7 comments

  • JollySharp039 minutes ago
    &gt; I highly recommend not bothering at all with legitimate hardware. As I’ll dive deeper into in this guide, original hardware is expensive, hard to use with a modern TV, and prone to breaking. Retro game cartridges and discs are often more expensive than modern games. Retro consoles can often be very expensive too.<p>It really depends. My father found my old consoles in the loft and I decided to get them working.<p>- PlayStation 1,2 and Dreamcast are easy to get, easily to repair. Normally the biggest problem will be CD&#x2F;DVD-ROM drive that is bad. These consoles are extremely reliable other than the DVD&#x2F;CD drive. Repairing such as this are simple and can be done in literally minutes, with a screw driver.<p>- Games are relatively inexpensive for PS1, PS2 and Dreamcast. Yes Marvel vs Capcom 2 and Castlevania Symphony of the night will £500 for a copy, but the vast majority of games can be found in Good Condition for £5-20. Absolute mint condition games will be about £30-50. I buy a couple of games a month for each console and have a nice small collection of classic games (not anything too crazy, but decent).<p>- I was missing cables for the consoles (long since lost). I got official controllers, and cables for reasonable amount of money. Memory cards were cheap. I did have to take apart the old controllers and service them, but again nothing major.<p>- If you have a slightly older (late-2000s&#x2F;early-2010s) LCD TV, the upscaler will actually work properly and the games look pretty reasonable. You can get HDMI upscalers for a reasonable price for these consoles. Cheap upscalers can be bought online for PS1&#x2F;PS2 and Dreamcast and the results are &quot;OK&quot;.<p>Emulation is obviously easier, with a few caveats. You must find a BIOS for the PS1 and PS2. These can be easily found with some googling. Also DuckStation has licensing doesn&#x27;t allow it to be repackaged for your &lt;linux distro&gt;, so you have to use their app image or download &amp; compile yourself. Which is a bit annoying, as I don&#x27;t really know what to do with AppImages.
    • chocochunks16 minutes ago
      Cheap generic upscalers add significant latency and worse non-consistent latency. It might be OK for a turn based RPG like Persona 3, but it will drive you mad for games like DDR, Guitar Hero or heavily action based games.
      • JollySharp00 minutes ago
        As I said the results were &quot;ok&quot;. The biggest issue has been that it stretches the picture IMO. The latency is greatly exaggerated IME.
  • poisonborz29 minutes ago
    Not true, at least not in this all encompassing clickbait sense. $25 buys you a hackable R36S with 4 core cpu, 1gb ram, runs Debian off dual microsd with dual usb-c for any peripherials, swappable battery, emulation perf up to PSX. There are many more cheap, capable options.<p>I&#x27;d say &quot;retro console&quot; in the linux handheld sense is the best value hobby gadget to buy for the HN crowd.
  • MrGilbert49 minutes ago
    I went down this rabbit hole, and am now the proud owner of a PS2 (Slim), a PS2 (Fat), a PS3 (Fat), a PS4 Pro and a PS5. I also own a Nintendo Switch and a Gaming PC.<p>After installing a custom firmware on the PS3, I am now able to play my PS2 games, and also have the benefit of using HDMI without an expensive upscaler.<p>Turns out, the PS3 satisfied my needs to relive childhood memories, although I never had one as a kid growing up.<p>Also, I started reading books again. A pretty hassle-free childhood memory, to say the least.
  • voidUpdate1 hour ago
    &gt; &quot;For Wii it’s better to use a Wii U, because they support HDMI.&quot;<p>If you are going to buy a Wii U for wii games, make sure you buy one that actually has a gamepad, since they are useless without one (efforts are currently underway to make a working replacement, but currently you need a whole computer to pretend to be one)
    • chocochunks28 minutes ago
      Eh, while they do need a Wii U Game Pad, once you&#x27;re past setup you don&#x27;t really need it except for a handful of games. Maybe to do the occasional settings change. If you&#x27;re just using it as a Wii you can also press B on the Wii Remote while booting to boot straight into Wii Mode too.<p>I wouldn&#x27;t recommend it for non-technical people, but people here would probably be fine.
  • suddenlybananas1 hour ago
    I&#x27;m surprised the author finds emulation not worth covering, that&#x27;s obviously the best way to play old games in the vast majority of cases. I guess maybe they wanted to keep up the kayfabe that everyone is getting roms from the original media.
  • bakugo54 minutes ago
    &gt; For Nintendo games specifically, the way to play them is to buy a Nintendo Switch or Nintendo Switch 2 and subscribe to the Nintendo Switch Online service for $20<p>Unless you absolutely need to play these games away from home and a phone isn&#x27;t good enough, please just emulate on a computer instead of paying a subscription for some mediocre emulators that you can&#x27;t even own permanently.<p>Also, the article really should mention why cheap generic HDMI converters are bad instead of just saying they&#x27;re not recommended (the lower video quality is obvious, but what&#x27;s less obvious is that they usually have significant latency that may make certain types of games much less pleasant to play)
    • oceansky32 minutes ago
      Switch 2 is not emulable currently, and likely won&#x27;t be in a very good while.
      • sethammons27 minutes ago
        I think you misunderstood; they were talking about your switch running an emulator for legacy games via subscription vs running that for no subscription on your phone and&#x2F;or computer