Hello all, thought I'd TRY and start a discussion so here we go...
Interested to know what reasons people have for playing retro games, is it nostalgia, money, hardware limitations or just personal preferences?
Personally I play both although lately I've started to lean towards the classics more even though I have a pretty decent PC. Currently playing through Resident Evil Code Veronica (Via Flycast) as I weren't able to play it properly when it was new due to several reasons.
I don’t really need a reason other than curiosity and a love of the hobby. I’ve been playing games older than me since I was young, having gotten a taste of the sixth generation during the tail end of the seventh, and wanting to know more. Series like Pokémon had large online fandoms in the early 2010’s who spoke candidly about the first, second, and third generations, which were all on older hardware. When I became a Sonic fan, it was through the classic games via the DS’ Classic Collection. While that collection is anything but perfect, it still introduced me to great games that hadn’t aged a day as far as I was concerned. In fact, their age made them more mysterious and mythical, as by that point they had already established much of their legacy, with an entire generation that had grown up on them and were eager to share their memories. I pined after retro games for years, getting NES games like Mega Man 3, Super Mario Bros., and The Legend of Zelda on my 3DS’ Virtual Console. At the Christmas of 2013, my family pulled a rabbit out of a hat and blessed me with Sonic Adventure 2 Battle and Sonic Heroes, alongside GameCube memory cards. We had the controller for a while (that’s a story for another day), and while I loved playing these games on the Wii, I couldn’t help but want the hardware to match. When I saw a GameCube at a garage sale in 2014, I knew it had to happen. I plugged a GameCube through S-video into a CRT that we had bought for us kids at Goodwill for less than ten dollars, and for years that would be the center of my gaming life. We had newer consoles, yes, but I was just more interested in what had legacy already.
I’ve matured a lot since then, and still have a lot of maturing left to go (my list of SEGA dreams speaks volumes of that second point). I now am more excited than ever for current games, shockingly enough, as I finally have my own financial income and can pick and choose what I play. That said, I still play retro games more, booting up my Saturn and PS1 almost daily. I still have my good ol’ GameCube with me after all these years, and it’s since been joined by 12 other machines, all with their own games and stories that I have formed with them over my short but meaningful lifetime. It’s more than the games: it’s the memories. I will never forget coaching my friend to beat Punch Out!! Wii for hours on end. I will never forget the multi-hour marathon to beat the gorgeous Astal. I will never forget the excitement of playing Vib-Ribbon for the first time on real hardware, learning the chart for one of my own favorite songs. I will never forget stumbling upon Panorama Cotton via GenPlus GX on my Wii and absolutely being blown away by it, nor the amazement of discovering Donkey Kong Jungle Beat on the same console. I will never forget, just yesterday, the close battles I had in Fatal Fury 2 on the Genesis. All these memories I listed come from the last three months alone. This doesn’t even COUNT the decade plus that I’ve been collecting and playing.
Good games are good games. Good consoles are good consoles. Good emulators are good emulators. The memories we make with all the above are what give this hobby its soul.