
Laser disc games and indeed popular game systems of the time did not operate under such limitations.
#TIME GAL GAME OVER FULL#
Many of the early games to use full motion video tended to only use 32 colors on-screen. The Sega CD graphic's hardware was limited to displaying 64 colors on-screen, out of 512 total colors. Heck, it was not even a perfect adaption of an older arcade game. Once the initial awe and excitement was over, two things became rather clear in the minds of consumers who had eagerly bought into the Sega CD hype.įirst off all, Time Gal was an adaption of an older game (something about a 1990s "Next Level" ad campaign does not scream "Lets All Go Back To The 1980s"). Never before had most gamers of my generation actually played a game that looked, sounded and moved like a cartoon. It may not seem like much today, but seeing Time Gal on the Sega CD was amazing. They didn't need to find a laser disc arcade machine, and they didn't need to pay a thousand dollars (or so) to get a decent CD-ROM computer. To make a long story short (too late?) if you were an American consumer in the early 1990s - mid 1990s, the Sega CD was more affordable then a good CD-ROM computer.įor the first time, American consumers - on a fairly large scale - got to play a video game like Time Gal in the comfort of their own living room or even bedroom.
#TIME GAL GAME OVER PC#
While PC and Mac computers were also moving on into the CD-ROM format, the price of a decent CD-ROM computer was still bigger then most consumers wallets.

It had a distant third place in terms of national support and visibility, not unlike, say, a third party candidate in American politics, like Ralph Nader. It was pretty much the third party in the American video game market. NEC was first, but not too important.įar fewer American consumers were familiar with the NEC CD-ROM system. The Sega CD was probably the first CD-ROM game system that lots of kids - at least in America - heard about and played. Remember that it was designed and marketed for consumers who grown up with games having to fit on computer discs or video cartridges. Initially, Time Gal did look and sound simply revolutionary on the Sega CD. In fact most of the early games released for the Sega CD were games that featured extensive animation or full motion video. Time Gal for the Sega CD was one of the first games released for the CD-ROM game system.

The Sega CD - for all its many faults - could potentially do much large, interactive game worlds and, yes, offer consumers the type of features normally seen in coin-op arcade games, especially laser disc arcade games.īigger means better, right? What could possible, possible go wrong with the Next Level? The limited storage capacity also meant that games could not have full motion, extensive dialogue read by actors or other digital audio and video effects that been limited to some coin-op arcade games and a few laser disc games.

OK, so the limited storage capacity of a video cartridge or a computer disk, made it impractical produce the type of sand box or open world concepts games that we see today.
#TIME GAL GAME OVER INSTALL#
Most computer discs had less storage capacity, which meant that games often required more then one disc to install or even play. The most part a video cartridge had anywhere between 1 - 25 megabytes of memory stored in it. Not many consumers could afford to, especially in the era of Reagan Economics. Not too many consumers are going to spend three hundred dollars on a single video game. Well, the only way to make a profit with a video cartridge of that size, was to price the game at over a hundred dollars. However, only one company tried to do this commercially? Why Yes, a video cartridge can - technically - hold a very large game memory 500 megabytes (the standard for a CD at the time). It was probably memory for gamers in the 1970s - 1980s, but the limitations meant that games the size a of a game - including size of the game's world - faces practical limitations.

Remember that a computer disc or a video cartridge could not store too much memory. Sega, which certainly had some amazing advertising campaigns in the 1990s, stepped its corporate toe into the CD-ROM pool with the tagline "Welcome To The Next Level".Īctually, Sega of Japan did the stepping, apparently without much feedback from their American branch, and the Sega CD (or Mega CD for PAL gamers) ending up frustrating gamers, especially Sega fans, more so then anything else. Just as the music industry had to say "goodbye" to records and cassette taps, the game industry was going to have to say "goodbye" to its old technology and, yes, "hello" to the huge storage capacity of CD discs. The final days of floppy disks and cartridges was coming upon consumers. In the early 1990s, the CD-ROM revolution was hitting both world of computer and video games.
