Funny, I have a slim and it plays ps1 discs.neonsword13-ops said:Sorry about your loss, bro.
Looks like it's time to move on to bigger and better things.
*cough*PS3orPCmaster-race,takeyourpick*cough*
OT: My N64 still works perfectly. Can't say the same for the cartridges, though. And I have had it since I was three so it's been in my possession for, oh... 13 years?
I just wish my PS2 didn't bite the dust in '05. I had to get the slimmer one, rendering all of my PS1 discs useless.
It came out in 2006, so it's 6 years old now, not 3.NinjaDeathSlap said:Ok, I have to take my hat off to this one. My brother had an LG Chocolate and it was possible the most fragile, unreliable phone I've ever seen. A lot of friends had them too, and the longest any one model lasted was around 3 months. So how yours is still working after what must be at least 3 years now (I can't remember exactly when it came out) I don't even know.Dirty Hipsters said:This isn't exactly my longest lasting piece of tech, but I bought one of those LG Chocolate phones at launch, and the damn thing still works. I don't use it anymore, I traded up to an Android smartphone, but my dad uses it now, after his last phone crapped out on him after only 2 months of use.
So yeah, I have a cellphone that's been working for 6 years without a single problem or defect. I'd say that's pretty damn impressive in this day and age.
Nokias don't count though. Everyone knows that the only things that can survive a direct nuclear blast are cockroaches and Nokia phones.Matthew94 said:Pu-leeese
![]()
My Nokia 3220, released in 2004 and still works. That being said I now use a Lumia 800. The 3220 could survive a nuclear blast.