- Joined
- Feb 3, 2013
How does Jake manage to come away with precisely the wrong idea about everything?
Nobody likes Super Nintendo because it has HDMA, they like it because it's the system they played Mario World on. And the people who program for it today are doing it because they like the feeling of working on the same hardware as their childhood favorites. Nobody wants to program the Jaketendo.
And as usual, Jake has long since been Red Shirted. The project he's trying to grope his way toward already exists, it's the Playdate - hobbyist hardware for hobbyist game programmers:
play.date
A "retro-ish" Gameboy-type console with Lua and C APIs - not ASM hackery-dackery. High-res 1-bit screen, 44.1kHz audio, a few buttons, and just one "gimmick" feature, an analog crank. You could even use the crank the same way as Jake's mythical scroll wheel
If you take a look at the API it's all very reasonable stuff for the modern day, nothing held over from the days of scanlines or CRTs or whatever - and that's as it should be. All this for $199.
Compare that to Jake's monstrosity which would probably be like that time Homer Simpson designed a car.
Anyone who wants to ride the nostalgia high is going to program a real retro console exactly as it was, and anyone wanting to program something new is going to either go to Playdate or just write a retro-styled PC game using one of the many toolkits out there.
I can't wait for the new batch of insulation.
Nobody likes Super Nintendo because it has HDMA, they like it because it's the system they played Mario World on. And the people who program for it today are doing it because they like the feeling of working on the same hardware as their childhood favorites. Nobody wants to program the Jaketendo.
And as usual, Jake has long since been Red Shirted. The project he's trying to grope his way toward already exists, it's the Playdate - hobbyist hardware for hobbyist game programmers:

Playdate. Pre-order now!
It’s yellow. It fits in your pocket. There’s a crank. It comes with 24 free games to get you started. Say hi to Playdate from Panic.

A "retro-ish" Gameboy-type console with Lua and C APIs - not ASM hackery-dackery. High-res 1-bit screen, 44.1kHz audio, a few buttons, and just one "gimmick" feature, an analog crank. You could even use the crank the same way as Jake's mythical scroll wheel
If you take a look at the API it's all very reasonable stuff for the modern day, nothing held over from the days of scanlines or CRTs or whatever - and that's as it should be. All this for $199.
Compare that to Jake's monstrosity which would probably be like that time Homer Simpson designed a car.
Anyone who wants to ride the nostalgia high is going to program a real retro console exactly as it was, and anyone wanting to program something new is going to either go to Playdate or just write a retro-styled PC game using one of the many toolkits out there.
I can't wait for the new batch of insulation.