Hey all, new member. Love the TG16 and been occasionally checking out these forums for a couple years now, but been doing it more frequent recently so I decided to join up.
Welcome, Mishran
SMS and TG-16:
Social, Practical, Economic FactorsIf you were economically semi-independent during 1985-1990, you had more freedom of choice. I wasn't; I had to save birthday money to buy things, so choosing a console was influenced by many things.
Growing up, 96% of the serious (obsessed) video game fiends had NES. It was 1985-1990, we were kids, and our parents bought the goddamn things. Even when kids had a choice, you better believe the social component was crucial in the decision-making process: who will you be able to borrow games from, who will you trade/sell/buy with? Even when folks were AWARE of alternatives, there were very practical economic incentives to choose NES.
Now, I happened to think that, overall, the NES had the best library of games, because I was only occasionally jealous or envious of the SMS games some friends had. Yes, it's true: there was a small, but loyal, support network for SMS in my area, which was cemented and nurtured by the local video store that carried a great selection of SMS titles. The owner had kids, so he was buying the games for his kids to play, then he rented them when they got bored. As a parent now, I would love the opportunity to do something like this! Secretly, of course, I wanted to play ALL games on all platforms, including computers, but I rationalized away the envy/frustration by saying, "The NES is the best compromise, considering the serious lack of money."
But, honestly, outside of a small cadre of SMS fans, SMS WAS NON-EXISTENT. By the time Genesis and TG-16 were out, all the SMS fans migrated to GENESIS (Sega should have called it SAVIOR, because that is how the SMS fans viewed it!)
For the record, I really liked the SMS, but did not think it was "essential". I did not feel that way about the Genesis, though. Everyone had been anticipating its release. Then a funny thing happened: I saw a few games that really appealed to me (Blazing Lazers, Legendary Axe, etc.) and suddenly I
didn't care about all the practical concerns listed above: I was older, I just wanted to play this new, obscure system that intrigued me.
Genesis would have been the more practical, better choice for me (for all the reasons the NES was the best choice), but I decided to take a chance. Luckily, my younger brothers were easy to influence, and they committed all of their birthday and Xmas money to fund TG-16.
Bottom line: As soon as I got a real job, I bought an SMS and all the used carts I could find.
What was the topic?