What are your favorite Nintendo games across all systems?
Hellmo_luciferrari @ Hellmo_Luciferrari @lemm.ee Posts 12Comments 342Joined 2 yr. ago
Super Mario World - Hands down my favorite game of all time.
Donkey Kong Country - I know people typically prefer 2 but 1 holds a special place in my heart.
Super Mario Land 2: The 6 Golden Coins - Another game that holds a special place in my heart. It was still Mario, but it had charm of its own never revisited in any other Mario game.
Super Mario Land 3: Wario Land - Another game that was off the beaten path a bit compared to its other entries. It was the best Wario game in my opinion.
Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island - I would play this game at my aunt's house in the basement just like Donkey Kong Country, and it was a visual treat as well as an auditory treat. This game memorized me as a kid, and still puts me into a trance to this day.
Mortal Kombat II - This was one of the games both my parents actually sat down and played with me when I was that young and could remember.
Stunt Race FX - One of the few racing games I ever played when I was a little tyke. It was fun, but looking back the frame rate and fidelity of the game leaves me in awe at how much things change. I didn't care then. Now I prefer much smoother frame rates.
Pokemon Emerald - I loved Pokemon even before I got to play the games. I did have yellow, but I didn't beat it or play much because it was gifted to me by my crush in elementary school. I still have the cartridge. The first pokemon game I had was Ruby, and later Sapphire. But Emerald was my favorite experience of this generation. The music is still haunting to me. I listen to it from time to time. I had over 300 hours into my save before the battery crapped out. I later moved all the Pokemon from this game as well as R+S to my DS games. I had so many friends, and cousins, even strangers I'd meet who would play these games with me. It was the first sense of community that I ever felt.
Pokemon Leaf Green - this game I got a special edition bundle of sorts and I got the manual with it. I would stay up late trying to beat it every night that I could. I tried not to use the manual, which I did mostly successfully. I layer for Fire Red too. I let my sister play Fire Red and we would play these games for hours and battle and train with each other.
Mario & Luigi Superstar Saga - I didn't get into a lot of RPG games prior to this. I already loved Mario games, and so this was a natural progression for me to pick up. I played this game to death. The cameos were wonderful in the coffee shop.
Wario Land 4 - it was my first GBA game, and felt different enough from all the others yet familiar enough to be similar to why I loved Wario Land 1.
Mario 64 DS - I never owned an N64 but I played it at a cousins house so when one Christmas I stumbled upon my presents this game was there a long with a DS.
Mario Kart DS - This game was so much fun. My sister had it, so did my step brother, but my step sister played as the guest character Shy Guy. I spent hours racing them, and I spent hours unlocking everything. A truly great portable experience.
Nintendogs: Dachshund and Friends - while this game isn't something I'll ever go back to, I will always have fond memories of it. When I had this, my sister had another Nintendoga game. We played it together all of the time.
Pokemon Platinum - I skipped Diamond and Pearl, and didn't pick this game up until I was a bit older. I thought I had fallen off the series not helped by the constant bullying in school over it. I played this whole others focused on playing Call of Duty, Halo, and other "more grown up games." This game reminded me how much fun the series was, and how much these games built my childhood up.
Super Smash Bros. Melee - my first smash bros. Game that I owned. My step brother and I would play this. And this game brought out my discoveries on the Internet with cheat websites and gaming rumors. I remember trying to unlock characters that were not part of the game due to rumors.
Luigi's Mansion - Never was a horror fan per se but this game was so different to me and it gripped me. I loved this game so much. The exploration, the ghost catching, and all within a universe I love.
Mario Kart Double Dash - this was my second Mario Kart game, and although it wasn't the first I have played it definitely had great levels, great gimmicks, and is still fun.
Pokemon Colosseum - It was fresh, it was new. It was like a new more grown up Pokemon adventure was there to grow and change with me.
New Super Mario Bros. Wii - While I skipped the DS release of NSMB I did love this one. I played every level, collected every star coin, beat every level including world 9. It was wonderful because my first serious relationship the gal I was seeing and I had a competition when we were apart to see who could beat it first, and with all levels star coins collected.
Pokemon Y - back on to the Pokemon kick, I got Y when I got my 3DS and I loved this game. Felt a fitting entry into a more 3D type game for handheld Pokemon. From all of my GBA and DD games I brought my Pokemon to my copy of Y and got to see my childhood digital pals thrive in a brand new adventure.
There are so many more games I could list, but these games were some of the Nintendo games that hold a special place in my heart. I wouldn't be the same person had I not experienced these games when I did, with who I did. It brought me so much joy throughout growing up. Especially when I was having problems with health, or school, or parents splitting, or grieving over the loss of family who did play these games with me.
I'm now an adult with my own place, my own life, a career, and just miss the times when what mattered was the fun and friends I made along the way.
You didn't do anything wrong, I just found it funny. Absolutely no hate thrown your way!
I can understand that preference. I think hearing my mom call them raspberries irked me enough that it ruined it for me.
I struggle to understand why there are a select few people who refer to their Raspberry Pi's as raspberries. They are Pi's, or Raspberry Pi's not raspberries. 🤣
There are some programs I still use that are designed for Windows, but use cases are "niche" or at very least specialized:
- Guitar Pro 8 - Guitar Tab software
- Line 6 HX Edit - Helix Settings Editor
- Line 6 Powercab Edit - Amp Settings Editoe
- Line 6 Updater - Firmware Updater for Line 6 Products
- Steelseries GG - Configuration Software for Steelseries Peripherals
- Numerous VSTs and other Audio Plugins
These are just what I remember I use off the top of my head.
I do use Guitar Pro 8 with Wine, but the others won't work through Wine. I did try to use the others with a Windows KVM through QEMU but I ultimately gave up and left one windows workstation because of my issues with my Nvidia RTX 3090.
It's not FOSS but I used Textra for years and it's quite great. I don't think it supports bubbles, but it's worth checking out
I won't be going to theaters to see this movie. It feels forced, and the cast doesn't inspire confidence that it's going to be good.
I personally wouldn't use Manjaro, especially if you plan to use anything from the AUR.
Even with X11 I have had nothing but instability sadly.
I wanted to switch to Arch like I did for my laptop, but the cons outweighed the pros ultimately for me.
Wow, I can't believe I missed your response. Sorry for such a late reply.
General instability, absolutely. Multi display issues. And seemingly no matter what I do Wayland on KDE is basically unusable for me.
How do you go about passing basic integrity? I thought Play Integrity Fix was dead.
I've tried the open source drivers, the proprietary dkms variant, and standard proprietary drivers and all give me issues.
And here I am with a 3090 having more issues than I have time for wishing I went with an AMD card. Sadly we both can see grass ain't necessarily greener.
I don't have any input to add to the conversation, but I definitely would be interested to hear from anyone with experience using booster.
NTFS will give you issues just like exfat. You can partition it as multiple partitions. 1 ntfs, 1 ext4. Or I personally for Linux have been using btrfs.
There is a btrfs driver for windows, but I don't know much about ita use cases.
https://btrfs.readthedocs.io/en/latest/btrfs-convert.html
This could help
As someone wise once said to me, consider your threat model.
Before I even found Lemmy I did go down that rabbit hold. I love GrapheneOS
As MajorHavoc said, there are ways. I do in fact use GrapheneOS, have access to a reasonably secure VPN, I use Firefox as well as Vanadium, within Firefox I use Ublock Origin and a few other tools. Some argue that having as many layers of "protection" is counterintuitive because it makes your fingerprint on the web more unique.
Thank you! I know a lot of what I put comes down to my rose tinted glasses but it's nice to know others can see some of it the same. I agree, games in their more primitive states can be more imagination engaging. I would say that, even the GBC and GBA still invoke a sense of wonder fueled by imagination to some extent.