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Guest Column: Why Are We So Nostalgic About Games?

Guest contributor Mike Drucker ponders why games of old still resonate with him today.

I'd rather see this when I die than the faces of my family.
I'd rather see this when I die than the faces of my family.

Here's something I want when I die: A Super Nintendo controller.

Just put that controller in my hands. That small, smooth, purple and grey wonder.

I know, I know. Real fans like the controllers with a lot of colors because that's what other regions got and other regions are better because they're not us. But that's not what I grew up with, so it's not what I want when I die. I want the purple and grey one.

Now you're playing with portable power without it being portable!
Now you're playing with portable power without it being portable!

This is a thing I've actually thought about: Wanting an object from my childhood in my hands when I die. I don't even really care if it's playable. It probably won't be when I die in the great, distant future of 2018. I'm also pretty certain no reasonable family member or, let's be honest with my relationship record, orderly at a care facility would actually give me that controller.

But I want it. I want in those last moments to remember the time I threw a fireball in Street Fighter II: The World Warriors at my neighbor Stephen and he started crying because he didn't know you could do that. I want to think about putting Mario Land into a Super Game Boy and having an entirely new world of games I already owned open up to me.

If you don't think about me all the time, I die!
If you don't think about me all the time, I die!

Nostalgia and games go together like peanut butter and similes. Nintendo's entire marketing strategy surrounds it. Sega's entire marketing strategy surrounds making fun of it. Capcom's entire marketing strategy surrounds being confused by it. But it's right there--we always miss the games that we own, as if they'll go away if we don't keep remembering them with retrospectives and “Best of All Time” lists.

True, a good portion of our culture is built on nostalgia. I drink from a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles mug and I wear Star Wars hoodies and fantasize about Gadget from Rescue Rangers.

I mean...
I mean...

But games don't just hold onto the past or reboot it for branding – they try to recreate it, time and time again. Some do it well. Shovel Knight is one of my favorite games of the last five years because it's fun and interesting and, yeah, taps into a part of my brain that didn't know what finding an apartment after a breakup is like.

Others do it poorly. Steam is chock full of pixel-art games that recreate the feel of the NES, SNES, Genesis, or whatever. They're cheap and they look like a time we don't have anymore, so we buy them and then play them for 10 minutes and say, “Oh, right. The past,” and then let them rot with Humble Bundle purchases and Steam sale impulse buys.

At a point, buying old (and old-looking) games becomes a ritual. We're supposed to buy every version of Super Mario Bros. because it's a classic. We're supposed to hope this next Sonic game is better than the last, if just because we remember a time when Sonic was good. We're supposed to play old Final Fantasy music in the car in Final Fantasy XV because old is better than new.

This will keep me from thinking about Gadget.
This will keep me from thinking about Gadget.

A lot of this is marketing. But it's marketing that works on us, because games were often an all-encompassing passion that drowned out the bad in life. And as we got older, and the bad became the important--and therefore impossible to tune out--we reached for the old games more and more to remember that blissful unawareness.

On the other hand, the classic games of our youth are by and large better than those classic cartoons we think are good but aren't good because they're bad. Have you watched the old Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles lately? While sober? It's terrible. The beats of all the episodes are the same, there are never really any stakes, and the characters are a lot less fun than you remember.

Gadget is still great, though.
Gadget is still great, though.

Meanwhile, classic games are still pretty good. Super Mario Bros. is great. Final Fantasy IV is great. Hell, Space Invaders and Pac-Man are still great and they came out in a video game age equivalent to silent films of trains pulling into stations. So we aren't still playing them just because we remember them.

And it goes without saying (as I say it) that good games are still being made today. 2017 alone has been full of classics and we aren't even close to E3. Resident Evil 7. Yakuza 0. Nioh. Gravity Rush 2. All games that are good. And all games that I don't need to block out a memory of my parents fighting to enjoy.

Wouldn't you rather have dinner with Gadget, a nice mouse with an engineering degree?
Wouldn't you rather have dinner with Gadget, a nice mouse with an engineering degree?

But maybe that's what makes us so nostalgic for games. Not just because they're good but because they were good when we needed them. And because they're good, we can actively go back to them. There's less shame in enjoying something good, and more of a reason to go back again and again and again.

I would say that this is me justifying my own consumerism, but that ain't too hard to do. I still buy merchandise from crappy cartoons and wear shirts that ironically reference cereals I ironically eat because I don't know how to have emotions without a cover of snark.

That's the problem with nostalgia as an argument. Dismissing a game as childhood wonder also dismisses why it was so fun as a kid. But just saying the games are good fails to consider the popularity of new games that use old art styles for effect (and marketing). Not to mention failing to consider why games that intelligently adapt those gameplay mechanics can make something entirely new.

My marriage only lasted one year.
My marriage only lasted one year.

When I first started plotting out this essay, I really wanted to find a much better conclusion than “I don't know.” Or some witty wrap-around about Gadget or being dead, my two favorite things to think about on the bus to work. I don't know why we're nostalgic for games, or why I'm both disquieted by marketing nostalgia and drawn to it like a bug to a different simile.

Maybe that's it.

Old games aren't classics just because we remember them. And they're not just classics because they're good. They're classics because they came at a time when we needed something that was good. And they've stuck with us because they continue to be good, even as we age out of the time when they were needed the most.

And because of Gadget.

--

Mike Drucker is a Giant Bomb contributor and co-head writer for “Bill Nye Saves the World,” coming to Netflix in 2017. He's also written for The Tonight Show, Nintendo, The Onion, and SNL. He also co-hosts the podcasts, “How To Be a Person” and “The Room Where It's Happening.” You can follow him on Twitter @mikedrucker and watch him on Twitch under the surprising name “MikeDrucker.”

Mike Drucker on Google+

68 Comments

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skinnyluigi

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well that gadget was a babe

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thebeardedfellow

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Thank you for the article:)

My first reaction when i started reading it was "Rosebud...."

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hassun

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Now this is and interesting read, not feeling much or any nostalgia for anything myself.

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Demonsoul

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Dan_CiTi

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Honestly I do love the purple buttons, but man do I wish the SNES console had the same design as the SFC. Such a cool little box, Japan's controllers to me are just cool in a different way but the actual consoles were streets ahead of the US versions.

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Jordyagain

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I am glad we in Europe got the same colorful model as the Japanese SFC. I was less glad when I learned that most of the Snes Euro releases got gimped due to the PAL conversion.

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BlazeHedgehog

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Not to turn in to a Tumblr-Post-Turned-T-Shirt-Slogan here, but I also think games are so nostalgic because they are other lives, other selves that we get to inhabit in a way that books or movies can't really compare to. Maybe it's almost something like the opposite of PTSD, where instead of having flashbacks to a deeply-rooted horror, we have flashbacks to moments where we felt clever or heroic. War vets both suffer the negative effects of PTSD, but others spend their lives trying to recapture a former glory they once felt. Games give us a taste of that feeling from a safe, comfortable place. We can always recapture that former glory, because all you really have to do is replay the game.

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cerberus3dog

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Edited By cerberus3dog

I don't know how to have emotions without a cover of snark.

^ I appreciate this line. I think nostalgia has to do with an adult's view on media these days. I was more of a blank slate when I was a kid, less critical of everything around me.

There is a clear delineation between games I look back on nostalgically and everything else. That line is an age marker for me somewhere between high school and college. I always thought feeling nostalgia had something to do with my level of ignorance of the world and my lack of knowledge about the games industry at the time I played those games. I didn't analyze whether a game's message connected with me, whether my enjoyment was determined by a game's mechanics staying fresh and new, or whether I saw an ad as a marketing strategy targeted at a specific demographic. I was simply moved by a story, got bored playing a game, or saw an ad and thought it was cool and something I'd like to have. My nostalgia is directly correlated to my "purity" as a kid. I didn't over analyze, I didn't critique, I simply played and took in what the game was showing me.

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Slag

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I think every generation has nostalgia for stuff that was new,unique and special to them growing up. Something they got that their parents didn't. Something that evoked a specific era that marked their formative years.

For many GenX/Millenials that's video games.

I honestly don't think the next generation is nearly as fond of video games as the generation before them, probably precisely because games were a thing that belonged to their parents. And that's no criticism either, they just grew up in a different time and value different things. I know I didn't value rock n' roll or cars the way my folks did.

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Thor_Molecules

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Edited By Thor_Molecules

Loved the piece, Mike! Get your busy ass on the Bombcast someday!

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bigsocrates

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Edited By bigsocrates

I don't relate to this at all. I sometimes think that I am missing some kind of nostalgia gene or was just never a "real kid" because while I am around Mike's age and watched the same stuff he watched (and played the same games) I have no real nostalgia for any of it. I still like stuff from that era, but only if it is good in an objective way. That goes for stuff I didn't play or experience at the time too. I never really played Punchout!! as a kid but when I got it on virtual console I played a lot of it and loved it. Same with City Connection when they put it out on PS4.

The only exception for me is music. I still like the music of my youth more than current stuff, and game music from that time period resonates with me more than current stuff. I can agree with you that Abzu has an amazing score but it doesn't have the raw emotional connection I get from Gradius.

Games are better now than they have ever been and while I like retro stuff I don't want to die with a SNES controller I want to die in VR surrounded by the latest greatest coolest thing.

And those purple buttons were ugly then and ugly now. And the PS1/N64 era mostly sucked.

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paulunga

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Nostalgia doesn't work on me. I hate that companies like Square-Enix keep regurgitating the games I loved like some sort of corporate cow. I have no interest in listening to the old songs on my radio, I'd much rather have new compositions.

Gadget, though. That's one sexy mouse.

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zombievac

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It's funny, while I do get the nostalgia thing, I love nostalgia... but from the perspective of video games it's always a disappointment... man I was so stoked when emulators became almost perfect and you could download the whole 8 and 16 bit eras in one pack anywhere on the web. I thought it would be heaven... then I tried a few for a few mins each, and never went back, they were crap compared to today's best games. I don't want to ruin my video game memories, and I fully realize I enjoyed a lot of the things I did as a kid because I didn't know anything better, and/or nothing better existed yet. It's the same with older TV and Movies - your favorite shows as a kid are almost guaranteed to suck - if you can't see that through your nostalgia, just show them to a kid these days who has YouTube or watches modern kids shows - they'll be bored to tears.

Now we live in a world where the terrible movies are actually passable compared to anything that came out in the 70's or earlier, except a few gems of course like Godfather and such. TV comedies and dramas have never been anywhere close to as good as they are now (on average), freed of their ad-ridden, network-purified shitroots. Same with the best games - they're 100x what a game of the same price was in the nintendo era. That's just a fact. SMB was innovative and great at the time, it would FAIL miserably if it were released today and Mario had never existed as a brand until now.

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jacksonroye

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Edited By jacksonroye

Lol the red text about "a time when Sonic was good" links to an article about the Mandela effect.

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JuxJuxJux

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I haven't seen paragraph responses (good, positive responses) on this site in some time. That's awesome. I don't have much to add, but thanks for your work, Mr. Drucker. Please keep writing these.

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WeyounNumber6

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Will read this sweet looking article right after I stop lamenting Drew.

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citizencoffeecake

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Been playing a lot of SNES, NES, Genesis lately. Recently played through the SNES game Soul Blazer, a game I hadn't heard of until about a month ago and it was FANTASTIC. I'm wondering if I hadn't grown up with the SNES, would I still think it was so great? Is my fondness and the warm memories of the console itself clouding my judgment? I doubt it, Soul Blazer is amazing. I'll be interested to play the games I loved as a kid with my own children and see if they enjoy them or just call me lame and go back to Minecraft.

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UncleBenny

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Edited By UncleBenny

Mike Drucker let's have a death pact where we will make sure that there'll be a SNES controller to hand to each other on death bed while we stare at our posters of Gadget...

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cavemancolton

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Edited By cavemancolton

First and foremost, this is beautifully written and really resonates with the way I think of my childhood games. But I do think it's important to dismiss the idea that the only reason to use pixelart in a modern game is to profit from nostalgia. I genuinely think that pixelart is beautiful and fascinating, and I want to see the artstyle furthered in modern video games. The same goes for the chiptune music. Finally, I have never watched Rescue Rangers and Gadget is clearly the sex appeal of the show.

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CharoftheFlame

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What a great article. It's just simply funny and makes me laugh in an honest way. That you're writing the Bill Nye show has made me interested in a way nothing else has. Please keep these articles coming!

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pirata

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Fantastic article. And yeah, I know the rest of the world thinks it's ugly, but when I see an SNES, I think of magic. Glad to know you're working on the new Nye show!

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Rothbart

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Good article. Games are more nostalgic than other media mostly because they are actual experiences you've had, places you've been, accomplishments and such. Plus they're preserved exactly as they were, for the most part, which allows people to revisit them and re-experience them anew.

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audiosnow

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I replayed CoD4 and MW2 recently, having not played the campaigns since shortly after they released. I don't generally find games I played after the age of ten nostalgic, but after completing those two I felt the oddest sense of saudade.

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hawkinson76

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Edited By hawkinson76

I also have a lot of nostalgia for mid to late 80s video games and cartoons (Gadget WAS hot).

IMHO, my favorite video games from the 80s hold up better than my favorite cartoons. Good game play mechanics don't age the way cheap animation does. I tried to go back to Tail Spin and Robotech, so rough. But Zelda, even the original Super Mario Bros hold up fine.

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dr_monocle

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Edited By dr_monocle

This is a really funny article. I have definitely fallen into many nostalgia traps and will happily continue to do so until real life stops sucking. So death, essentially.

I wonder if kids today have a "Gadget figure" in their lives...

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ChristmasUnicorn

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God this is a good article. Please keep on writin' Druckmeister.

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Smeat

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Edited By Smeat

Old games aren't classics just because we remember them. And they're not just classics because they're good. They're classics because they came at a time when we needed something that was good. And they've stuck with us because they continue to be good, even as we age out of the time when they were needed the most.

This is pretty much the reason for me. Out of all my hobbies from childhood, gaming is the one that carried over the strongest and even though games have been getting better over the years, NES era games still hold a personal charm for me. Still find as much enjoyment playing the original Legend of Zelda as I do with recent Zelda games as an example.

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godzilla_sushi

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Does anyone who writes about games fall into a politically neutral camp of objectivity anymore?

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Dray2k

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Edited By Dray2k

Reading though this guest column made me realize that there are games that have Nostalgia even written in its Story. Bastion is a prominent example of a game where world building envokes nostalgia. Even if you never really have a grasp on how the world before the calamity looks like the game explains it perfectly to you to give the player agency to progress, while.

The world before the calamity is something you really want to have seen but the game does such a good job longing for a world that you never really witness but still makes you want to fight for it.

@godzilla_sushi: No and they never did and its not like it matters much.

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Volt

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Even if you didn't manage a one-liner explanation of nostalgia, I feel like you did a pretty great job of summing it up in that last paragraph.

Also that last caption got a pretty bleak but solid laugh outta me

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ivdamke

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Edited By ivdamke

I get nostalgia and all but there's never been a better time to be playing video games. I usually have a select few games that I'll go back to for nostalgia reasons but they ultimately get replaced every few years by games that improve on those games strengths.

As to why games are so nostalgic over other media I've always thought it was simply due to the interactive nature of them. They're actual personal experiences, not just vicarious experiences through characters displayed on a screen or portrayed in text. The baseline control of a character that games give you is just strong enough to make the actions the game characters take feel like an extension of yourself. That would also key into the drowning out the bad in life as your projecting yourself onto the game characters in a more tactile way. They're a far more effective distraction and they last a hell of alot longer than most other media.

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NoneSun

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Edited By NoneSun

Nice piece.

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RentalFloss

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This is so incredibly well written. I always get excited when I see a new article from Drucker, and I think this is my favorite yet.

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WeyounNumber6

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Great article. I'm super nostalgic for the N64, 1080 snowboarding game in particular, my entire college time spent riding in a Panda suit down a giant snow half pipe over & over again.

Joy.

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glots

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Great read!

I don't know about Gadget, though...

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deactivated-63f899c29358e

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Good article, I rarely get nostalgic about games (or most other things for that matter) but it does happen occasionally.

Rawr at Gadget.

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Rasrimra

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Edited By Rasrimra

Interesting article. Nostalgia has always been an odd term for me. I'm sure we are all influenced by the association with past events, myself included. Consciously I don't notice this with games. When I put on an old game I don't recreate those past feelings or events any more than just traveling through my memories.

I also find it interesting that there is this (perhaps I am imagining this) perception that nostalgia is stronger for games than other media? I don't experience that either. Nostalgia for games (to the extend that I like my memories of it) is the same for games as it is with comics, books, music and movies for me. I don't perceive a notable difference taking into account that I love games that much more than movies or books.

And to increase my misalignment with the general nostalgia argument I never linked pixel art style indie titles to nostalgia until I read about it. I always viewed it as a stylistic choice and it never made me feel like I was playing an old game. To me pixel art is just a certain visual style that happens to look more like an older game. In fact I find that reason to pick pixel art for a game a fascinating idea. If there is an old game that I loved and it got a better looking version, I would probably prefer to have the better looking version over the 'nostalgic' version. I don't feel that making something look old would make it attractive. But the style has its qualities that I like, despite it looking like something old.

Maybe my nostalgia is broken, or maybe we are making it out to be more than it is? I wonder if this is just a very personal thing, but I viewed pixel art the same way I view 2D or on-rail shooters: a type, a choice, a way to make a game and they can all work and be good games independent of other types of games that we come up with.

I guess, the way I look at it, games interact with our brains. They are not dependent on the times or other games unless our brains deem it so.

That said I do indeed like to collect old games, digitally. The games that I liked most. I suppose that is a form of nostalgia. The love for things that happened before, the desire to keep them safe and close? So I guess on further inflection I am affected by it too.

I know that our memories tend to make things prettier than they were. Like it's easy to get used to a better looking screen, and when go back to your old screen it's a scare. But when people are discussing the quality of a new game and say 'that's nostalgia talking' it is rarely the case. And even if it were, the inverse could be just as strong a case to make. Having something beloved to live up to? There is a reason that series end.

Anyway, that is just how I experience things and it doesn't have to be true to you. I like thinking about this stuff. Thanks for making me think.

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jadegl

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Edited By jadegl

As a young girl in the late 80s-early 90s, my first crush was Ray Stantz from The Real Ghostbusters cartoon...

I find that most cherished games are ones that I have a strong connection to outside of just playing them. I remember a lot of Commodore 64 games fondly because I not only played them before anything else when I was very young, but I also watched my brothers play them. They fostered a connection between us. Most of my childhood friends and I played games every day and talked about games in excruciating detail when we couldn't play them. Renting games was a huge deal and became a communal activity, each of us advocating for one title over the other, based on nothing but box art or whether the title sounded cool or not. Neon colors, interesting fonts and larger than life characters won the day usually. If there was a teenage mutant ninja turtle on the cover, there was no need for debate. Mortal Kombat was rented more times than I can count, even though it was the inferior SNES version. But who cared? We didn't know any better at that point. We just wanted to murder each other in new and exciting ways.

I don't get too much into the glut of throwback games. I loved Shovel Knight and stuff like Rogue Legacy, but there is too much crud and not enough cream. I will admit that I am a bit astounded in my own glowing reactions to being resold games from my youth. I have a bad habit (that I have managed to curtail with age and hopefully wisdom) where I see a release of a game that I loved as a kid and want to get it and play it all over again. This is why I own so many versions of Super Mario Bros. 2. I love it so much that I just can't help myself.

Nostalgia is something that is hard to explain logically. I know that some people don't feel the tug of it, but I do. Playing stuff like Barbarian or Winter Games for C64, or Doom or RBI Baseball, take me back to being a kid, not a care in the world. No bills, no stress about my car passing inspection or work obligations, just a game I like to play and all the time in the world to play it. What could be better than a feeling like that? :D

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Mezmero

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Edited By Mezmero

Some times some crimes go slipping through the cracks. Such as the crime of forgetting how far video games have come. I think I was more into Cleo from Heathcliff back in the day. I can't imagine my love of games being as strong as it is today without the days of the arcades, the NES and beyond to inform my tastes. By that same token I look at hardware that I missed out on like the Atari, Intellivision etc. and I think that most of those games seem bad even for their time. Like seriously how can you look at that Atari version of Pac-Man and not think that it's a burning pile of trash? Because of that I think I can understand why younger gamers can't appreciate the stuff that I myself am nostalgic for. Mike Drucker is A-okay in my book. These articles he does are always a pleasant read. Keep up the good work duder.

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BasketSnake

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I play just as many retro games as new games. Both because of nostalgia and because some of them just holds up today. I own a ton of consoles, a framemeister and handhelds and I got a beefy pc for whatever I want like retroarch and dolphin. I use a little bit of everything. I like having options but I'm particularly fond of new 3ds 1:1 nes/snes pixelmapping.

HOT tips if you never played them (because I didn't myself until recently)

Terranigma. It's just great if you loved Mana/Evermore.

Super Metroid. Excellent game. Plays great, sounds great and looks great. Classic.

Earthbound. Took me by surprise. I've played a lot of JRPGs but this felt like it was made today. Medium grinding.

I bought and played James Bond 007 on gameboy at release and enjoyed it. It's a little bit underrated for a gameboy game I think. It's got adventure game elements. Check it out.

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MongolianMisfit

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I feel like these articles are applicable to this write up:

http://www.forbes.com/sites/laurenfriedman/2016/08/02/why-nostalgia-marketing-works-so-well-with-millennials-and-how-your-brand-can-benefit/#2046ecf114bf

http://www.thedebrief.co.uk/news/opinion/why-are-millennials-the-most-nostalgic-generation-ever-20160362770

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MissAshley

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"Disquieted" perfectly describes my reaction to the abundance of games employing nostalgic elements. Without actually playing a game, determining whether it's exploiting nostalgia or attempting to emulate what made older games fun is hard. They force me to ask "Am I being pandered to? Or does this game 'get it'?"

Many of those games don't seem to "get it," and I think their existence is a big part of the anti-nostalgic sentiment I see from (presumably younger) people online. Because as Mike says, being good is as important to a game becoming nostalgic as existing at the right time in someone's youth. And if a person's only exposure to the elements common in nostalgic games comes from bad throwbacks and cash-ins, as opposed to the good older games themselves, then I can see how that person can dismiss older games (and older game enthusiasts).

Thanks for making think about something I thought I thought enough about. :)

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Solidair3

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What IS it about Gadget? Like for real.

Good read! I always think about things like this. It's so strange that we think about all of these old things. Nostalgia is SO powerful. It's kind of wild.

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CyleMoore

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Edited By CyleMoore

Great article, thanks for the good read.

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WynnDuffy

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Edited By WynnDuffy

Obligatory the US SNES is soooo ugly comment!

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colourful_hippie

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Fun read that I find mostly true. Now I'm sitting here horrifying myself at the passage of time by thinking about someone writing something just like this but instead of a SNES it's an Xbox 360 controller....or worse, a PS4 controller