this post was submitted on 03 Apr 2026
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Except there WAS online play. Since like the 90s. RTS games especially had online tournaments. Also, LAN parties used to be epic.
Games DID receive updates when needed. Internet speeds were slow, so it was expected that when you bought a game you got the game after installation, and not a day one patch that barely fixes anything.
As for the other kinds of updates; games got expansion packs. As the name would suggest, they expanded the game. Sometimes quite drastically.
Saves still corrupt to this day in brand new AAA releases.
I mean, the kids playing a switch. Consoles didn't really get updates until the 360/ps3 era and even then it wasn't a guarantee a game would get updates.
That's why there is such a big deal about release versions from back then. If a game was big enough it could get a updated physical release with some slight tweaks.
I guess if I were to specifically keep it consoles, sure. But PC gaming had Internet and games with patches. But usually games just needed... Like... One patch to balance something or fix a problem.
The N64 was pretty experimental with some limited online features. And some time later, if I remember correctly, the PS2 had an ethernet socket.
The Dreamcast was probably the biggest exploration into the internet before modern consoles. Heck even the megadrive had a gamepass like service (Sega Channel) that would have a rotating line up of games, some even being exclusive to the service
You're thinking of a different time.
I don't think so. The kid is playing a Nintendo Switch and called the other guy "dad".
So "dad" must be around my age. So he was a kid during the 90s, and so would stand to reason he'd game on N64, PSX, Windows 98, and onward.
My kid plays switch and I grew up in the 80s. I think he's talking more dos/windows 3.1 times, Super Nintendo, maybe Sega genesis/mega drive times, where many games did not have saves. I remember playing sonic and when you ran out of lives, that was that. When I bought X-Wing, it came with a massive manual.
But whatever, it's a comic about nostalgia. People will always be nostalgic about their own childhood.
I dunno, man. That kid is looking pretty tiny. I don't know about you, but most people get a kid before they turn 50.
Also, the dad in the comic is clearly holding a PSX controller.