this post was submitted on 05 Jul 2023
199 points (93.1% liked)
RetroGaming
19480 readers
96 users here now
Vintage gaming community.
Rules:
- Be kind.
- No spam or soliciting for money.
- No racism or other bigotry allowed.
- Obviously nothing illegal.
If you see these please report them.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I'm just not ready to call the N64 'retro'. I mowed lawns for months to buy that thing.
Based on the meaning of "retro" when the N64 came out (stuff from the 70s was considered retro in the 90s), it is. But in the almost 30 years since it came out, the meaning of retro might have changed.
Relative and absolute time frames are a bit of a bitch. Like the modern age has come and gone (ok, this isn't exactly agreed on, either the modern age ended with WWII or we're in the late modern age right now, but it started back in 1500 and things have changed a bit since then) but we still use "modern" to refer to current things, even when talking about an information age replacement of an earlier modern age product.
Should "retro" refer to - , or should it refer to a specific time and a new name be given to the timeframe 90s kids are nostalgic about? My own mind thinks of things from like the 50s to the 80s when it sees "retro".