NES Anybody with Famicom Disk System Experience?

TamagotchiTamaHero24's iconTamagotchiTamaHero24

The Little Fella in your CD-ROM Drive
Level 5
Joined
Feb 2, 2025
Messages
1,059
Reaction score
1,912
Points
3,477
Location
The Vectorgraphic Void and Dot Matrix Grid
I want to know, for those who have experience, was it positive? It’s very novel, but was it enjoyable? All I know about the FDS was that it was neat, but ended up having diminishing returns because chips kept being added to games that made them more and more impressive.
1746924831986.jpeg

(I made too many threads and I’ve had to wait an hour to post this thread lmaooooo)
 
The Famicom Disk System is an amazing experience and has a strong library all it's own, the only thing is to get used to having to swap disk sides and wait a bit for them to load.

If you like old Nintendo games you'll probably be able to find something you enjoy on FDS; I personally recommend Armana no Kiseki.
 
Played the FDS version of Castlevania II, only real difference was the music and having load times. I wouldn't say the music is better just "different". Never used or even seen an FDS in person. My flash cart can play the games on a stock NES if that counts. Even has auto disc flipping, though there's a button on the front to do it manually.
The enhanced sound in castlevania 3 is really nice.
CV3 was a cart game with an extra sound chip. Konami cheaped out on the overseas release and didn't include it. They actually did this quite a few times like with Contra's cut down graphics. They axed the extra memory chip.
 
Yep. Wouldn't be the first one, either.
This is both the benefit and consequence of diving deeper into something than most would think of doing.
 
The Famicom is cute! >.<

The NES had to look like a computer to deal with the videogame crash lmao. Not that I'm complaining.
 
It was a cool idea at the time, and there are some really solid titles for it. Tracking down the games is tougher than finding the hardware, and when you get into those blank ones you could have burned at a kiosk or whatever, I think buying used ones can be a mystery. But the concept isn't too different from using disks on contemporary computers of the day (C64, Apple II, etc). I forget and it's been years since I've owned an NES, but isn't that what the port on the bottom was originally for, but then the FDS never made it out of Japan?
I'd only seen these a handful of times until I frequented Bookoff a bit more, and Bookoff regularly carried Famicoms and the FDS, but separately, never saw them bundled together.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Connect with us

Featured Video

Gintama Rumble (VITA)

Latest Threads

D&D Tower Of Doom (Saturn) English patch is Out!

Read more

Fractal Heroes Appreciation Thread!

I can't believe people don't talk much about this game nowadays... Back on the days of the Xbox...
Read more

Libre games thread

The lucky guy of the day

Lucky guy buys defective PS5 at a bargain price - can repair the part in a few minutes and...
Read more

Anyone from here participating on RetroAchievements?

Would be cool to follow you guys!
Read more

Online statistics

Members online
189
Guests online
491
Total visitors
680

Forum statistics

Threads
7,783
Messages
194,159
Members
575,467
Latest member
srnonato

Support us

Back
Top