Image from Giant Bomb |
Whatever the reasons are, the announcement got me thinking about some of my favorite hardware revisions from past years, three of which I'll share here.
The Original Xbox Controller or "Duke"
Sleek, understated, ergonomic: none of these words have ever been used to describe this monster. Microsoft was looking to make a big impact on the console market with the Xbox, and their original controller was a physical manifestation of this goal.
Image from Wikipedia |
The Xbox Controller S
Image from Wikipedia |
The Original NES
Part VCR, part toaster, all 80s: the original NES occupies a place in my heart as the box that started it all. To this day, its two-toned color and harsh angles have a retro-futuristic appeal to me. It's like something that would have seemed at home within an alternate reality future in a science fiction story from the 1950s. Of course, the design has some major drawbacks: not only were there plenty of moving parts to break (both the cartridge tray and hinged cover underwent a lot of stress in my house) the flat surface had the unintended consequence of acting as an alluring, yet very expensive and highly delicate, drink table.
Image from Wikipedia |
The NES-101 Model
Image from Wikipedia |
Thankfully, the NES controller also received a redesign. I'm not sure why the North American NES controllers had sharp corners, but I do know that it was hard to convince your parents that you hadn't been playing video games all day when the evidence was imprinted on your palms.
The Game Boy Advance
I love the Gameboy Advance as a platform, but I was never a fan of the original hardware. There's nothing offensive about it; it's just kind of uninspired. Not quite a rectangle, yet not quite an oval, it makes a relatively big footprint and doesn't offer much in the way of protecting its screen from the bumps and drops inherent in mobile gaming. Also: what is with Nintendo's infatuation with purple?
Image from Wikipedia |
The Game Boy Advance SP
Image from Wikipedia |
Of course, the SP's major drawback is the lack of a standard 3.5 mm audio jack. Whether this was a technical limitation or a cheap cash grab on Nintendo's part is unclear to me. Nintendo would never cut corners and then turn around to sell a kludgey, overpriced add on...right? I mean, right? In any case, adapter cables are easy to come by these days, making up for the one weakness in an otherwise outstanding package.
So there you have it: three of my favorite hardware revisions. I suppose it's the never-ending paradox of the hardware business: by the time a piece of hardware reaches its best incarnation, it's time to move on to the new thing. As we approach the end of another cycle, allow me to open up the floor and invite you to stroll down memory lane: What were your favorite video game hardware revisions?
Ah, hardware revisions...
ReplyDeleteOddly, I think the two I love the most are the PSPgo (which despite a huge amount of issues, the biggest became more and more irrelevant over time, lack of UMD) and the GBA Micro... Micro is easy, it's a GBA I can wear as a slightly large pendant type thing I can wear when feeling particularly geeky...
The PSPgo is one I've never quite been able to justify though, but it just feels so right for the main genre PSP had much of merit in, JRPGs, although it's terrible for monster hunter clones (the other genre it does)...
Also, there is the Megadrive (Gensis) 2. I'm not sure if the later revision of the megadrive made it to your shores, but it just was so sleek and slim and had such lovely red buttons. At the time I loved it anyway... Now, I look back with fond nostalgia for the headphone jack in the original console complete with volume slider...
Ah, how nostalgic.
I totally agree about the PSPgo: a pretty cool product released at a bizarre time into a crowded market. That Megadrive revision also sounds pretty cool; I'm going to have to go check out some pictures.
ReplyDeleteYeah, this Genesis revision is the one that still boggles my mind:
ReplyDeleteOriginal Genesis and Sega CD combo: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sega-CD-Model1-Set.jpg
CDX: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sega_Multi_Mega.jpg
My friends called that original Xbox controller "The Cadillac." I actually preferred it to the S, but the 360 one is much nicer.
Damn, Genesis-era stuff sure has a distinctive look. Kind of like really awesome VHS casette rewinders.
ReplyDeleteI love the multi mega. Wanted one so badly.
ReplyDelete