play old games. Like someone else said, I already have the original systems for that.
Strell
03-25-2006, 10:44 AM
So I can pop in my Xbox games? ;)
Of course. That is what the Revolution will feed on.
alongx
03-25-2006, 10:46 AM
Now obviously, that could just as easily mean the Sega Master System and Game Gear, but why stop there? If the Rev will support 200MB+ Turbo CD games, then certainly the door is open for Sega CD games, or Sega Saturn games, or maybe even Sega Dreamcast. Technically, it could be done.
I wouldn't hold your breath for Saturn and Dreamcast. Techincally, maybe the DC could be done since it had a fairly basic architecture, but I think emulating the Saturn's dual graphics processors plus the CPU would be a feat of unimaginable difficulty.
Now if Sega would port some of their Saturn stuff (Panzer Saga, Shining Force 3 pts 1-3) I'd gladly re-buy them all. This wouldn't be that trivial, unfortunately, because Sega's Saturn games, at least, were written in highly optimized assembly, which doesn't exactly lead to easy porting.
rabidmonkeys
03-25-2006, 11:15 AM
No way this would happen. This is nothing more then pure, fabircated speculation. The Rev would have to have every processor from every console in the system for this to work and have access to the architecture and languages from each system. Can you put a Sega CD in a dreamcast? No. Why? Because its a dreamcast, not a sega CD.
On top of that, the comment of "Now that's the official annoucement that the Nintendo Revolution will play Turbo CD games, but via download? Those are some pretty big games for even a high-speed download." is just dumb. The 360 has demos and trailers larger then the size of a CD already and 70% of America has broadband access.
daroga
03-25-2006, 12:30 PM
Why do people still believe the myth of the backward-spinning disc? That was dispelled ages ago.
True enough, the GC discs spin clockwise, like CDs and DVDs. I had heard the that the data was actually written backwards, in that the start of the disc was on the outside and worked in instead of the other way around. Has that theory been proven or disproven? Google was of little help to me.
SpazX
03-25-2006, 12:32 PM
The 360 has demos and trailers larger then the size of a CD already and 70% of America has broadband access.
Woah now, that's way too high, less than 50% have broadband at home. 70% might have access meaning at home or work. I don't think people will be toting their game consoles to work to get downloads (if they'd even have wifi or allow you :-P).
Friend of Sonic
03-25-2006, 05:32 PM
No way this would happen. This is nothing more then pure, fabircated speculation. The Rev would have to have every processor from every console in the system for this to work and have access to the architecture and languages from each system. Can you put a Sega CD in a dreamcast? No. Why? Because its a dreamcast, not a sega CD.
On top of that, the comment of "Now that's the official annoucement that the Nintendo Revolution will play Turbo CD games, but via download? Those are some pretty big games for even a high-speed download." is just dumb. The 360 has demos and trailers larger then the size of a CD already and 70% of America has broadband access.
Emulation...?
CapAmerica
03-25-2006, 06:07 PM
No way this would happen. This is nothing more then pure, fabircated speculation. The Rev would have to have every processor from every console in the system for this to work and have access to the architecture and languages from each system. Can you put a Sega CD in a dreamcast? No. Why? Because its a dreamcast, not a sega CD.
On top of that, the comment of "Now that's the official annoucement that the Nintendo Revolution will play Turbo CD games, but via download? Those are some pretty big games for even a high-speed download." is just dumb. The 360 has demos and trailers larger then the size of a CD already and 70% of America has broadband access.
There are a little thing called emulators, maybe you have heard of them?
I know with my old 1.5Ghz AMD PC I could easily play Dreamcast, SegaCD and Sega Saturn games (Not ROMS) just by downloading a couple emulators. What says Nintendo's Virtual Console is not going to be Emulator based, All that needs to be done is just have a few emulators compiled for the Revolution hardware? It gets away from using custom hardware and will allow them to add more systems later on. We also know Nintendo has dipped their toes into Emulators. Just look at the Zelda collection disc, Hackers have actually found that all those games are running threw emulators and have infact used those emulators to play roms of other games. If Nintendo just writes a emulator that also looks for games being inserted in the DVD drive they could easily support all other CD based formats. And with the problem of the Revolution drive spinning backwards, don't forget Nintendo has already said that you will be able to watch DVDs on the Revolution so they have already fixed the problem with switching the read direction.
TheBlueWizard
03-25-2006, 06:23 PM
Woah now, that's way too high, less than 50% have broadband at home. 70% might have access meaning at home or work. I don't think people will be toting their game consoles to work to get downloads (if they'd even have wifi or allow you :-P).
Everyone has access to librarys. Library's have high speed internet. So 70% isn't that unreasonable.
Or it could mean the 70% of people live where broadband is available. I think that this is far more likely.
TBW
alongx
03-25-2006, 06:34 PM
There are a little thing called emulators, maybe you have heard of them?
I know with my old 1.5Ghz AMD PC I could easily play Dreamcast, SegaCD and Sega Saturn games (Not ROMS) just by downloading a couple emulators.
Congradulations, you're full of shit.
The Sega CD - sure, Ages emulates that fine, and I used it to play my old Lunars long after the Sega CD was dead. The Dreamcast - I don't know about that. It was a proprietary format disk, and thus may not be readable by a regular CD/DVD drive, but I never tried it and thus don't know. But the Saturn I know without a shadow of a doubt is not playable on any computer anywhere. Do you know why? Because no emulator programmer ever managed to fully emulate the Saturn hardware. The closest I think was A-saturn (though I may have the name wrong), which only got to a 0.1 release and was able to play Saturn games at about 1/15th of the speed.
Even Super Nintendo emulators have some bugs these days and are still being tuned. Emulation is great, but it's severely dampened by the emulating box's CPU's ability to fully emulate the entirety of the other system.
Survivor Charlie
03-25-2006, 06:37 PM
And with the problem of the Revolution drive spinning backwards, don't forget Nintendo has already said that you will be able to watch DVDs on the Revolution so they have already fixed the problem with switching the read direction.
That's what I've been saying. Out of the box, the Rev plays four types of media.
1. Music CDs
2. DVD Movies
3. Gamecube Optic Discs
4. Revolution media.
That's four different formats of disc-based media right out of the box. Using various methods (drivers, emulation, etc etc) is it THAT far-fetched to say the Revolution will be able to read disc-based games of classic systems?
I also don't accept or buy into the theory that Nintendo wouldn't do it because 'there is no money to be made' on it. Are you kidding? Imagine the marketing coup. Picture the Regginator at E3, chest puffed up, saying "The Playstation 3 will play PS2 and PS1 games. The XBox 360 plays some original XBox games. God bless them for it. But the Revolution... it plays everything else."
Backwards compatibility was a huge marketing point that helped the PS2 in ways that cannot be measured. Imagine the appeal of a game system that can play every single non-Sony or Microsoft game system. HUGE appeal.
Vinny
03-25-2006, 06:49 PM
Interesting proposal... but it just sounds really far-fetched. If it's true, then Nintendo will be hailed as the video game gods in my book.
evilmax17
03-25-2006, 06:56 PM
It would be cool, but i don't see it as a major selling point to John Q. Revolution-Buyer.
The only people that have SegaCD/Saturn/Duo games anymore are collectors.
dayglo
03-25-2006, 07:11 PM
This would be a game collector's wet dream but I seriously doubt that the average gamer would run out and buy a bunch of 10 year old Sega CD games to play on his brand new Revolution.
Which is exactly why nintendo wouldn't do it. There's no market for it, and there's no new revenue for them with the exception of the console sale. Considering Nintendo's been pushing the low price point on the Revolution, it wouldn't make sense to start adding features like that, that will not generate any more revenue for Nintendo. What WOULD create more would be to make them available to purchase and download online. They still have the marketability of saying it can play games from such and such console. The market for people that already have a huge collection of Sega CD and such games is so small, Nintendo wouldn't pursue it.
Think about it this way. Nintendo is not making the Revolution run in HD because (among other reasons) they believe not a large enough portion of their user base have HD TV's. Now think about the number of people with HD TV's compared to the number of people with a collection of Sega CD games and without a working console. That market is even smaller.
Nintendo adds backwards compatibility to help ease their users into a new format. The GBA could play GBC and GB games. The DS could play GBA games. This is because at the release, the previous iteration's games were still available. Why is the DS not compatible with GB and GBC games? Because Nintendo didn't see a market big enough to make it available. Nintendo is a company, and although I really like them, they are just that, a company. They will do what they need to to make the most revenue, and I just don't see this as feasible.
Out of curiousity, where did you originally read this? I'm curious what the original article said.
Strell
03-25-2006, 07:54 PM
First off, in Japan, there are still games being made for the Dreamcast. The Sega CD and the Saturn had similar fates - they were far more popular in Japan and supported. Same thing with the TB16/PC-Engine. Important because Nintendo si going to appeal to their homeland with brute force and all guns blazing. Can't think of a better way than to tell an otaku that they can play all those games they've got sitting around. You could make the argument that this would encourage indie development and such, but that's kind of a weak connection.
Given that, I fail to see why everyone thinks this would be a bad marketing decision. If it were to happen, they could do one of two things: offer the games for download, or press new copies. In either case, the only true cost is manufacturing. And given the mania a few games have - namely, Radiant Silvergun, Rondo of Blood, etc - there are more than enough people out there that would drop cash on them in a second.
Is it plausible? Not entirely. But it is most assuredly doable.
I don't know about physical limitations - how a Dreamcast proprietary CD couldn't be read - but what would stop Sega from putting them on DVDs? If they can put Sonic Adventure onto Gamecube disks, I'd think they could determine a way to load an emulator and a game onto a DVD. Can someone tell me why that wouldn't be possible? Why not make TG16 compilation DVDs? Yes? No? Obviously this doesn't answer the original question about formats, but it is still something to consider for, say, possible new batches of games to be pressed.
Of course I am not technically capable enough to know whether or not all of this will succeed. I'm just saying there are easy solutions to these issues. Obviously speed isn't a big deal given emulators. After that, distribution can be done directly, which would lead to huge profit margins. You people talk about "who is going to buy it?" and yet you'd turn around in a second and put down cash on Chrono Trigger if it only costs $5.
And I'd pay $20 for Snatcher on my Revolution, if it were to happen. And I'm willing to beat there's a big enough market for it.
Nintendo has pulled out crazier shit in the past.
Again, plausible? Yes. Likely? Hard to say.
In 5 weeks we'll know.
PsyKyX
03-25-2006, 08:09 PM
Congradulations, you're full of shit.
The Sega CD - sure, Ages emulates that fine, and I used it to play my old Lunars long after the Sega CD was dead. The Dreamcast - I don't know about that. It was a proprietary format disk, and thus may not be readable by a regular CD/DVD drive, but I never tried it and thus don't know. But the Saturn I know without a shadow of a doubt is not playable on any computer anywhere. Do you know why? Because no emulator programmer ever managed to fully emulate the Saturn hardware. The closest I think was A-saturn (though I may have the name wrong), which only got to a 0.1 release and was able to play Saturn games at about 1/15th of the speed.
Even Super Nintendo emulators have some bugs these days and are still being tuned. Emulation is great, but it's severely dampened by the emulating box's CPU's ability to fully emulate the entirety of the other system.
The programmers that write these homebrew emulators do not have access to all the hardware architecture or SDK's. Do you think these companies would come on board and not give Nintendo complete documention?
David85
03-25-2006, 10:25 PM
Never will happen.
Survivor Charlie
03-25-2006, 10:51 PM
Well, there is no market for black and white gameboy games, yet Nintendo made the GBA backwards compatible. It was a good selling point.
Nintendo aims at a younger audience, and younger people DO NOT buy their own systems. So it's Nintendo's way of saying "Hey mom and dad... holding onto that dusty old Sega Dreamcast? Well don't throw the games out, because Nintendo has you covered!!"
Suddenly, places like Goodwill become game stores, where a Sega CD game can be played on the latest video game system.
Is it likely? Maybe not. But with news that Turbo CD games will be on the Virtual Console, it shows that at the very least, the Nintendo Revolution WILL be able to play games built on Turbo CD technology. Can just popping in the CDs be that far out of the question?
Here's the statement from Hudson. It's in Japanese, so good luck.
http://www.hudson.co.jp/corp/news/bn2006/060324.pdf
Here's the article that tells you what the announcement says.
http://www.planetgamecube.com/newsArt.cfm?artid=11226
b0bx13
03-25-2006, 11:07 PM
True enough, the GC discs spin clockwise, like CDs and DVDs. I had heard the that the data was actually written backwards, in that the start of the disc was on the outside and worked in instead of the other way around. Has that theory been proven or disproven? Google was of little help to me.
That was disproven as well. There's nothing special that separates a GC disc from a normal mini-dvd.
1. rather gamecube disc spins backward or forward is not a factor at all. You can burn gamecube games to mini dvds or even regularl dvds if you take off the cover.
2. dreamcast games are on GD-Rom, which is 1gb, bigger than a cd
However being able to play Dracula X would be more than enough for me.
2Fast
03-25-2006, 11:16 PM
Well, I always already more than sold on the Revolution when I first hear of its development, and if this is true; OH MAN!
CapAmerica
03-25-2006, 11:20 PM
Congradulations, you're full of shit.
The Sega CD - sure, Ages emulates that fine, and I used it to play my old Lunars long after the Sega CD was dead. The Dreamcast - I don't know about that. It was a proprietary format disk, and thus may not be readable by a regular CD/DVD drive, but I never tried it and thus don't know. But the Saturn I know without a shadow of a doubt is not playable on any computer anywhere. Do you know why? Because no emulator programmer ever managed to fully emulate the Saturn hardware. The closest I think was A-saturn (though I may have the name wrong), which only got to a 0.1 release and was able to play Saturn games at about 1/15th of the speed.
Even Super Nintendo emulators have some bugs these days and are still being tuned. Emulation is great, but it's severely dampened by the emulating box's CPU's ability to fully emulate the entirety of the other system.
I can prove your wrong beyond a shadow of a doubt I'm sending you a PM with a link to a fully working Sega Saturn emulator. There is a little program called SSF 0.07 (To Mods: If its a mistake to mention the name sorry in advance.) And I know it works cause I've used it to play my copy of Nights and Dead or Alive.
Who is full of shit now? Cause I know its not me.
willardhaven
03-25-2006, 11:24 PM
I like how the same people seem to get into arguments all the time.
GizmoGC
03-25-2006, 11:26 PM
If this is true, I will take a picture of my boobies. Seriosuly, for all to see!
rabidmonkeys
03-25-2006, 11:43 PM
There are a little thing called emulators, maybe you have heard of them?
I know with my old 1.5Ghz AMD PC I could easily play Dreamcast, SegaCD and Sega Saturn games (Not ROMS) just by downloading a couple emulators. What says Nintendo's Virtual Console is not going to be Emulator based, All that needs to be done is just have a few emulators compiled for the Revolution hardware? It gets away from using custom hardware and will allow them to add more systems later on. We also know Nintendo has dipped their toes into Emulators. Just look at the Zelda collection disc, Hackers have actually found that all those games are running threw emulators and have infact used those emulators to play roms of other games. If Nintendo just writes a emulator that also looks for games being inserted in the DVD drive they could easily support all other CD based formats. And with the problem of the Revolution drive spinning backwards, don't forget Nintendo has already said that you will be able to watch DVDs on the Revolution so they have already fixed the problem with switching the read direction.
You need to re-read my post. I was rebutting the OP. he said that the rev would play the original CDs. I thought I was clear on the fact that they would do it via emulation when I countered his "they'd be too big to download." comment.
But emulation via software not hardware and surely you can't think that putting a cd in via some mythical program to determine disc type and system type and game then run another program to emulate that hardware via software? First off I would say its very unlikely that is even possible due to the hardware differences but from an economic point (either in development of such a system, or the profit loss by giving this system away with the hardware. Why give it away when you can sell it? Why would they allow someone to put in their Marvel vs Capcom 2 Dreamcast disc, or buy it from ebay, when they could force them to pay for the download?
Survivor Charlie
03-26-2006, 12:10 AM
Oh give me a break. The PS2 can tell the difference between DVD movies, PS2 *GAMES*, CD *music* and CD Playstation 1 *games* right out of the box, no accesories needed. And the PS2 is certainly not some kind of magical mythical box that has teny tiny Oopma Loompas that manually input what kind of disc has been inserted.
I mean, yeah... Rev may not be able to play old CDs, but regardless a lot of you people here are ignorant.
Vegan
03-26-2006, 12:11 AM
There are a little thing called emulators, maybe you have heard of them?
I know with my old 1.5Ghz AMD PC I could easily play Dreamcast, SegaCD and Sega Saturn games (Not ROMS) just by downloading a couple emulators. What says Nintendo's Virtual Console is not going to be Emulator based, All that needs to be done is just have a few emulators compiled for the Revolution hardware? It gets away from using custom hardware and will allow them to add more systems later on. We also know Nintendo has dipped their toes into Emulators. Just look at the Zelda collection disc, Hackers have actually found that all those games are running threw emulators and have infact used those emulators to play roms of other games. If Nintendo just writes a emulator that also looks for games being inserted in the DVD drive they could easily support all other CD based formats. And with the problem of the Revolution drive spinning backwards, don't forget Nintendo has already said that you will be able to watch DVDs on the Revolution so they have already fixed the problem with switching the read direction.
I don't think you realize that that would be illegal for Nintendo to do. They can do it all they want with the Zelda disc and Virtual Console because they own it; who are they going to sue, themselves? Remember bleemcast? Yeah, they're not around anymore.
JSweeney
03-26-2006, 12:22 AM
Of course. That is what the Revolution will feed on.
I thought that was the souls of young children. Or is that only Yamauchi?
VanillaGorilla
03-26-2006, 12:25 AM
I don't know about you guys, but I would rather play new games on these new systems, instead of games I've already played out years ago, and will only play for 15 minutes, until the nostalgia factor wears off.
JSweeney
03-26-2006, 12:28 AM
I don't know about you guys, but I would rather play new games on these new systems, instead of games I've already played out years ago, and will only play for 15 minutes, until the nostalgia factor wears off.
I like having the option to do both, and if the games are reasonably priced, it would be far preferable for me to boot up the Rev and download a game rather than having to either hunt for an actual copy of it, or find an emulator, and then the rom, and then patch the emulator so that the rom I want to play works.
CapAmerica
03-26-2006, 12:35 AM
I don't think you realize that that would be illegal for Nintendo to do. They can do it all they want with the Zelda disc and Virtual Console because they own it; who are they going to sue, themselves? Remember bleemcast? Yeah, they're not around anymore.
It would only be illegal if they don't have the creators of the systems backing them.
If Sega give Nintendo the greenlight to have Sega Emulators then its no longer illegal, same goes if NEC & Hudson-Soft give the okay for TurboGrafx emulators.
Mookyjooky
03-26-2006, 12:57 AM
Probably 10% of the market are even interested in playing some TG16 CD gamem or Sega Saturn game on the system. And 5% probably actually have some games to play. It really isnt finacially sound to waste money and dev time on such a silly project. Now downloading and playing roms from Nintendo's site is one thing, but after taking a loss, or breaking even, they're not going to get any money for letting you play some 10-15 year old game on their system. This is not only speculation, its retarded speculation.
Its like making a iPod that plays Minidisks.... 10% of the people may think thats cool, but the pther 90% will be like WTF??
Moxio
03-26-2006, 12:58 AM
HELL YES if there's Dreamcast support.
Mookyjooky
03-26-2006, 01:15 AM
I can prove your wrong beyond a shadow of a doubt I'm sending you a PM with a link to a fully working Sega Saturn emulator. There is a little program called SSF 0.07 (To Mods: If its a mistake to mention the name sorry in advance.) And I know it works cause I've used it to play my copy of Nights and Dead or Alive.
Who is full of shit now? Cause I know its not me.
Giri Giri was the first and best to play saturn emulatated games, so good, that instead of suing them, Sega bought the source code. SSF on the other hand, requires a VERY beefy graphics card as the coding is dogshit in comparison to Giri Giri. The Dreamcast is also out there, but the only emulator worth a shit is Chankcast, and it only plays a few games, namely Dead or Alive 2. Most other games look like hell. Either way, both SSF and Chankcast require more than a 1.5 AMD to get a framerate over 3 a sec... so yes, you're completely full of shit.
I know my emulators, as a couple friends of mine and I made the Original Dreamsnes emulator years back to play Snes games on the Dreamcast. The Dreamcast, even now... after multiple changes can barely play any Snes games more than 90% speed.
Emulators are fun, but first rule of emulation is that you need a machine 3X faster than the machine you're emulating. Also, the revolution would have to be the size of a Xbox 1 to fit all the GPUs of consoles past. There isnt, nor will there ever be one chip that can process all... as all systems were coded differently.
Also, Japan is making it illegal to sell games before the year 2000 starting in April... so there goes that market.
Lets not forget that Nintendo is here to make money, not fulfill your greatest fantasies... If Panzer Dragoon is destine to make it to the Revolution (or "GO") - it will be in download form, NOT Sega Saturn CD disc format.
Nintendo is not your friend.
Survivor Charlie
03-26-2006, 02:16 AM
Unless Nintendo wants to say "Here's a machine that plays everything, either via the original CD (in the case of CD formated games) or via download (such as cart-based games)."
And really, even if the Rev doesn't 'offically' play old game CDs, the fact that it can emulate them 100% accurately, which for the NES, SNES, N64, Gameboy, Sega Genesis, Turbo Graphix 16, and Turbo CD/Duo, what's to stop some hacker from just making it accept the original discs?
Hudson is in. Turbo Graphix and Turbo CD games will be on the Revolution. Confirmed by Nintendo, NEC, and Hudson. This is not speculation. They will be on the system, and Hudson is helping create the tools needed to play those games.
Sega is in. The Genesis, 32X and Sega CD will be on the Revolution. Confirmed by Sega and Nintendo. This is not speculation. They will be on the system, and Sega is helping create the tools needed to play those games.
So if they are working with the companies to build the tools needed to play these games with complete authenticity on the new machine, why on Earth is it so out of the question that if the system is disc based, you can just use the disc if you already have it? There's no money to be made on it? Are you kidding? It's a huge selling point for the hardware itself!! It's a gateway to get the machine in the hands of players who will then have the option of buying new games.
Gameboy415
03-26-2006, 02:32 AM
I'd be insanely happy if it could play Dreamcast games.
I just picked up the SegaGaga LE box set but alas my DC is back home in the States :(
GizmoGC
03-26-2006, 02:46 AM
Even now the only thing capable of emulating the SNES is the Xbox.
dayglo
03-26-2006, 02:56 AM
The Japanese news release simply says that the Hudson Soft games will be available for download through Nintendo's service, nothing about it being able to play the physical cd. I'm not quite sure where the jump from that release to the Revolution being able to play all non-sony disc formats came from...
terribledeli
03-26-2006, 03:00 AM
Also, Japan is making it illegal to sell games before the year 2000 starting in April... so there goes that market.
This statement right here through a wrench into everything proposed.
Nintendo isn't going to say "Oh hey Japan, you've supported us for years but we're going to spend resources on something to benefit someone other than you guys. But don't forget to continue to buy our products."
There's no real money to made on this. Nintendo may be the only true game company left, but they're not going to spend valuable resources to benefit a small niche group.
Its purely a pipe dream that will be forgotten in a few weeks. Remember when it was proposed that the Xbox could technically run Dreamcast games?
dayglo
03-26-2006, 03:05 AM
Also, Japan is making it illegal to sell games before the year 2000 starting in April... so there goes that market.
Actually, the law doesn't apply to games:
http://homepage3.nifty.com/tsato/terms/denan-e.html
rabidmonkeys
03-26-2006, 10:18 AM
Oh give me a break. The PS2 can tell the difference between DVD movies, PS2 *GAMES*, CD *music* and CD Playstation 1 *games* right out of the box, no accesories needed. And the PS2 is certainly not some kind of magical mythical box that has teny tiny Oopma Loompas that manually input what kind of disc has been inserted.
I mean, yeah... Rev may not be able to play old CDs, but regardless a lot of you people here are ignorant.
That's because a PS2 has a PS1 processor inside of it, its a hardware solution not a software one. Thank you for playing.
PsyKyX
03-26-2006, 02:38 PM
Well why can't a PS2 play all PS1 games correctly? Some games can't even be played on PS2.
Tebunker
03-26-2006, 03:10 PM
I could care less if the system accepts older media from older systems. I'd rather be able to pop in a 2gb sd flash card, download a couple of games and play them off the flash with no load times.
Nintendo could very well support a lot of these older systems, but the ONLY way it will happen is through the download service. That way Nintendo gets some money and so does the IP owner.
So while it's a nice dream, it's unrealistic. Expect to be able to download these games and be happy. If nothing else, take all of this energy and focus it into getting NEC/Hudson to bring these games to the States, since they mismanaged the whole PCengine/TG16 thing maybe we can get some of the better games over here.
evanft
03-26-2006, 03:14 PM
The Dreamcast - I don't know about that. It was a proprietary format disk, and thus may not be readable by a regular CD/DVD drive, but I never tried it and thus don't know.
Chankast. I win.
Well why can't a PS2 play all PS1 games correctly? Some games can't even be played on PS2.
The number of PS1 games that don;t work on the PS2 is tiny. Look it up.
once again people are acting like it is going to take a lot of effort to do this. The Xbox can run homebrew PSOne emulator pretty well. Same with Bleemcast on Dreamcast, and those are unsupported effort. With the right tools, it is not as hard as one would think.
Chankast. I win.
The number of PS1 games that don;t work on the PS2 is tiny. Look it up.
It's usually the compilation discs that use an emulator (like Final Fantasy Orgins I think). The Ps2 cant emulate an emulator.
Correct me if I'm wrong, since I'm not 100% sure, just what I recall.
ITDEFX
03-26-2006, 06:20 PM
the big n must have paid some serious royality fees to these companies if they got a machine that can play diffrent system games outside of the nintendo family. Yes it would be nice to see dreamcast/saturn support on the machine since sega surrendered to the big 3 5 years ago..so basically sega's anyone's bitch as long as they feed sonic.
Im pretty pissed that sega shot themselves in the foot with that stupid gdrom crap. There is nothing these companies can do to prevent piracy..its gonna happen period and no matter how many millions of dollars they put into R&D for it, it will only take a few hackers in asia a few weeks/months to crack it and vola.
cochesecochese
03-26-2006, 06:29 PM
Just doesn't smell like Nintendo.
Let's just pretend for a minute that there are no technical restrictions and that the Revolution is actually capable of playing all the old discs. As successful as the Nintendo hype machine has been up to this point, do you honestly think that the huge surprise is going to be an elaboration on the virtual console? Come on.
All that buildup, the Kodak theatre rented out, and a dominating presence on the show floor to say 'Hey guys, we can play lots of old games' isn't it.
Survivor Charlie
03-27-2006, 02:15 AM
I'm sure there are more tricks up their sleeve. I actually think the machine has a GBA port and DS port hidden on it, with the so called 'magic wand' controller acting as the stylus. The machine will likely come with more then one type of shell, have an XBox 360ish hardrive-or-no hardrive option where if you buy the HD set, it comes with some classic games preinstalled, have a microphone on the controller, and a bunch of other stuff. The DS will likely be able to act as a wireless controller too, I'm sure.
Kendal
03-27-2006, 02:44 AM
I'm sure there are more tricks up their sleeve. I actually think the machine has a GBA port and DS port hidden on it, with the so called 'magic wand' controller acting as the stylus. The machine will likely come with more then one type of shell, have an XBox 360ish hardrive-or-no hardrive option where if you buy the HD set, it comes with some classic games preinstalled, have a microphone on the controller, and a bunch of other stuff. The DS will likely be able to act as a wireless controller too, I'm sure.
Now you are just reaching for shit. They have said time and again the Rev will use SD memory cards. It won't have HDD because it uses flash memory. You aren't even trying anymore.
Im pretty pissed that sega shot themselves in the foot with that stupid gdrom crap. There is nothing these companies can do to prevent piracy..its gonna happen period and no matter how many millions of dollars they put into R&D for it, it will only take a few hackers in asia a few weeks/months to crack it and vola.
the gamecube disc is actually pretty successful aganist piracy. Even with a burner it is very difficult to burn a backup gamecube disc.
cochesecochese
03-27-2006, 04:22 AM
Now you are just reaching for shit. They have said time and again the Rev will use SD memory cards. It won't have HDD because it uses flash memory. You aren't even trying anymore.
Yeap. Having a second shell and a two-tier pricing scheme would completely go against everything Nintendo's been trying to do. Also, a rev-specific microphone is likely going to be a peripheral in order to cut out cost/size from the final product.
elwood731
03-27-2006, 04:30 AM
This rumor makes no sense, really. How many people actually have old TG-16 CD, Seag CD/Saturn/Dreamcast games lying around? It's not like, for the most part, you can walk into your local EB/GS and buy such a thing. You mostly have to hit up a pawn shop or locally owned game shop, and even then you'll find a small selection of titles, and fewer everyday.
I think the VC for these systems will be downloading only. That's still cool, and I wouldn't be surprised to see Sega getting very cozy with Nintendo to help exploit some of their back catalog.
Vegan
03-27-2006, 05:36 AM
This rumor makes no sense, really.
As far as I know, it's not EVEN a rumor. This guy pulled it out of thin air on his own.
PsyKyX
03-27-2006, 12:50 PM
The number of PS1 games that don;t work on the PS2 is tiny. Look it up.
I never gave a number. I said it can't play all. I don't need to look it up. I know it's a miniscule amount. I'm just saying ;)
Anyway, I was in reply to thisThat's because a PS2 has a PS1 processor inside of it, its a hardware solution not a software one. Thank you for playing.
I meant to show that it is not purely a hardware solution in the PS2 for bc of PS1 games. That is why not all games are fully compatible.
rabidmonkeys
03-27-2006, 12:53 PM
Now you are just reaching for shit. They have said time and again the Rev will use SD memory cards. It won't have HDD because it uses flash memory. You aren't even trying anymore.
Thank God, finally someone with some sense. I've been fighting with him since his first post and no one is coming to bat. The only reason these are "rumors" is because he pulled them out of his ass.
PsyKyX
03-27-2006, 01:03 PM
lol, that's how they start
Strell
03-27-2006, 02:05 PM
Clearly, the big secret is a sexable orifice. It was originally envisioned for myself, hence why it is a big surprise. DO YOU SEE WHAT I DID THERE?
Coincidentally, it is the same reason I am no longer allowed in the Target I bought my Gamecube from years ago.
Children and old grannies were tramautized, and how!
Heh, I wonder if this includes those Zelda CD-I games.
http://www.kotaku.com/gaming/nintendo/two-horrible-horrible-zelda-beginnings-162757.php
http://www.kotaku.com/gaming/zelda/two-horrible-horrible-zelda-endings-162670.php
OH GOODY, I'M SO HUNGRY I COULD EAT AN OCTOROCK!!!!
That video makes that game look so...... hmmmmm...... AWESOME!!!!
Survivor Charlie
03-27-2006, 03:25 PM
In my latest post above, I was simply suggesting that those other things COUDL happen, but I have nothing to back it up with. They were random guesses.
The main topic... the backwards compatibility with extinct systems... I'm not the only one speculating on that.
vherub
03-27-2006, 05:45 PM
This would be fantastic, and the industry would stand to gain immensenly from such a leap in backwards compatibiliy. Backlists are huge tapable resources, ask anyone inn music, movies, tv or books. However, if you can play old games, that pretty much opens the doors for piracy. Forget about software protection, region coding, anything of that source if all you have to do is throw in the disc and the machine reads it.
Such a system would be a holy grail in the industry, and while I doubt it's existence, I stand to gain nothing as a naysayer.
I ache for this to be available.
Scorch
04-30-2007, 11:35 PM
hahahahahaa Nintendo do something that awesome? hahah no they cant even nail the virtual console or online play down. Baby steps guys.
You fucking idiot, why did you bump this thread? It's over a year old. Someone lock this.
Jimbo Slice
04-30-2007, 11:37 PM
hahahahahaa Nintendo do something that awesome? hahah no they cant even nail the virtual console or online play down. Baby steps guys.
lol this thread is OLD
i was reading some posts and thought that the dude was weird for calling it the Revolution, and then I looked at the date's the posts were made.
pimpinc333
04-30-2007, 11:38 PM
Man I thought this shit was new.
paz9x
04-30-2007, 11:39 PM
You fucking idiot, why did you bump this thread? It's over a year old. Someone lock this.
whatta you expect. fuckin canadians =)
guyver2077
04-30-2007, 11:46 PM
waste of time
dallow
04-30-2007, 11:50 PM
Wow, I got super excited....
Like, I was nearly shaking.
The bastard.
foltzie
05-01-2007, 12:15 AM
Wow, I got super excited....
Like, I was nearly shaking.
The bastard.
HAHA Fooled You!.
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