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NEC TG-16/TE/TurboDuo => TG-16/TE/TurboDuo Discussion => Topic started by: vestcoat on January 23, 2016, 03:39:39 PM

Title: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: vestcoat on January 23, 2016, 03:39:39 PM
1989 Looks cool!
1990 I wish I had some friends.
1991 These accessories are freaking expensive.
1992 A cheap 16-bit console!
1993 Finally, good games
1994 Clearance!
1995 That's it?
1996 Playstation sucks. Guess I'll keep playing my Duo.
1997 N64 sucks. Guess I'll keep playing my Duo.
1998 Ebay!
1999 Friends on the internets! Thank you Netscape Navigator!
2000 Imports are expensive.
2001 ...girls... alcohol...
2002 A new Turbo game!
2003 PCEngineFX Forums!
2004 It is no longer possible to press TG-CD's :(
2005 Why doesn't the sound work on my TurboExpress? Why doesn't the sound work on my TurboDuo?
2006 When did I become a "retro gamer"?
2007 Advent of Buy It Now. Imports are cheap, domestics are expensive. I own Sapphire! He lied to us!
2008 RIP TZD. This shit is getting expensive. Surely, prices will top off.
2009 Insanity! Pressed CD's!
2010 Who are all of these f*cking noobs?
2011 Who are all of these f*cking Youtube idiots?
2012 Concede hopes of U.S. set.
2013 Forum trolling eclipses game time
2014 Rise of the repros
2015 Ceases to be gamer, retro gamer, and collector, just internet a$$hole.
2016 ?
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: HailingTheThings on January 23, 2016, 03:56:56 PM
You're adorable. I bet you look just like Cleopatra.

*sighs*
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Punch on January 23, 2016, 05:06:54 PM
2016 I still wish I had some friends.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: ccovell on January 24, 2016, 12:36:38 AM
2016 - Noobs: "I'm so retro, I've got a Turbografx!  It's an Android emulation box."
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Bernie on January 24, 2016, 03:23:26 AM
2016 - Noobs: "I'm so retro, I've got a Turbografx!  It's an Android emulation box."

HA!  THIS!!!!
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Jason_dicarlo85 on January 24, 2016, 03:41:34 AM
Lol this made me laugh... Although I am one of the people who didn't get a turbo till later in life... I had sega master system and the genesis...
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Gentlegamer on January 24, 2016, 04:10:56 AM
1997: Discovers Magic Engine. Cool, I can play TurboGrafx-16 on my PC. Pirates activation key for full features.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: incrediblehark on January 24, 2016, 05:16:56 AM

2011 Who are all of these f*cking Youtube idiots?
2012 Concede hopes of U.S. set.


Pretty much nailed it for me.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Black Tiger on January 24, 2016, 06:26:31 AM
1997: Discovers Magic Engine. Cool, I can play TurboGrafx-16 on my PC. Pirates activation key for full features.

I bought Magic Engine twice.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: ginoscope on January 24, 2016, 06:51:41 AM
1997: Discovers Magic Engine. Cool, I can play TurboGrafx-16 on my PC. Pirates activation key for full features.

I bought Magic Engine twice.

Magic engine was amazing and my first successful burn on Dracula X then.  Then wii in 2006 brought turbo back.

Now full circle to 1990-1994 with real hardware and software.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: spawnshop on January 24, 2016, 07:29:58 AM

2006 When did I become a "retro gamer"?


This is how I feel most of the time....  I play some of the new games, but there's nothing like the charm of the classics.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Sparky on January 24, 2016, 10:52:17 AM
Vest!!!!! great post glad to see you back on posting... Wait for it..... Hugs
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: esteban on January 24, 2016, 07:37:23 PM
BEST POST FROM VEST IN A DECADE.

:)

Not really...he had some scathing posts that were so funny I forgave him for being utterly MIA for years and years.




1997: Discovers Magic Engine. Cool, I can play TurboGrafx-16 on my PC. Pirates activation key for full features.

I bought Magic Engine twice.

Ha! At first I simply used my brother's (legit) key.

But after a short period, I gladly sent a few rubles to France.

----------------------

Anyway...for me...if it wasn't for MagicEngine/emulators in 1998/1999, I would not have gotten back into video games, specifically TG-16, until... ????!??

I was going to grad school in CA and didn't have any consoles. Eventually, I would end up buying my "west coast hardware" even though I already had consoles in storage (parent's basement!) on east coast.

This is the point where my hardware collectard fetish really blossomed.

But MagicEngine was the catalyst.





Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: _joshuaTurbo on January 25, 2016, 06:41:22 AM
Very accurate!  However, mine is a bit changed in the center-

2006 When did I become a "retro gamer"?
2007 Advent of Buy It Now. Imports are cheap, domestics are expensive. I own Sapphire! He lied to us!
2008 Bills... Time to sell everything!
2009 Oh f*ck.  This is boring without obey.
2010 At least I have them all emulated....
2011 Trades for a Turbografx at a gamer meetup!
2012  It all starts again!!
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: GohanX on January 25, 2016, 06:43:40 AM
Man, talking about hitting the nail on the head...
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Necromancer on January 25, 2016, 07:16:10 AM
Heh, too funny.  My timeline is similar, though I was buying stuff from TZD shortly after they set up shop and like Punch I'm still looking for friends to play Bomberman, Bonk 3, Sapphire, etc.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: bob on August 19, 2017, 11:50:16 AM
2017: where did vestcoat go?
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: wiseau on August 19, 2017, 06:50:19 PM
I'll post my timeline, no bully
1998: Bonk on the gameboy's pretty fun!
2009: Man, they made more of Bonk on this obscure console i've never heard of, i'm sold!
2010-2015: Trying out random shit in magic engine
2016: Alright time to bite the bullet i've got a console and a few chips and CDs, and i'll get an everdrive for the su- Wait, the CD unit is HOW much? f*ck that.
2017: Broke down and sold off my US turbo to buy a modded PC engine Duo r; most US games are surprisingly cheaper than i was led to believe, at least if you're willing to wait it out anyways.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: seieienbu on August 20, 2017, 07:11:17 PM
2017: Broke down and sold off my US turbo to buy a modded PC engine Duo r; most US games are surprisingly cheaper than i was led to believe, at least if you're willing to wait it out anyways.

How expensive were you told the games were?
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: wiseau on August 20, 2017, 10:18:00 PM
2017: Broke down and sold off my US turbo to buy a modded PC engine Duo r; most US games are surprisingly cheaper than i was led to believe, at least if you're willing to wait it out anyways.

How expensive were you told the games were?
An recent example would be someone on a different forum saying a Vasteel with a map for, around 120 bucks was a good deal, then a day later another one shows up for ~90.

Or seeing Ys 1&2 and 3 actually sell for almost 200 bucks on a forum, when someone was selling the exact same thing for ~120 on ebay.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: xelement5x on August 21, 2017, 04:49:28 AM
2017: where did vestcoat go?

I think I offended him permanently with my D&D ribbing. 
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Necromancer on August 21, 2017, 05:09:33 AM
We need more vestcoat noob audits.  :mrgreen:
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Black Tiger on August 21, 2017, 11:48:44 AM
vestcoat has stated in the past that he has learned all he needs to know about Turbo/PCE and owns everything he wants that he is willing to buy. He checks in now and then and will comment when something new comes up, but feels that most of the topics discussed have already been discussed to death in the past.

When Henshin Engine starts arriving in mailboxes, we'll likely hear from him next.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: geise on August 26, 2017, 08:15:32 AM
I miss his posts. From what you said though BT I feel the same way. I am sure a lot of other old forum members and first time adopters of the turbo/pce are in the same mindset as well.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: esteban on August 26, 2017, 01:33:28 PM
2004-2005 - I start realizing that prices are too high for me. Like, Sylphia was $60 or more... Hellfire... some other shootemups....

2017 - I realize that I should have purchased those games.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Arkhan on August 26, 2017, 09:38:14 PM
I miss his posts. From what you said though BT I feel the same way. I am sure a lot of other old forum members and first time adopters of the turbo/pce are in the same mindset as well.

some of them have also grown tired of what things have become with the dumbassed facebook groups, flippant bullshit, and lame ass profiteering. 
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Digi.k on August 27, 2017, 11:30:39 AM
2011 Who are all of these f*cking Youtube idiots?

that was 2007 for me.  During the time I uploaded Lunar Silver Star story complete for the Sega Saturn and being accused of faking a release "that never existed" as Vic Ireland said that Lunar Silver Star Story complete only exists for the Playstation..  Plus a few youtubers had a meltdown on there..
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Arkhan on August 27, 2017, 02:21:39 PM
2011 Who are all of these f*cking Youtube idiots?

that was 2007 for me.  During the time I uploaded Lunar Silver Star story complete for the Sega Saturn and being accused of faking a release "that never existed" as Vic Ireland said that Lunar Silver Star Story complete only exists for the Playstation..  Plus a few youtubers had a meltdown on there..


lol.  motherf*ckers be dum
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: NightWolve on October 20, 2017, 04:01:06 AM
1989 Looks cool!
1990 I wish I had some friends.
1991 These accessories are freaking expensive.
1992 A cheap 16-bit console!
1993 Finally, good games
1994 Clearance!
1995 That's it?
1996 Playstation sucks. Guess I'll keep playing my Duo.
1997 N64 sucks. Guess I'll keep playing my Duo.
1998 Ebay!
1999 Friends on the internets! Thank you Netscape Navigator!
2000 Imports are expensive.
2001 ...girls... alcohol...
2002 A new Turbo game!
2003 PCEngineFX Forums!
2004 It is no longer possible to press TG-CD's :(
2005 Why doesn't the sound work on my TurboExpress? Why doesn't the sound work on my TurboDuo?
2006 When did I become a "retro gamer"?
2007 Advent of Buy It Now. Imports are cheap, domestics are expensive. I own Sapphire! He lied to us!
2008 RIP TZD. This shit is getting expensive. Surely, prices will top off.
2009 Insanity! Pressed CD's!
2010 Who are all of these f*cking noobs?
2011 Who are all of these f*cking Youtube idiots?
2012 Concede hopes of U.S. set.
2013 Forum trolling eclipses game time
2014 Rise of the repros
2015 Ceases to be gamer, retro gamer, and collector, just internet a$$hole.
2016 ?

Hm, you're a very astute observer.  :lol:

Something about the last ~3 cut deep into my soul... :/
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Arkhan on October 20, 2017, 04:46:21 AM
the repro stupidity has definitely opened the floodgates for the dumb.

Mostly due to Facebook amplifying people's attention starved narcisisissiisisisissisism.

Sidenote: does anyone else have issues trying to type narcissism 


I just start hitting keys and going f*ck IT. 
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: blueraven on October 20, 2017, 08:52:48 AM
Vestcoat for the win, again.

Cutting through like a scalpel.

Also please bring back your Avatar.

Great to have you back.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: SignOfZeta on October 20, 2017, 10:26:58 AM
I still feel like a noob because my first system was a Duo (ie: I’m not on the first couple years of this timeline.)
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: seieienbu on October 20, 2017, 11:04:13 AM
I still feel like a noob because my first system was a Duo (ie: I’m not on the first couple years of this timeline.)

The way I see it, the only way to be a noob is if you got into Turbografx because of either the Wii or videos on youtube
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: NightWolve on October 20, 2017, 06:19:09 PM
Also please bring back your Avatar.

Done.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: HuMan on October 20, 2017, 07:20:29 PM
The way I see it, the only way to be a noob is if you got into Turbografx because of either the Wii or videos on youtube

It all started on eBay for me, very long time ago now. First was a TG16, but then I saw the light and went to PCE.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: turboswimbz on October 21, 2017, 02:28:03 AM
The way I see it, the only way to be a noob is if you got into Turbografx because of either the Wii or videos on youtube

It all started on eBay for me, very long time ago now. First was a TG16, but then I saw the light and went to PCE.

Ehhh I was labeled a noob despite having a system in 91.  I spent years trying to get more games, but it was not something I could do until I was an actual adult... (haha i remember the days when I was one of the youngest active persons on the forums) and then I was able to start just in time for prices to skyrocket... thus there were a good couple of years of where the frustration on this list starts, I didn't immediately get...I now get it, and wish I didn't. on the upside emulation has also taken off so I can play without throwing out too much cash. . .     
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: HuMan on October 21, 2017, 06:28:45 AM
What I did was get a PCE Duo, an Everdrive and a pack of CD-Rs. I do have a few real PCE HuCards and CDs, but these days it makes no sense to spend hundreds/thousands when there's a good real hardware alternative.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: lukester on October 21, 2017, 06:29:19 AM
The way I see it, the only way to be a noob is if you got into Turbografx because of either the Wii or videos on youtube

It all started on eBay for me, very long time ago now. First was a TG16, but then I saw the light and went to PCE.

Ehhh I was labeled a noob despite having a system in 91.  I spent years trying to get more games, but it was not something I could do until I was an actual adult... (haha i remember the days when I was one of the youngest active persons on the forums) and then I was able to start just in time for prices to skyrocket... thus there were a good couple of years of where the frustration on this list starts, I didn't immediately get...I now get it, and wish I didn't. on the upside emulation has also taken off so I can play without throwing out too much cash. . .     

Youngest forum member here I think, I'm 19. I was 13 when I joined.

Got into the console via Bomberman on the PC. Then I got a Wii and a bunch of virtual console games.

Having to save up my money means a lot of PCE on the laptop. The Everdrive also serves me well.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: SignOfZeta on October 21, 2017, 08:21:51 AM
What I did was get a PCE Duo, an Everdrive and a pack of CD-Rs. I do have a few real PCE HuCards and CDs, but these days it makes no sense to spend hundreds/thousands when there's a good real hardware alternative.

Can we just put that in our sigs and leave it otherwise assumed at this point?
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: SignOfZeta on October 21, 2017, 08:24:57 AM
The way I see it, the only way to be a noob is if you got into Turbografx because of either the Wii or videos on youtube

It all started on eBay for me, very long time ago now. First was a TG16, but then I saw the light and went to PCE.

Ehhh I was labeled a noob despite having a system in 91.  I spent years trying to get more games, but it was not something I could do until I was an actual adult... (haha i remember the days when I was one of the youngest active persons on the forums) and then I was able to start just in time for prices to skyrocket... thus there were a good couple of years of where the frustration on this list starts, I didn't immediately get...I now get it, and wish I didn't. on the upside emulation has also taken off so I can play without throwing out too much cash. . .     

Youngest forum member here I think, I'm 19. I was 13 when I joined.

Got into the console via Bomberman on the PC. Then I got a Wii and a bunch of virtual console games.

Having to save up my money means a lot of PCE on the laptop. The Everdrive also serves me well.


Interesting. I was 19 when I got my Duo. It’s wild to imagine buying a Duo that’s already older than the person buying it.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: HuMan on October 21, 2017, 09:23:30 AM
Apparently I'm a few months older than the Turbo Duo. When did the black PCE Duo launch?
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: turboswimbz on October 21, 2017, 11:04:29 AM

Youngest forum member here I think, I'm 19. I was 13 when I joined.
Got into the console via Bomberman on the PC. Then I got a Wii and a bunch of virtual console games.
Having to save up my money means a lot of PCE on the laptop. The Everdrive also serves me well.


Hence why I said one of the youngest (24 at the time).  There were a couple other teenagers as members back around 2012ish .  PCE is good however you play.  and yeah it's strange to me too Zeta that a few of the systems I have are as old as I am. 
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: ghataa on October 24, 2017, 01:41:11 PM
Got the TG16 and Sega Genesis within days of each other in 1989. May have even been Labor Day weekend.

I really liked both but the TG16 won me over completely when I got the CD attachment on Christmas 1990. I have the pics somewhere. I still have the original massive box!  My favorite was Y's I and II of course!
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: geise on October 27, 2017, 02:04:45 PM
Got the TG16 and Sega Genesis within days of each other in 1989. May have even been Labor Day weekend.

I really liked both but the TG16 won me over completely when I got the CD attachment on Christmas 1990. I have the pics somewhere. I still have the original massive box!  My favorite was Ys I and II of course!
lol! Post pics of you with the box in the show you mugs thread or whatever it's called now.  BTW Welcome!
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: retro junkie on October 28, 2017, 12:01:38 PM
I had the Sega Genesis and the SNES. I had only read about the Turbo Grafx 16 in gaming magazines. There was no internet in those days. I went across the state line into Tennessee and purchased mine off the shelf at a Toys-R-Us. That is were I purchased most of my games that I still have today. My wife gave me the Turbo Express for Christmas that year. I ordered the CD attachment with a money order out of the back of a gaming magazine for $150. They were out so they sent me a replacement, it was a Turbo Duo. I was not disappointed.  :dance: It has been in the last bunch of years that I have acquired the PC Engine. The love continues.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: ghataa on October 30, 2017, 02:41:21 PM
Never was able to afford the Turbo Express. I wanted it desperately but I was a poor graduate student. I was lucky enough to get a Turbo CD which was probably a better choice for me as I instantly fell in love with the system!
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: kenomac78 on November 20, 2017, 02:22:34 PM
2006! exactly? who even created the term retro gamer? I've always preferred the term vintage anyway.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: ClodBuster on November 22, 2017, 05:35:01 PM
1999: Learned about the PCE in a videogame magazine.
2004: Read a book were the PCE was discussed.
2008: Started smoking cigarettes.
2010: Quit smoking.
2010: Food tastes so much better now.
2011: Saw the GameSack episode about the TurboGrafx-16.
2011: Bought a Wii
2012: Got Gradius II on Virtual Console.
2013: Got my Turbo Duo. First game: Bomberman 94.
2013: Oooh shit, sound fades. What's up with that?
2013: Joined PCEFX forums.
2013: Had the Duo's caps replaced by a friend.
2014: I'm pretty much done buying the games I really wanted.
2014: Got a Flashcard. Loaded Magical Chase onto it.
2014: f*ck, my Duo won't power up anymore.
2015: Time to get more TG-16 Virtual Console games before Nintendo closes down the Wii shop.
2015-2017: Spamming the PCEFX forums. Still going to do so.


Don't nail me down on the exact years, I'm not getting younger and wrote this from my memory without actually doing research.


EDIT: Dates corrected.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: retro junkie on November 26, 2017, 01:29:51 AM
Not sure of the accuracy of this timeline. Lets just say it is "sort-of."
1989: Read about it in Game Magazine (Hunger started)
1990: The want & hunger continues without seeing one anywhere. Settles for a Sega Genesis.
1991: Still wanting one but gets sidetracked with a SNES.
1993: Finally finds one out of state Toys-R-Us clearance, purchased with Bonk! Gets Express the same year! Bomberman becomes family time.
1994: Gets a Turbo Duo- Gates of Thunder consumes time.
1995: Gates of Thunder and Lords of Thunder consumes time.
1996: Turbo Grafx shooters continues to dominate game time.
At this point everything becomes muddled with the CD era of gaming. I still had a loyalty to the Turbo but there was a lot of distractions.
December 14, 2014 I return to my senses, my mind clears, as I acquired a PC Engine. My passion is renewed. Games began to pour in at this point and my game time becomes once again flavored with this unusual console and its influence.
2017: Along with my 2DS xl the PC Engine/ Turbo Grafx 16 becomes one of several consoles of that era that I seem to be drawn to and never gets old. That era of gaming is my golden age. Those games are my addiction.

Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: vestcoat on November 27, 2017, 01:52:57 PM
Hey y'all! Nice to see some familiar users posting.

I bought a house last year (actually two on one lot) and got a band going again, so I haven't done much video gaming. Last January I finally picked up a Wii and played some PCE and NeoGeo on the VC. Then I got distracted with Pool of Radiance on the NES again and almost beat that. That's about it.

Made the mistake of trying to buy a NES Classic before it was discontinued -- never again. It seems we've entered the era of not being able to buy stuff because of hyper consumerism (low wages also encourage flippers).

My main nerd activity continues to be D&D. It's easier to do with friends. Combining a hobby and socializing makes the frivolous hours easier to justify. Unlike the TG16, a lot of publishers and fans still support classic D&D, so there's always new material to discuss.

Unfortunately, D&D is mainstream now and collectors are doing what they did to vintage video games ten years ago. Fortunately, I had a twenty-five-year headstart on the posers.

Glad PCEFX endures. The encroachment of Facebook groups into the realm of old bulletin board forums like this is super depressing. There's no institutional memory on Facebook and nobody knows shit. Social media lends itself to photos and haul videos, so most posts are just people bragging about buying crap.

PCEFX is comparatively awesome.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: turboswimbz on November 27, 2017, 02:08:03 PM
Hey y'all! Nice to see some familiar users posting.

I bought a house last year (actually two on one lot) and got a band going again, so I haven't done much video gaming. Last January I finally picked up a Wii and played some PCE and NeoGeo on the VC. Then I got distracted with Pool of Radiance on the NES again and almost beat that. That's about it.

Made the mistake of trying to buy a NES Classic before it was discontinued -- never again. It seems we've entered the era of not being able to buy stuff because of hyper-consumerism (low wages also encourage flippers).

My main nerd activity continues to be D&D. It's easier to do with friends. Combining a hobby and socializing makes the frivolous hours easier to justify. Unlike the TG16, a lot of publishers and fans still support classic D&D, so there's always new material to discuss.

Unfortunately, D&D is mainstream now and collectors are doing what they did to vintage video games ten years ago. Fortunately, I had a twenty-five-year headstart on the posers.

Glad PCEFX endures. The encroachment of Facebook groups into the realm of old bulletin board forums like this is super depressing. There's no institutional memory on Facebook and nobody knows shit. Social media lends itself to photos and haul videos, so most posts are just people bragging about buying crap.

PCEFX is comparatively awesome.

Congrats on the house(s) man!!!!  Well D&D and a Band sound pretty sweet to me.

I enjoy this thread won't quite die. I can finish the timeline now:

2016 - buys houses - gets the band back together - plays some wii VC
2017 - D&D - mainstream, hipster, nerd culture and social media have ruined everything.


Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: _joshuaTurbo on November 28, 2017, 03:07:35 AM
This thread still makes me laugh. Thanks Vesty!  ;)
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Arkhan on November 28, 2017, 04:11:36 AM
2018:  Sell real copies of games for repros "because they look nicer on shelf"

???
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Gentlegamer on December 04, 2017, 08:40:33 AM
My main nerd activity continues to be D&D. It's easier to do with friends. Combining a hobby and socializing makes the frivolous hours easier to justify. Unlike the TG16, a lot of publishers and fans still support classic D&D, so there's always new material to discuss.

Unfortunately, D&D is mainstream now and collectors are doing what they did to vintage video games ten years ago. Fortunately, I had a twenty-five-year headstart on the posers.

I hope this means you're playing real D&D or AD&D, by Gary Gygax.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: vestcoat on December 04, 2017, 04:30:38 PM
Yeah, 1st edition, some 2nd (specialty priests & wizards, tougher dragons, later Greyhawk developments). Taught a bunch of brand new players to enjoy classic rules, appreciate the 70's-80's art , and talk shit about modern editions.
:D
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Arkhan on December 05, 2017, 06:13:52 AM
Yeah, 1st edition, some 2nd (specialty priests & wizards, tougher dragons, later Greyhawk developments). Taught a bunch of brand new players to enjoy classic rules, appreciate the 70's-80's art , and talk shit about modern editions.
:D

2nd edition is the one true religion.
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: Warbucks on December 06, 2017, 07:34:41 AM
I am liking this thread more and more
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: esteban on December 08, 2017, 09:14:43 AM
Hey y'all! Nice to see some familiar users posting.

I bought a house last year (actually two on one lot) and got a band going again, so I haven't done much video gaming. Last January I finally picked up a Wii and played some PCE and NeoGeo on the VC. Then I got distracted with Pool of Radiance on the NES again and almost beat that. That's about it.

Made the mistake of trying to buy a NES Classic before it was discontinued -- never again. It seems we've entered the era of not being able to buy stuff because of hyper consumerism (low wages also encourage flippers).

My main nerd activity continues to be D&D. It's easier to do with friends. Combining a hobby and socializing makes the frivolous hours easier to justify. Unlike the TG16, a lot of publishers and fans still support classic D&D, so there's always new material to discuss.

Unfortunately, D&D is mainstream now and collectors are doing what they did to vintage video games ten years ago. Fortunately, I had a twenty-five-year headstart on the posers.

Glad PCEFX endures. The encroachment of Facebook groups into the realm of old bulletin board forums like this is super depressing. There's no institutional memory on Facebook and nobody knows shit. Social media lends itself to photos and haul videos, so most posts are just people bragging about buying crap.

PCEFX is comparatively awesome.

GODDAMN.

Next thing we know, you’ll be covering the songs from Blodia with your band (please!!! Do it. kthanxbye.)

:)
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: OldTurboBastard on January 19, 2018, 08:24:15 AM
Believe it or not, I actually had friends who bought a turbografx after I got mine...and both got the CDROM too, so thats where i played it first. I ended up trading a 5 cd changer for my friends entire turbo setup after i had sold mine. Then i sold all that for like $200 in 1997 or so. Ugh. But by that time out was collecting dust unless me and 4 other stoned friends wanted to play "motoroader"....We LOVED that game during my college years!
Title: Re: The lifeline of a TurboGrafx gamer
Post by: CZroe on January 19, 2018, 12:20:38 PM
My timeline:
Around 1992 I saw the logo on the side of a kiosk next to a Game Boy kiosk at a department store. Couldn’t see the screen. I was on an outing with a youth-group or a baby sitter or something and they didn’t allow me to go check it out. For whatever reason, the group was split and my twin brother was allowed to go check it out, which made me insanely jealous. They all repeatedly told me that I’d be able to see it “next time,” but it was gone the next time. I’ve felt cheated ever since.

Around 1993, my friend from school brought over his TG16. He traded his Genesis to his uncle for it. I remember Devil’s Crush, Pacland, Bonk, and more. It left a lasting impression. I had only played SNES in stores back then and my home console was still the NES.

My twin brother and I collected cans and mowed lawns and saved birthday/Christmas money and sold our NES, scrimping and saving until February 1994 when we bought... an SNES. After all, we had just sold our NES with SMB/SMB3 and the free Super Mario All*Stars deal that Nintendo extended was a big reason to sell the NES. We couldn’t even afford the set with SMW. I still remember the night before when I had a sudden realization that maybe I was making a mistake with the SNES, so I called up my friend from school and asked him if I should get an SNES or a Genesis. I failed to even consider TG16. :(

I probably didn’t even realize that it ever had a CD-ROM or that the Turbo Duo existed until I was on the Internet around 1996. I was intrigued, but it was far too late considering that the PlayStation, Saturn, and N64 were the new thing, but I soon discovered emulation... and Strip Fighter II. ;) This was the SNES96, NESticle, GeneCYST, and Virtual Game Boy years, so I was there for a lot of the major developments in console emulation and followed VG-Network.com religiously. This is around when I got interested in getting older consoles but I needed to get another SNES after (regrettably) selling that to get my N64. I was still a jobless teenager with no allowance so the time scale to rebuild my SNES collection while building an N64 collection was YEARS. All the while, I knew I’d buy a TG16 if I ever found a good price in the wild. Heck, I even had a brief stint with an Atari Jaguar when K-B Toys has it for $29.99... but still no TG16.

Strangely, I finished the ‘90s without ever coming across a TG16 in local thrift stores, yard sales, or flea markets despite checking often. I did finally luck out on a Turbo Express at Goodwill in the mid 2000s, it by that time I had lots of old or obscure stuff, like CD-i, 3DO, imports, etc. Goodwill had a $1 sticker on it in a section for $1 toys but the register person peeled back the sticker to reveal som old yard sale sticker or something and ended up charging me three times as much. I was insulted at the insinuation that I tried to scam them but I was still excited to get it for so cheap. It included Falcon (ugh).

With no audio and poor picture quality, I soon realized that it needed work and as a budding electronics hobbyist I did what we all do with the stuff we want to work on... put it in the projects bin for nearly a decade while I work on other projects. I can’t tell you how many times I dreamed of getting to play Devil’s Crush again but it just sat there, taunting me. I did eventually get a cap kit and take care of it right before finding a TG16 in the wild around 2013 (FINALLY!).

The “in the wild” TG16 was at a game store that wanted $120 for it. I stayed there for months but I eventually came back in 2014 with $120 only to find that it had finally just sold. To add insult to injury, there was a $90 top loader NES with it the whole time and that had also just sold (Hi-Def NES had just been announced).

2015 had my back though. I was still a regular at the flea markets and someone finally showed up with a TG16. He agreed to sell it for $15 because there were no cords to test it, but he found them when I came back by the next day... and he didn’t want any extra for them. Score! Original RF switch, controller, Keith Courage HuCard, and AC adapter. Still had the shipping film over the logo!

2016 brought my Turbo Everdrive, so I finally got my fix.

2017 saw me trade my Turbo ED for my CD dock just a couple weeks before the Super SD System 3 was announced. I also ordered a “junk” CD-ROM^2 drive which arrived right around the new year. I waited until Black Friday to order a replacement Turbo ED but it has yet to arrive.

2018, I’ve (hopefully) repaired my “junk” CD-ROM^2 drive and started a small CD collection but I still can’t play them until I get my replacement Turbo ED (no System Card). I swapped the laser and tweaked the pots to get it playing pressed CDs and I made my own 11v 1.5A PSU so hopefully I’m ready.

What’s next: I plan to build a 2P NeoGeo stick to TG16 adapter based on a design from OSHPark and then I’ll look into making a DIY 6 button version. I’ve long wanted to play Rondo of Blood but I’m aware of just how much else I have missed and I’ll try to save that for the future (perhaps after playing the series in order).