Interesting links, Joe and Black.
For Joe's pics: The component seems a lot brighter, but the composite pics look unusual dark. Maybe it's just the camera but it seems like it shouldn't be that dark to begin with.
For Black's pics: Call me crazy, but I think the composite actually looks better since it blends the dithering and makes the game look more colorful, even though the colors aren't as vibrant. A really good example of this is looking at the darker shade on the mountains.
The composite pics all turned out way better than the S-Video photos, since I did the S-Video ones first and sorta figured out what I was doing towards the end. If you saw them both running in person, you probably wouldn't prefer the composite overall.
But if you like detail getting blended out, then the Virtual Console games are just for you.
Man, how do you guys take such good pictures off the TV? I've tried that myself and it just looks like crap every time.
Like I said earlier, they pretty much all turned out like crap. I was lucky enough to get those two pics of each to turn out well enough.
I just followed the instructions I remember from the first year Nintendo Power comic: turn out all the lights and sit the camera on a pile of stuff with a level surface on top. Which meant I cradled my bro's Xbox360 box on my knees as I tried to squat in front of the TV set.
I also had to figure out the hard way to start a real game and pause it before snapping photos.
I put it on a tripod, put the camera on a two second timer, press da button, switch to component, press da button again. All of this happens when the lights in my room are off and the TV is the only light source.
Also, I think the composite being dark may be the result of the way my TV handles composite. Well actually that composite is converted into s-video by the JVC switcher, and the NES composite doesn't seem dark. I wonder...
The composite of my Duo/Turbo systems always appears extra bright and washed out, like it's being displayed on a crappy projection TV or something.
Black_Tiger... It might be the JPEG compression of the pic, but I think I can see a tiny little bit of blue color bleed in the dude's legs on your s-video pics.
It could be, but all the S-Video photos turned out with extra glowing colors than they appeared on the screen. Especially that big vagina. I know I didn't hold the camera very steady with the S-Video pics...
Man, how do you guys take such good pictures off the TV? I've tried that myself and it just looks like crap every time.
Good question.