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Farewell and fond memories – PlayStation 2 Retires

Farewell and fond memories – PlayStation 2 Retires

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Andy

Being the opinionated loudmouth that I am, I’m no stranger to pointless debate; the kind of debate that usually begins around a pizza box and ends with that box being used as a projectile weapon, frequently aimed at me. I can take it, it comes with the pressures of being perpetually correct. 

 One such discussion I’ve often found myself in the middle of is which game console is ‘the best’, as if such an arbitrary title could possibly be applied to over 20 years of evolving technology. But if we’re going to try nail it down, what should the criteria be? Tech surely isn’t a fair barometer as newer consoles (or PCs) will win hands down. For my money, the ‘best’ console is the one that builds bridges and tears down barriers; one that welcomes waves of newcomers without abandoning the people that made it, one that makes a significant social impact. 

 I still remember the day I got my PS2. I’d been late to embrace the platform; being a PC gamer in my formative years the prospect of a Microsoft console was just too tempting to turn down, but after saving enough money and eventually realizing Final Fantasy was not coming to Xbox, I finally caved and bought one. It was one of the original models, bulky and inelegant (although slightly less so than the Xbox) but full of promise all the same and with it, and the first game I ever bought for it, I had one of the most profound gaming experiences of my life. 


Final Fantasy X was a special game. Even its critics will frequently admit that there is something undeniably charming about it. Presented with a brand new platform, the brightest creative minds at Squaresoft set out to create something gamers would never forget and boy did they do just that. From the moment the sun crept around the blitzball in the center of that campfire, I knew this wasn’t going to be just another game. The score, the characters, the animations, the gameplay, everything about X was spectacular. Anyone worried that Square would have a hard time following their stellar PSX line-up found those fears unfounded in the face of Final Fantasy X and even though it was the first PS2 game I ever played, it remains my absolute favourite. 

That’s not to say the PS2 was lacking software support. I played more games on it than any other console I’ve ever owned, partially because most of my friends also had one and we’d frequently lend games to each other. And I suppose this is what I’m ultimately getting at. When I was a kid myself and my friends would split time between each others houses to get the best out of each others consoles; someone had a Sega, someone had a Nintendo, someone else a PSX and myself a PC. The Playstation 2 however, was almost universal. Not only did all my friends have one, but suddenly people who’d never had an interest in games were picking one up. Before long it became to strange to visit a house without one, as if it was as common a household item as a television or DVD player, which of course it also was. 

 So for whatever it’s worth, the PS2 is, in my opinion, the best video game console of all time. Not just for the experiences I had on it, but for the impact it had on the world around me. Sony may have finally pulled the plug on the device, but its legacy lives on not just in its own brand, but in the doors it graciously opened for its competitors. 

 Long live the PS2. 

Sean

Like many of you out there, I have a lot of memories of the Playstation 2. There are so many great stories we could share, we could be here all day talking about them. It’s so difficult to choose just one. So I’m not going to tell you about the first time I played it at my friends house and we stayed up all night playing Smuggler’s Run, or the time I saved up all my pounds and pennies ( Yes that long ago ) to buy my first PS2 or even how excited I was to have an electronic device that had an awesome blue light ( Simpler Times ).

My favourite PS2 memory, in fact one of my favourite video gaming memory is this. In the year 2001 a little game called Zone of the Enders happened. While in itself a great game, the reason anyone bought it back then ( whoever disagrees is probably lying ) was the pack in of the Metal Gear Solid 2 Demo. Everyone just needed to see the next instalment of Metal Gear. So I get home, practically disregard ZOE all together and insert the MGS 2 Demo disc. First of all the graphics, music and cinematography were amazing for the time. Then I watch the intro, Snake in the rain running along the George Washington Bridge and leaps onto USS Discovery. Then our hero stands on the deck and has a conversation with Otacon. Now the game actually begins, of course I didn’t realise that and just sit there staring at the screen with Snake standing there with awesome weather effects and ship movement. Fully believing the cut scene was still continuing. When I realise I can actually control this amazing environment and it’s not some pre-rendered movie, I just sit there for another few minutes with my jaw dropped open in awe at what I’m seeing before me.

That was my most prominent PS2 memory, the Playstation 2 is no doubt one of the most important consoles ever created, influencing culture and society at large in understanding that gaming is an okay thing, laying the ground work for so many modern concepts we now take for granted.

So as you go silently into the night old friend, you will never be forgotten.

To read more fantastic memories and stories from the Arcade staff click the page buttons below!

2

Andy

Being the opinionated loudmouth that I am, I’m no stranger to pointless debate; the kind of debate that usually begins around a pizza box and ends with that box being used as a projectile weapon, frequently aimed at me. I can take it, it comes with the pressures of being perpetually correct. 

 One such discussion I’ve often found myself in the middle of is which game console is ‘the best’, as if such an arbitrary title could possibly be applied to over 20 years of evolving technology. But if we’re going to try nail it down, what should the criteria be? Tech surely isn’t a fair barometer as newer consoles (or PCs) will win hands down. For my money, the ‘best’ console is the one that builds bridges and tears down barriers; one that welcomes waves of newcomers without abandoning the people that made it, one that makes a significant social impact. 

 I still remember the day I got my PS2. I’d been late to embrace the platform; being a PC gamer in my formative years the prospect of a Microsoft console was just too tempting to turn down, but after saving enough money and eventually realizing Final Fantasy was not coming to Xbox, I finally caved and bought one. It was one of the original models, bulky and inelegant (although slightly less so than the Xbox) but full of promise all the same and with it, and the first game I ever bought for it, I had one of the most profound gaming experiences of my life. 


Final Fantasy X was a special game. Even its critics will frequently admit that there is something undeniably charming about it. Presented with a brand new platform, the brightest creative minds at Squaresoft set out to create something gamers would never forget and boy did they do just that. From the moment the sun crept around the blitzball in the center of that campfire, I knew this wasn’t going to be just another game. The score, the characters, the animations, the gameplay, everything about X was spectacular. Anyone worried that Square would have a hard time following their stellar PSX line-up found those fears unfounded in the face of Final Fantasy X and even though it was the first PS2 game I ever played, it remains my absolute favourite. 

That’s not to say the PS2 was lacking software support. I played more games on it than any other console I’ve ever owned, partially because most of my friends also had one and we’d frequently lend games to each other. And I suppose this is what I’m ultimately getting at. When I was a kid myself and my friends would split time between each others houses to get the best out of each others consoles; someone had a Sega, someone had a Nintendo, someone else a PSX and myself a PC. The Playstation 2 however, was almost universal. Not only did all my friends have one, but suddenly people who’d never had an interest in games were picking one up. Before long it became to strange to visit a house without one, as if it was as common a household item as a television or DVD player, which of course it also was. 

 So for whatever it’s worth, the PS2 is, in my opinion, the best video game console of all time. Not just for the experiences I had on it, but for the impact it had on the world around me. Sony may have finally pulled the plug on the device, but its legacy lives on not just in its own brand, but in the doors it graciously opened for its competitors. 

 Long live the PS2. 

Sean

Like many of you out there, I have a lot of memories of the Playstation 2. There are so many great stories we could share, we could be here all day talking about them. It’s so difficult to choose just one. So I’m not going to tell you about the first time I played it at my friends house and we stayed up all night playing Smuggler’s Run, or the time I saved up all my pounds and pennies ( Yes that long ago ) to buy my first PS2 or even how excited I was to have an electronic device that had an awesome blue light ( Simpler Times ).

My favourite PS2 memory, in fact one of my favourite video gaming memory is this. In the year 2001 a little game called Zone of the Enders happened. While in itself a great game, the reason anyone bought it back then ( whoever disagrees is probably lying ) was the pack in of the Metal Gear Solid 2 Demo. Everyone just needed to see the next instalment of Metal Gear. So I get home, practically disregard ZOE all together and insert the MGS 2 Demo disc. First of all the graphics, music and cinematography were amazing for the time. Then I watch the intro, Snake in the rain running along the George Washington Bridge and leaps onto USS Discovery. Then our hero stands on the deck and has a conversation with Otacon. Now the game actually begins, of course I didn’t realise that and just sit there staring at the screen with Snake standing there with awesome weather effects and ship movement. Fully believing the cut scene was still continuing. When I realise I can actually control this amazing environment and it’s not some pre-rendered movie, I just sit there for another few minutes with my jaw dropped open in awe at what I’m seeing before me.

That was my most prominent PS2 memory, the Playstation 2 is no doubt one of the most important consoles ever created, influencing culture and society at large in understanding that gaming is an okay thing, laying the ground work for so many modern concepts we now take for granted.

So as you go silently into the night old friend, you will never be forgotten.

To read more fantastic memories and stories from the Arcade staff click the page buttons below!

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