I was born in 1981, and my earliest gaming memory is Air-Sea Battle on an Atari 2600, which was probably about 1985, maybe a little earlier. NES took up most of the memories through the 80's (even saw "The Wizard" in theaters in anticipation of Mario 3), then we got a Genesis in 1991. The Genesis was what helped me to see games as more than just fancy toys. Anyway, about my age...
My Mom teaches 7th grade English and about around 2003, a thought occurred to me about and the year 1991. This was the year most of my Mom's students were born. That means, chances are, they probably never had an original NES, much less a 2600. Also, since they probably didn't start gaming until around the age of four or five, that means that most (if not all of them) completely missed the 16-bit era and went straight to a Playstation (probably never even heard of the Saturn). They hit the ground running with full 3D and CD-ROMS. They only reason they even know what a cartridge is is because of the Game Boy or the N64. They regard full voice-over, dynamic lighting, and cinematic cut-scenes as the norm, not novelties.
That makes me feel old.
My Mom teaches 7th grade English and about around 2003, a thought occurred to me about and the year 1991. This was the year most of my Mom's students were born. That means, chances are, they probably never had an original NES, much less a 2600. Also, since they probably didn't start gaming until around the age of four or five, that means that most (if not all of them) completely missed the 16-bit era and went straight to a Playstation (probably never even heard of the Saturn). They hit the ground running with full 3D and CD-ROMS. They only reason they even know what a cartridge is is because of the Game Boy or the N64. They regard full voice-over, dynamic lighting, and cinematic cut-scenes as the norm, not novelties.
That makes me feel old.