nintendork666
Member
No, but I bought a Game Gear once.
The legacy of N-Gage did live on through the N-Gage-as-a-platform, bringing hits like Metal Gear Solid (Mobile) to the table (!)
My ex-girlfiend had an N-Gage so I played though Pathway to Glory about 4 years ago. It was hard. Very hard.
It's biggest issue from memory was that it was like an hour long start to end.N-Gage 2.0 was truly ahead of each time. Game Center and Google Play Games released years later (2010 and 2013) and they still haven't reached it in certain aspects uniformity-wise.
It also had some very decent games, like Metal Gear Solid Mobile and Metal Gear Acid Mobile. Granted, the latter (and its sequel) were demakes of the PSP games, but the former was an original Metal Gear entry. It surpasses even Snake's Revenge and Ghost Babel in terms of rarity and obscurity.
I had an N-Gage, a QD, and a Gizmondo. I had a weird obsession with obscure handhelds as an adolescent. I enjoyed The Elder Scrolls: Shadowkey for the N-Gage despite its glaring problems, and the platforms in general despite their glaring problems.
The Gizmondo was my emulator machine for a long time and when a bunch of its games were leaked by former devs I wound up getting a respectable library from it. Some of them were very incomplete (Johnny Whatever was just a demo, and Furious Phil was an alpha tech demo) but I think that wound up influencing my fascination with older/incomplete versions of games.
Wow, that's weird. Those were in every game case?
That's kind of cool, but really wasteful. Did they expect people to buy three times as many used, caseless copies of their games?
Me too. It was actually pretty cool at the time cause of the color picture. Games that were ports of console games didn't run as nicely but as a child that didn't bother me at the time.No, but I bought a Game Gear once.
My parents asked me to buy my younger brother his first mobile phone.
I intentionally bought the N-Gage just so he would throw a shit fit.
Totally worth it.
i think it's safe to say N-Gage is the worst handheld of all time.
Yeah, it was a good time for handheld gaming, I think. I miss not just the homebrew scene being lively on smaller platforms like the GP32 and Tapwave Zodiac (two systems I wanted but never got) but also having this big arena of potential hardware upstarts to come into the more mainstream market. I guess the dominance of the DS and PSP nixed those possibilities, but I was hopeful then.I had all these systems back in the day, too. I got really big into the mobile homebrew scene for a while. the gp32 is still my favorite handheld of all time. that was an era of high experimentation, it was lot of fun to be around those little dev communities.
oh hell no, Gizmondo and Game.com or something are way worse
The achievement system was legit (plus the N95 I was using was a wicked phone).I didn't have an N-gage, but in its ahes birthed the software based N-gage 2.0 platform on Nokias Symbian devices. And I consider that the golden-age of mobile games. Relatively high budget 3D games without IAP. It was awesome!