The other day I was rummaging through a cardboard box that's been following me through three house moves, and there it was—my original Earthworm Jim manual for the Mega Drive. Crisp pages, still smelling faintly of that new-manual scent mixed with thirty years of storage. You know that smell. It's like opening a time capsule, except instead of finding historical artifacts, you're rediscovering why we used to read these things cover to cover on the…
The other day I was digging through a box of old gaming magazines—you know the drill, sticky pages from ancient orange juice spills and that particular musty smell of paper that lived through the Clinton administration—when I found a torn-out preview of Virtua Fighter on the 32X. The screenshot looked incredible for 1994. Like, genuinely jaw-dropping in a way that made me remember exactly what it felt like to see polygons moving smoothly on a…
Rummaging through my gaming collection last week, I stumbled across something that made me pause mid-dig through the plastic cases: the Sega Genesis Collection for PS3. Still wrapped in that slightly yellowed cellophane that screams "bought it, meant to play it, life happened." You know how it is. The thing sat there looking at me like an old mate I'd promised to ring but never did.Here's the weird bit—I'd completely forgotten buying this compilation. Must've…
I was digging through my game collection last night, trying to find something to show my nephew who's visiting for the week, when I spotted that familiar yellow cartridge. Donkey Kong 64. Just holding it brought back this wave of Saturday mornings and the particular excitement of unwrapping what was essentially Rare's love letter to everything they'd learned about making platformers.You know what's funny? Everyone remembers the Nintendo 64 as this revolutionary machine—and it was—but…
The plastic clamshell clicked open with that satisfying snap I'd forgotten about until I heard it again last weekend. Inside sat my battered copy of Streets of Rage 2, label slightly peeling, contacts a bit tarnished but still game for another round. My eight-year-old was watching me slot it into the Mega Drive with the sort of reverence usually reserved for archaeological discoveries. "Does it actually work without downloading?" she asked, and I realized we'd…
You know what still gets me? The way that little paper Mario would flutter when he jumped. There was something so perfectly Nintendo about taking their most famous character and flattening him like he'd been run over by a steamroller, then somehow making that limitation feel like pure magic.I remember the exact moment I first saw Paper Mario running in that Mushroom Kingdom intro. My mate Dave had picked up a copy from Electronics Boutique—remember…
The thing about speed is that you don't really understand it until it's taken away from you. I learned this the hard way when my mate Dave brought his SNES round for a sleepover, and we spent half the night arguing about whether Mario moved too slowly compared to Sonic. Dave was wrong, obviously, but watching Mario's careful, considered jumps after months of Sonic's breakneck sprinting felt like watching paint dry in slow motion.See, I'd…
The other night, I was digging through a box of old gaming magazines when my hand brushed against something unmistakable—that three-pronged controller that still looks like alien technology twenty-eight years later. Just holding it brought back everything. The weight, the slightly rubbery grip, that analog stick that clicked when you pressed it down. But mostly, it brought back memories of weekend warfare in my mate Dave's front room, where four of us would huddle around…
The controller felt wrong in my hands at first—that weird three-pronged alien design that made you hold it like you were operating some kind of spacecraft console. But once Perfect Dark loaded up and that haunting synth melody kicked in, everything clicked. This wasn't just another shooter. This was GoldenEye's older, smarter sibling who'd spent a gap year traveling and came back with stories that would blow your mind.I remember the exact moment I knew…
My mate Tony called me an idiot last Tuesday. Not for anything particularly stupid—well, more stupid than usual—but because I'd just spent twenty-five quid on a pristine copy of Mortal Kombat II for the Mega Drive. "You know you can download it for free, right?" Yeah, Tony. I know. But you can't download the weight of that chunky cartridge, can you? You can't download the satisfying click when it slots into the console, or the…