No argument
Most of us didn't realize it at the time, but the internal power struggles / infighting at Sega were
FOR REAL. I'm written about this in another post, but I used to be so sympathetic towards Sega regarding their financial misfortunes with the Saturn and Dreamcast. But as more and more stories of their behind the scenes antics during that timeframe have come to light, I've changed my tune. They absolutely got what they deserved during that era, and essentially rotted from the inside out.
The shame of it all was that the Dreamcast was a damn good piece of hardware. Much easier to program for and port games to than its predecessor. And having similar (identical?) hardware to their then-current arcade boards made arcade ports a near-perfect thing of beauty! As someone who lived in the arcades in the late 90s, having a Dreamcast at home was basically like owning an arcade machine. A joystick was a must, though
I appreciate your response!
I do prefer the Dreamcast to the PS2, and think it is just a step behind the PS1 in terms of the software library and overall quality of games. The PS1 has really grown on me over the years. I didn't think too much of it at the time (as I owned a Nintendo 64 and Saturn back then) but I am really impressed by how its library expanded and improved during its lifespan. It started off being full of good ports (Doom, Street Fighter Alpha, Road Rash) and excellent weekend rentals (Alien Trilogy, Die Hard Trilogy, Krazy Ivan) but really hit its stride after a few years. And some of the later titles (Ride Racer Type 4, Fear Effect Retro Helix) are almost as impressive today as the day the were released.
As for the PS2, I spent over a solid year from September 1999 to October 2000 getting kicked in the figurative nuts by friends, classmates, and co-workers for buying a Dreamcast. One friend called me a f****t - to my face - when I showed him Space Channel 5 and Jet Grind Radio. And the incident with the FuncoLand employee. Et cetera. Everyone talked endlessly about the PS2 being the be-all and end-all
when they hadn't even played the damn thing yet.
And what did we get at the PS2 launch? Sure, Tekken Tag was fun, but it was no Soul Calibur. SSX was pretty cool. Madden and NHL were not as as good as their 2K counterparts. And there wasn't any online play, nor were there any games I thought were as impressive as something like Phantasy Star Online or Skies of Arcadia. But you better believe all my friends with a PS2 would never shut up about how "awesome" it was.
It did get better with time, of course. Twisted Metal Black was incredible! But by the time Silent Hill 2, Devil May Cry, and GTA III hit the scene, I had pretty much checked out of videogames, in general. I just didn't care. Having a few years of people treating you like you're
stoopid for buying a particular console will do that to a guy
For everyone that has fond memories of the PS2, you can have it. But in my own experience, the hype and buildup to its launch really seemed to bring out the worst in people. I do not look back on those days fondly...