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Extremely impressive games

Started by January 26, 2013 09:21 AM
2 comments, last by Sik_the_hedgehog 11 years, 9 months ago

OK, this thread is to discuss about games that really break the limits of the systems they were made for. By this I don't mean that they just look impressive, but that outright look like there's absolutely no way they could be running on that thing no matter what (yet obviously somebody figured out how). Basically games that look like they actually belong to a later generation than the system on which they run.

First I'll start with Red Zone. The entire game is pretty much demoscene so it's not surprising =P I find the indoor areas more interesting than the outdoor ones, even though technically they aren't as impressive (a lot of it is just the video hardware doing its job). They don't feel as empty and honestly, they look like they could have come out of the early GTA games. Same perspective, even. Seriously:

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Then there's... this. Road Rash on the Master System and Game Gear (both are based off the same code). You can tell only because the sound gives it away (shame the FM add-on was pretty much dead by that point), otherwise it's essentially indistinguishable from its 16-bit counterparts. In fact, I compared its framerate against the Mega Drive, and this version is actually faster (5~6 frames per tick as opposed to 6~8), although of course it lacks the sprite scaling so that's probably how it gets away with it. And before somebody points out that the road could be done by just changing the scroll mid-line: you can't do this with the vertical scrolling on this system (only horizontal). Hills are software rendered. Only the curves could be done with scrolling.

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And finally for this post, Wacky Races for the Game Boy Color. That's one trollish video title, it says GBA. Then again, given how that road looks like and how colorful is the background, it isn't surprising, it could really pass for GBA if it wanted. That the steps between sprites is so smooth doesn't help either. Again, sound gives it away (not much that can be done about this in this case, sadly).

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What games would you mention? Remember, they can't be just impressive, they need to look outright impossible.

Don't pay much attention to "the hedgehog" in my nick, it's just because "Sik" was already taken =/ By the way, Sik is pronounced like seek, not like sick.

Recently, killzone2/3 and the last of us

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Any of the SuperFx SNES games, until (or even after) you find out that they had to include extra processing hardware inside the game cartridge itself!

Any of the SuperFx SNES games, until (or even after) you find out that they had to include extra processing hardware inside the game cartridge itself!

That's cheating! I may as well include Virtua Racing since the SVP was about as powerful as the SuperFX 2 despite running at the same speed as the SuperFX 1 (not surprising when you compare the instruction sets).

Which reminds me, were SFX1 games poorly optimized or something? Because Star Fox lags a lot. Star Cruiser on the Mega Drive looks quite comparable in terms of graphics, except not only it isn't using any extra chips, it outright predates the Super Famicom (was released earlier in that year, if I recall correctly).

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Honestly doesn't look like something from the 5th generation (unless you count Bubsy 3D) but also plays a lot better than most 3D games on that generation. And I think the code could be optimized even more, there's no way it's running at full speed when there are those huge dither patterns (they're 8×8, seriously!).

Don't pay much attention to "the hedgehog" in my nick, it's just because "Sik" was already taken =/ By the way, Sik is pronounced like seek, not like sick.

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