Kind of spinning off from the whole "console exclusivity" debate, I realized one of the big things that often influenced my decision to buy a new console was "backwards compatibility". My early years weren't so well informed, I had a NES, so of course the Super NES was the next step. It was the likes of games like Oddworld and Final Fantasy 7 that made me go Playstation and then... I more or less clicked into position as a "Sony Player" for awhile.
I had no issues at all deciding on a PS2 for a very simple reason, I could play all my PS1 games on it. I knew this would be important because even at that stage I was having problems with my old NES systems working right, it was evident these systems won't last forever so extending the life of them into the new generation was really a big deal for me. Since I was already enjoying the Playstation line, I went ahead and bought a PSP, a super powerful handheld that blew everything else out of the water (for it's time) and I still love playing my PSP, and due to the ease of mobility handhelds offered I purchased about 20 something PSOne Classics to really round out my game collection, several I already had owned, several others I never got a chance to play before. This of course influenced my decision to choose a PS3 over an XBOX 360 or Wii, because with the PS3 I already had 20 games that would work on it guaranteed AND it is backwards compatible with PS1 Game Discs.
Nintendo, starting with the Gameboy line-up has kept up with backwards compatibility fairly well, their consoles began doing it once they went to disc based systems, with the Wii and Wii U both supporting their predecessor's line-up.
What about the big-dogs this generation though? the XBOX One and PS4 both going to x86 architecture means leaving any thought of backwards compatibility in the dust. Even on PCs, the mightiest of all gaming platforms, new Windows OS's are making it more difficult to run certain older games, though that at least wasn't an intentional move.
This of course concerns me that a big aspect of what drove me as a customer to new consoles and even new operating systems (I stayed XP for the longest time...) is being largely phased out with excuses of "nobody cares".
I'm curious to find out what other people's opinions on backwards compatibility is and how important it has been to your console/OS buying habits.
I had no issues at all deciding on a PS2 for a very simple reason, I could play all my PS1 games on it. I knew this would be important because even at that stage I was having problems with my old NES systems working right, it was evident these systems won't last forever so extending the life of them into the new generation was really a big deal for me. Since I was already enjoying the Playstation line, I went ahead and bought a PSP, a super powerful handheld that blew everything else out of the water (for it's time) and I still love playing my PSP, and due to the ease of mobility handhelds offered I purchased about 20 something PSOne Classics to really round out my game collection, several I already had owned, several others I never got a chance to play before. This of course influenced my decision to choose a PS3 over an XBOX 360 or Wii, because with the PS3 I already had 20 games that would work on it guaranteed AND it is backwards compatible with PS1 Game Discs.
Nintendo, starting with the Gameboy line-up has kept up with backwards compatibility fairly well, their consoles began doing it once they went to disc based systems, with the Wii and Wii U both supporting their predecessor's line-up.
What about the big-dogs this generation though? the XBOX One and PS4 both going to x86 architecture means leaving any thought of backwards compatibility in the dust. Even on PCs, the mightiest of all gaming platforms, new Windows OS's are making it more difficult to run certain older games, though that at least wasn't an intentional move.
This of course concerns me that a big aspect of what drove me as a customer to new consoles and even new operating systems (I stayed XP for the longest time...) is being largely phased out with excuses of "nobody cares".
I'm curious to find out what other people's opinions on backwards compatibility is and how important it has been to your console/OS buying habits.