kestla wrote:OoT was 256mb - I remember merely because I was at school at the time and valiantly defending the N64 against the PSX fanboys. Numbers were a big deal back then! lol Still a staggering amount of game in a number that wouldn't even cover a bunch of new guns in a CoD update
retroking1981 wrote:Just like kids thinking the floppy disc icon on MS Office is the save icon and not that it used to be a physical disc with 1.44MB.
davyK wrote:kestla wrote:OoT was 256mb - I remember merely because I was at school at the time and valiantly defending the N64 against the PSX fanboys. Numbers were a big deal back then! lol Still a staggering amount of game in a number that wouldn't even cover a bunch of new guns in a CoD update
256 megabits = 32 megabytes. It's amazing - isn't it? I assume some sort of compression was used but then 3D polys don't actually take up a lot of space as they are vector data. Textures would take up space. But really to get a world of that size and the associated code into that amount of storage is impressive.
LtPidgeon wrote:Any word on the hack for this being released? It's a pain in the arse having to get up to change games.
mistercrayon wrote:LtPidgeon wrote:Any word on the hack for this being released? It's a pain in the arse having to get up to change games.
If you have a wii pro controller then the home button replicates the reset button.
poprock wrote:retroking1981 wrote:Just like kids thinking the floppy disc icon on MS Office is the save icon and not that it used to be a physical disc with 1.44MB.
And that was only after we moved to HD (high density) floppies … beforehand it used to be half that!
retroking1981 wrote:poprock wrote:retroking1981 wrote:Just like kids thinking the floppy disc icon on MS Office is the save icon and not that it used to be a physical disc with 1.44MB.
And that was only after we moved to HD (high density) floppies … beforehand it used to be half that!
Was that the actual floppy flopping discs? I remember the C64 ones being like that.
Unlikely wrote:Can't see the video but I thought the "C" designation was because "A" and "B" were typically reserved for floppy drives.
Unlikely wrote:Or that came on more than two disks (see above).
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