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Retro video games are just so tubular, dude

USATODAY - Tech Top Stories

"Space Invaders" are among the games included on AtGames Legends Flashback Blast! In the box is a wireless controller and HDMI dongle to plug into a television. Today's video games may boast photorealistic graphics, surround sound and massively multiplayer matches, but many players still long for the days when games were, well, simpler. You know, when you didn't need to master 14 buttons just to beat a level or suffer from vertigo because of a dizzying virtual reality headset. If you've got a sentimental spot for bustling arcades of the early '80s – or sitting on a shag rug, sipping a glass of Tang, and playing Atari on the boob tube – then you'll be happy to know there are many ways to regain the glory of the "Golden Age of Gaming," in 2019.


PlayStation Classic review – Sony's nostalgia trip misses the magic

The Guardian

The original PlayStation represents a pivotal moment in the history of video games. It was there at the dawn of real-time 3D graphics processing, the moment we switched from the sprite-based visuals of the past to the texture-mapped polygons of the future. And, if those terms mean nothing to you and the sight of a polygonal Solid Snake or Cloud Strife doesn't give you warm fuzzies, it may be better to give the PlayStation Classic a wide berth. This tiny console, which fits on the palm of your hand and weighs less than a modern games controller, was perhaps inevitable from the moment Nintendo made a killing with its own Mini NES and SNES delights. The PlayStation Classic fits the same business model almost entirely.


Review: Sony's PlayStation Classic Is Too Frustrating to Love

TIME - Tech

Nostalgia is a powerful marketing tool, often used by companies to provoke consumer desire and extract more money from the pockets. A prime example: The rise of "classic" shrunken-down versions of decades-old video game consoles, loaded with favorite games from yesteryear. While Nintendo popularized the trend, Sony's now getting in on the action with its $99 PlayStation Classic, a miniature replica of the iconic PlayStation with two controllers and 20 games. But despite the appealing design and potential to relive some of your favorite moments in video game history, Sony's PlayStation Classic is a frustrating device. Barebones in terms of extras and marred by flaws, it may leave both hardcore PlayStation fans and casual gamers feeling as if it's little more than an attempt to capitalize on the nostalgia of older Millennial gamers who now have disposable income of their own to spend.


Sony lists the 20 games coming to PlayStation Classic retro video game console

USATODAY - Tech Top Stories

Check out how Sony's original 1994 PlayStation is being miniaturized and pre-loaded with classic games. You knew Sony couldn't make everyone happy when it came to choosing the 20 games that would come preloaded on Sony's upcoming retro console, the PlayStation Classic. Sony had already announced five games coming to the $99.99 console: "Final Fantasy VII," "Jumping Flash," "Ridge Racer Type 4," "Tekken 3" and "Wild Arms." The video game maker on Monday filled out that list with classic games such as "Metal Gear Solid," "Final Fantasy VII," "Grand Theft Auto" and "Twisted Metal." The plug-and-play system (out Dec. 3, available for pre-order), which is 45 percent smaller than the original PlayStation, comes with two controllers.


Sega Mega Drive returns – but this is no retro toy

The Guardian

Nature abhors a vacuum – and so does the video games industry. Over the last year, Nintendo and Sony have each announced new versions of their classic consoles: the Mini NES and SNES machines are outselling modern platforms, and the forthcoming PlayStation Classic is stirring up interest. So what of Sega, the creator of the Master System and the Mega Drive (AKA Genesis), the console that brought the arcade home in the late 1980s? When it comes to retro consoles, until now there have only been cheap third-party Mega Drive retro consoles, which often have popular games built-in but use software emulation to replicate the original hardware. This has meant that games often run with terrible input lag and tend to look horrible on contemporary LED displays, making for a disappointing nostalgic experience.


The PlayStation Classic is the latest in a wave of retro video game consoles

Popular Science

If you grew up with video games, then the titles from your childhood probably hold considerable sentimental value. I can't think about Cool Boarders without immediately flashing back to summers spent listening to bad '90s music and landing insane tricks in Cool Boarders. That nostalgia is powerful, and it has driven the relatively recent trend of retro consoles, which now includes Sony's PlayStation Classic. Scheduled for release later this year, Sony's miniature system will include 20 games and a pair of traditional PlayStation controllers--the original versions that predate the dual-shock joysticks. Sony hasn't released the full list of games yet, but we do know that it will include some certified heavyweights, including Tekken 3, Ridge Racer Type 4, and Final Fantasy VII, a game which I pumped literally hundreds of hours into when I was a teenager.


PlayStation Classic: 10 of the Sony console's greatest games, from Spyro to Tomb Raider II

The Independent - Tech

Sony has announced it is bringing back its original PlayStation games console – to the joy of 30-something gamers everywhere. The PlayStation Classic will be a miniature version of the company's first generation model, which represented the next evolutionary step forwards from the 16-bit Sega MegaDrive and Nintendo SNES when it first went on sale in Japan in December 1994. To celebrate, here's a look back at the games that defined that joyous machine, the best thing to happen to the 1990s outside of "Kiss from a Rose" and Gladiators on ITV. This racing simulator was admired for its sleek graphics and buffish attention to detail and became the best-selling game in PlayStation history, shifting 10.85m copies and setting up a series that is now deeply associated with Sony's home consoles. Precision was everything for players of this favourite.

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Sony launching retro video game console PlayStation Classic in December

USATODAY - Tech Top Stories

The PlayStation Classic will launch Dec. 3, 2018. Sony's next video game console is going retro. The electronics giant announced early Wednesday it will sell the PlayStation Classic, a miniature version of its first PlayStation console, on Dec. 3. Instead of requiring discs to play games, the PS Classic will come pre-loaded with 20 retro games, including "Final Fantasy VII" and "Tekken 3." The Classic looks exactly like the original PlayStation, which launched in 1994, only the Classic is about 45 percent smaller. It was a huge hit for Sony, becoming the first home video game console to ship 100 million units worldwide.


PlayStation Classic: Sony re-launches beloved console along with 20 'genre-defining' games

The Independent - Tech

The original PlayStation is coming back. Sony is re-making the beloved console and bundling it up with a whole host of "genre-defining" games, including Final Fantasy VII, Tekken, Ridge Racer Type 4. The PlayStation Classic will look almost identical to the original console, which came out nearly 25 years ago, and come with the same controllers and packaging. The I.F.O. is fuelled by eight electric engines, which is able to push the flying object to an estimated top speed of about 120mph. The giant human-like robot bears a striking resemblance to the military robots starring in the movie'Avatar' and is claimed as a world first by its creators from a South Korean robotic company Waseda University's saxophonist robot WAS-5, developed by professor Atsuo Takanishi and Kaptain Rock playing one string light saber guitar perform jam session A man looks at an exhibit entitled'Mimus' a giant industrial robot which has been reprogrammed to interact with humans during a photocall at the new ...