
BY THE GROWN GAMING TEAM: Regardless of whether you primarily play on a console, gaming PC or mobile, or whether you’re Team Xbox, Sony or Nintendo, we’re all gamers. We are all different, from our taste in games to the journey we have taken to become gamers.
The love for gaming had to start somewhere. These are our first game consoles – the pieces of hardware that sparked our interest in gaming and lead to a lifelong love for all things video games.

Phantom Knight provides his thoughts on the futility of Console Wars.
Humans are competitive by nature, in life there’s winner and losers.
Console wars don’t hurt the industry.
it will never die. It's not much of a war when Sony has won 3/4 of it's gens in historic fashion.
Nintendo atari sega were all once in the dedicated home console race, them 3 are the og's and none of them make home consoles anymore, Sony and microsoft killed them all and nintendo's case they ran off to their handheld market because they could not keep up with the big 2 in the dedicated home console business. Ill continue to support the big 2 as long as i can.

Gaming desktops are usually either big and heavy full-size beasts, or else miniaturized boxes that lack the power to impress. And whether you buy a complete system or an empty chassis to fill with components, they're often on the fugly side.

Deville Louw put together a list of 10 memorable and sometimes very difficult video game boss encounters. Do you remember these?
Most of the games listed span more than two decades. Why even add that in the title?
There's a lot more bosses that were memorable than just this list. Tough to narrow it down to just 10.
Are you okay? The most of them are from games that were released over 20 years ago.
That first boss fight in God of War was totally Legendary. I felt like it was a last boss fight.
Truly one of the best boss fights I ever played in a game.
Psycho Mantis fight also was Legendary.
Atari 2600
Colecovision
Mine was either the Atari or the Odyssey
The first to call my own was the NES.
The 2600 and Commodore were only available at Grandma's house before then.
A pong machine in 1975 but I dont think that counts as a console seeing as it was one game (with various modes). So my first console with interchangeable games is the Atari VCS in 1977.