As someone who was probably 10 or 11 when the Playstation came out I was absolutely boggled.
internet funeral
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What is this place?
• !hmmm@lemmy.world with text and titles
• post obscure and surreal art with text
• nothing memetic, nothing boring
• unique textural art images
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Guidlines
• no video posts are allowed
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This is a curated magazine. Post anything and everything. It will either stay up or be lost into the void.
Gen alpha will never grow up with demo discs from pizza hut. I feel sorry for them. I spent so much time getting good at that crash bandicoot level though I was crap at that PaRappa the Rapper game.
Many forget (or don't realize) it wasn't the graphics alone, it was the smooth 3D motion.
Before the 3D console era (and the equivalent arcade machines) most "3D" motion was scaled and stacked sprites. The rest of the time we had 2D scrolling.
Two examples of the best of 16 bit 3D effects:
Which used 3x CPUs like the Genesis clocked at 12.5 Ghz
Compare to the first gen 3D console 3D effects:
This is a poor screenshot to show the capabilities of the PlayStation though. The first playstation game that boggled my mind was crash bandicoot with it's fully expressive world, but the game that really blew me away was Mario 64 shortly after with its true freedom and wide open world.
Mario 64 is still a fantastic game, it's just the camera that sucks.
Back in the day, just the idea of having an entire 3d world inside a computer was absolutely mind boggling. The first time I moved a cursor and the camera rotated, the entire game world shifting, I lost my mind. I remember thinking "how did they fit this world in there? How did they build this?"
It's what sparked my interest in programming.
