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Viral tweet...has the retro gaming community debating the "most significant leap in gaming history"

Is GBA to PSP the real answer?

One question has gotten the retro gaming fandom up in a tizzy, and now the community is trying to decide what the biggest generational leap in gaming history really was.

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darthv72737d ago

8/16bit (2D era) to 32bit (3D era) is what I found to be the most significant. Everything after the 32bit was evolutionary more so than revolutionary.

Yi-Long736d ago

8 bit to 16 bit was huge, graphically.

16 bit to 32 bit was ‘different’. We were at the cusp of getting absolute gorgeous 2D games, BUT instead the industry instead switched over to 3D gaming, which was obviously a massive and important first step, but to me it was also ‘ugly’, and it felt like we were denied some massive steps in gorgeous 2D pixel-based gaming experiences, and instead we saw both an absolute revolution in gaming (3D characters, worlds, movement, etc) yet also just (mostly) disgusting graphics.

Obviously I realize those first 3D steps were always going to be ‘ugly’ before they’d progress into the gorgeous stuff we see on our screens today, so rationally I was always perfectly fine with that transition and era, cause I understood it would keep evolving and I knew where it was heading.

Emotionally though, I would have loved to have seen 2D gaming evolve a bit more back then, yet sadly so many devs just switched over completely.

Popsicle736d ago (Edited 736d ago )

Though not affordable for most I felt the Neo Geo was really strong for 2D gaming during gen 4. Graphically it blew the SNES and Genesis away. As for gen 5 and even though both failed, the Saturn and 3DO also had some decent 2D releases.

Agreed the transition to 3D was an ugly one, but as you said, it was always going to be because gen 5 was the first to really do it and there was a considerable learning curve. Nevertheless, gen 5 was the catalyst for what gaming was going to become.

Cacabunga735d ago

16 to 32 is the biggest leap ever.. 3D was a game changer in every way.. Virtua Fighter 1, Tobal Tekken Toshinden Ura i still remember that emotional shock to this day

Yi-Long735d ago

@Popsicle; Yeah, I remember reading the NeoGeo reviews and previews back then in magazines, and it was arcade-quality, but obviously far too expensive for most of us. And once the 32-bit era came around we saw 2D fighters with similar graphical quality, or even better, than what NeoGeo had been serving, but this time at an affordable price, for PS1 and Saturn.

NeoGeo also seemed to lack ‘an identity’, for me at least. Sega of course had Sonic and a few series like Streets of Rage, Shinobi, Ecco, etc, and Nintendo had some big obvious titles like Mario, Donkey Kong, and also 3rd party like Street Fighter 2 and Chrono Trigger, but I never felt I was truly missing out on anything major when I looked at the NeoGeo line-up.

DigitallyAfflicted736d ago

I agree, jumping from Sega Megadrive to PSX was unbelievable, I still remember playing Tekken, Resident Evil, Battle Arena Toshinden, PSX blew my socks off!

RiseNShine736d ago

I agree with this, 2d to 3d was a change of paradigm, jumping from Super Mario World to Mario 64 was a quantum leap, a complete retool of how gaming works and was understood.

I think that only VR has done something similar, creating a new paradigm of how a game is played and understood, most of the other consoles and games are evolutionary improvements, some even revolutionary, but not paradigm-changing ones that completely redesigned how games are played.

BlackDoomAx735d ago

From 1st go 2nd generation, particularly the atari 2600. Plugging a console on a tv and playing with a joystick/controller was revolutionary and transformed the console videogaming industry forever.

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isarai737d ago

It's a toss up for me personally from the 2D>3D or SD>HD leap. From an objective pov going 3D for sure, it changed quite literally EVERYTHING, but as someone who is obsessed with game development technology, the HD era came with so much nerdy tech that really got and still gets me hyped when something new comes along

EvertonFC736d ago (Edited 736d ago )

From 1998-2003 I worked and lived in France and didn't play any games for 5 years, so when I came back from France and bought my 1st home and HDTV/PS3 popped resistance fall of man and motorstorm into the PS3 my mind was blown 😊

isarai736d ago

I had a similar experience, within 1hr I went from playing Spider-Man 2 on PS2 on a cheap CRT to playing Uncharted Drake's Fortune on a brand new HD LCD. had been saving up, then my tax return direct deposited so I booked it to Walmart and grabbed everything at once. Was such a a special time as a gamer.

Name Last Name736d ago

PS3 Motorstorm was a huge wow moment for me. Truly felt like we were in a new gen. I never felt that again in PS4 or PS5 even though everything looks better.

P_Bomb737d ago

For me it was the HD era and all the bells ‘n’ whistles that came along with it.

1Victor736d ago

Technology and graphics wise the gameboy to psp is the biggest leap then 32 bits(Super Nintendo) to 64 bits(PlayStation)is a close second, 480p to 720p to 1080p to 2/4K was nice but it was just a tv catching up little by little with pc monitors.

Profchaos736d ago

SNES was actually 16 bit and PS was a 32 bit system.
But bits were really a marketing thing like terraflops now good on paper nice to hear your system has more but not all that meaningful

1Victor736d ago

Yes you are correct I forgot that the 32- 64 bit jump was on the PS2,N64 and Dreamcast era. Thanks for the reminder

Popsicle736d ago (Edited 736d ago )

In my opinion it is the jump from gen 4 to gen 5. Yes gen 5 lacked polish because 3D gaming was new and many kinks had to be worked out during said gen. Nevertheless, gen 5 changed how games functioned in a way no console generation has.

LucasRuinedChildhood736d ago (Edited 736d ago )

PS1 games tend to pale in comparison to PS2 games though. It might be the single biggest leap in game quality which in itself is transformative. I think there's a good argument for that jump too.

And SD->HD was an incredible time, not just for graphics but for gameplay possibilities and physics due to a much stronger CPU. Even mediocre games felt very impressive and "THIS LOOKS LIKE REAL LIFE!" was a common sentiment. haha

So I think all 3 are valid answers and it's very debatable.

Popsicle736d ago (Edited 736d ago )

I certainly don’t disagree with you. Gen 5 to gen 6 was a big leap. It’s just that if I am forced into picking only one, it is gen 4 to 5 for me. Mostly because that is the generation where the bones were formed for the modern game.

Gen 5 was super clunky and often ugly by today’s standards, but I didn’t know any better at the time. Doesn’t negate your opinion though.

As I said, 5 to 6 was a significant leap and was the time games started to feel more immersive and realistic. It became much easier to suspend disbelief during gen 6.

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