Did you have a gameboy as a kid? Because an iPod touch isn't all that much more valuable than those things were, all things considered. I for one would have /killed/ for a modern smart phone as a kid.bluepilot said:I am not taking a high pedestal, I am just trying to illustrate that compared to when I was 10, kids who are 10 these days have things much more complicated. I have an iphone now and even though having it is awesome, there is also a level of stress to having such an expensive piece of equipment. If my iphone were to get lost or damaged, I think that I would melt in a corner and cry. I do not think that the 10 year old me could have coped with that kind of stress...it was stressful enough lusting after those holographic rare cards.IamQ said:Can you even see me from that high pedestal of yours?bluepilot said:I see 10 year olds today walking around with their ipads, iphones e.t.c....when I was 10, I had pokemon cards
Seriously, can you people stop acting like you were so much more pure and good than other kids when you were there age. Had iphones and all that junk existed when you were a kid, you too would have those. And how are those worse than pokemon cards? How do you even compare them? They're not simular exactly.
I remember when I was 10. I wasn't playing pokemon cards. Me and my friends would be on the school computers and play runescape when the day was over until we had to go home to eat.
Edit: Also, you can get Android phones that are actually cheaper in raw dollar amount, let alone inflation adjusted, than a gameboy was back in the day. I'm looking at one right now that costs $80, but is powerful enough to easily emulate anything up to the PS1, and with a bit more difficulty do the N64, too -- and that difficulty is probably caused more by the rough state that N64 emulation is in than the actual power of the processor[footnote]in the early days of N64 emulation, the devs focused on hacks to get big games working instead of accurate emulation to get everything working. Unfortunately, nobody ever went back and made a truly accurate one, and it's left N64 emulation annoyingly buggy. PS1 emulation, like most other forms of emulation, is focused on near 100% accurate emulation of the system, with game compatibility arising from the accurate emulation, rather than tweaks for specific games.[/footnote]. For comparison, the Gameboy Color was $150 retail by the time I got it, and that was after Pokemon Gold and Silver came out, so the price may have already dropped a bit by then.