Earliest game I remember playing was the first Super Mario Bros. My earliest (retained) memory of it involved me sneaking into a family friend's house when I was 4 or so, while we were on vacation out of state, and playing the game. That didn't last long; I was caught as soon as I finished the first stage. I seem to remember that they had the NES hooked up to a TV on their kitchen table... it was some sort of table, I know that. I distinctly remember needing to climb into a chair to see it.
The first time I played an NES was at my babysitter's friend's house. We played a lot of Double Dragon that day.
I've been having way too much fun on Suno making AI generated songs. It's amazing how much better they end up being unlike most of the images AI creates. Heimlich Power
One of my brother's friends brought over a Sega Genesis and a handful of games a few times, and he'd leave them at our house for a day or two. He had the first Sonic game, Herzwog Zwei, Kid Chameleon... I know he had at least one other game, but I've long since forgotten what it was. (Shame---I remember it had some catchy music.) I never owned my own Genesis, so otherwise I never would've played Sonic. A few years later I created my namesake, but that's a whole other story entirely. >^_^<
If memory serves, the music (and sound in general) on the old Sega consoles was better than the Nintendo music. The Final Fantasy series was the exception.
If I'm remembering right, I believe it's because Sega consoles (or at least the Genesis) had two separate chips to use to make sound. One could do all the heavy lifting for the music while the other handled sound effects and such. It was pretty much able to do twice as many sounds as Nintendo systems of the time. Plus I think that bigger chip wasn't too different from what people were using in synths anyway.
I kind of wish I got to play Guantlet Legends on the Dream Cast more. It kind of a cross between the Arcade Gauntlet Legends and it's sequel Gauntlet Dark Legacy. I only ever played it once at a friends house.
The first NES game was the only Gauntlet entry I've ever played, and I've never come anywhere close to beating it on my own ability.
I don't think you could be the older games. I think they went on forever. Gauntlet Lengends and Gauntlet Dark Legacy actually did have endings. Two each actually. One if you had all twelve Runestones and one if you didn't.
The NES Gauntlet game had an ending of its own, I know that much (in contrast to the arcade game). It was contingent on getting a vault combination by beating an assortment of secret levels scattered around the different worlds. In addition, after beating the game's final boss, there are several hidden panels that need to be opened up in order to obtain the objective of the whole quest; going to the exit without it just gives a Game Over. I've managed to reach the boss all of once via gratuitous save-stating, and never again. I don't know how far my brother got into the game when he played it as a kid.
I remember one SNES game I played a lot as a kid. It was this rpg-adventure thing but the gameplay was more like arkanoid. You hit a fireball around the arena to attack while guarding your goal. For the life of me I can not remember what it was called though. All I remember is that I was fascinated by it.
Ironically, the worst NES game I've ever played was (loosely) based off of my all-time favorite movie Days of Thunder. Who the hell thought having the player control a 4 tire and fuel pit stop was a good idea!?
Saw my brother play it, never actually tried it myself even with emulation. I do remember it though; there'd be someone saying "Nice try, buddy" if you lost the race.
Sonic the Hedgehog being the mascot of blast processing and the Genesis. The glory days of Sonic and Mario butting heads.
I think it was the gamecube, but one of the Nintendo consoles had an attachment where it would emulate game boy games and it had a speed enhancement mode. I remember my brother using it to play the old Pokemon games and grind the pokemon to ridiculous levels then go and PVP children and destroy them. It was kinda mean, but still kinda funny too. The PVP would be on gameboy, you actually put the gameboy game into the attachment and played it on the tv through the gamecube.
No joke, this literally just popped up in my wife's YouTube shorts. https://youtube.com/shorts/_FcnrS_gdus?si=QTRXF2Ty8TttDZ3I