Category: Time

My Collection: PSP

I wasn’t planning on doing another of these posts so soon but I got a PS Vita for my birthday. This was the final nail in the PSP coffin (so to speak), so since I found myself packing the PSP away into the ‘permanent collection’ I thought it was a good time to do a retrospective of the many years of enjoyment it has given me.

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In December 2004, Sony released their first handheld console, the Playstation Portable, or PSP. I bought one on launch day in the US, March 24, 2005. It cost me $249.99 and I also bought Lumines, a puzzle game.

At launch, this was an extremely impressive device. It had a beautiful screen, wi-fi connectivity, was the first handheld with an analogue stick and used media with far more capacity than the cartridges Nintendo were using for their Gameboy Advance and DS systems. The PSP also launched very shortly after the DS, and was initially a much more impressive unit. The future looked rosy indeed for Sony.

Furthermore, the Universal Media Discs (UMD) that the PSP used were being used to sell movies and TV shows as well, and Sony wasted no time marketing the PSP as an all-in-one device. Customers showed little interest in buying movies though, and this market was soon abandoned and the PSP was devoted to being a game system.

Within a few years western support for the device as a game system had cooled as well. More and more tier-1 console franchises saw their PSP versions canceled or never announced, and it became more a console for translated Japanese games. In other words, it became heaven to an otaku like myself! The PSP more and more became the console for RPGs, shooters or other quirky games that would have been too risky to release on PS3. I lapped them all up, and I loved the thing.

Some examples:

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R-Type Tactics (2008) – A tactical based shooter set in the R-Type universe. Unique, difficult and very playable!

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Metal Gear AC!D (2005) – The second game I purchased for the PSP was this crazy tactical card game set in the Metal Gear universe. Incredibly entertaining, very replayable and for my money the second best Metal Gear game yet (after its sequel)!

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Patapon (2008) – A rhythm RPG in which you control an army of Patapon’s against many fierce beasts. The graphics are in silhouette, the music charming and the gameplay surprisingly deep. A landmark PSP series (there are two sequels) that I’ll remember forever.

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Tactics Ogre: Let Us Cling Together (2011) – If you look back on my list of favourite games of all time, this one (which originally came out for SNES in 1995) is one of them. The best version by far is the PSP re-release from 2011. This game is so packed with content I feel I could play it forever…

Of course no mention of the PSP library would be complete without the recognition of one particular series, and that would be Monster Hunter. Capcom’s juggernaut series was first released for PS2, but didn’t explode until it came out on PSP. Suddenly Japanese players discovered they could easily hunt monsters together via this portable system, and in the years that followed the launch of Monster Hunter Portable (Freedom in the west) in 2006 the sales of the PSP would get a large bump with each new Monster Hunter game.

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I was – still am – addicted to the series, and played them all for many, many hours. To this day, I suspect Monster Hunter Freedom Unite (aka Portable 2g) is the portable game I have played more than any other, with a save file somewhere near 400 hours (not including the ~130 hours on the old savefiles that were imported from previous versions).

In 2007 Sony released a new model of the PSP – called the PSP Slim – that I bought on release day. It was lighter and had a better screen and longer battery life. In 2009 they also released a version called the PSP Go that was digital only and did not include the UMD drive, which meant it couldn’t play any of the existing games unless you repurchased them digitally. This was a tremendously bad idea and unsurprisingly it failed miserably, being withdrawn from the market within six months.

The writing was on the wall for the device in the west even then, and the last few years have seen few new game releases, especially in physical versions. The last UMD-based game released in the west came out last November (I bought it), over a year after the PSP’s replacement device (the PS Vita) was released.

During the years I purchased 102 different PSP games. Here’s a shot of most of my collection:

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The PSP had no lockout, which meant games worked no matter where you bought them. About 15% of my collection is from Japan, Australia or the UK. I also have a decent amount of promotional UMDs (thanks AW!) also strangely some of these don’t work on either of my systems. Compared to my game collection as a whole, the PSP ranks sixth in terms of total games owned.

One of the PSPs strengths – the physical drive – is also a weakness. I haven’t used my original PSP in years, but around the time I purchased the slim model the original was demonstrating loading issues. And in the last year or so the springs on the UMD drive on my slim model have weakened, and occasionally discs take an excessive time loading. Were the PSP to continue as a viable device, I imagine I would have had to purchase a new one soon. I do wonder how playable they will be in the years to come.

For now, everything you see above is being sealed inside the pink storage box and put away. I can thank my PSP’s for nine years and thousands of hours of fun. In my opinion the PSP is one of the best handheld systems ever made.

A Life In Lists #3: Games

And so we get to the last list, the one you were probably expecting and the one you were waiting for!

My favourite video games of the last 42 years

1972 – n/a
1973 – n/a
1974 – n/a
1975 – n/a
1976 – n/a
1977 – n/a)
1978 – Space Invaders (arcade)
1979 – Galaxian (arcade)
1980 – Rogue (unix)
1981 – Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord (Apple II)

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1982 – Robotron: 2084 (arcade)
1983 – Moria (unix)
1984 – Elite (BBC)
1985 – Super Mario Bros. (NES)
1986 – The Legend Of Zelda (NES)
1987 – Final Fantasy (NES)
1988 – Final Fantasy II (NES)

BuCKs

1989 – Cadash (arcade)
1990 – Super Mario World (SNES)
1991 – Street Fighter 2 (arcade)
1992 – Shining Force (Genesis)
1993 – Ogre Battle: March Of The Black Queen (SNES)
1994 – Final Fantasy VI (SNES)

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1995 – Tactics Ogre: Let Us Cling Together (SNES)
1996 – Super Mario 64 (N64)
1997 – DoDonPachi (arcade)
1998 – Final Fantasy Tactics (PSX)

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1999 – Valkyrie Profile (PSX)
2000 – Diablo 2 (PC)
2001 – Final Fantasy X (PS2)
2002 – Metroid Prime (Gamecube)
2003 – P.N. 03 (Gamecube)

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2004 – World of Warcraft (PC)
2005 – Animal Crossing: Wild World (DS)
2006 – Elite Beat Agents (DS)
2007 – Etrian Odyssey (DS)
2008 – The World Ends With You (DS)
2009 – Monster Hunter Freedom Unite (PSP)

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2010 – Monster Hunter Tri (Wii)
2011 – Minotron: 2012 (iOS)
2012 – Diablo 3 (PC)
2013 – Puzzle & Dragons (iOS)
2014 – ?

Games are listed by the year of first release (not necessarily when I first played them) with the platform they were first released on. If this says Apple or BBC, then I would have played them first on the Commodore 64, probably a year later.

As I formed this list I asked myself: Would I still play this game today? For everything listed, the answer is yes. This doesn’t mean I overlooked games I loved in my youth for games I prefer as an adult, because you can rest assured I played the hell out of all of this stuff way back when it was released as well 🙂

This was another near-impossible list to assemble. In my youth I must have played virtually every single arcade game I ever saw, and over the years have played thousands (no exaggeration!) of console games. How to distill such an experience down to 42? In 1985 alone the  release of the timeless Super Mario Bros. meant that other classics such as Paradroid, Ultima IV, Star Quake and a wealth of arcade shooters (Gradius, Exed Exes, Slap Fight, Tiger Heli) missed the list. 1990 was another impossible choice, with Super Mario World facing off against Ultima VI and Wizardry VI! In recent years I have spent more time on fewer games. It’s very hard to single out just one 🙁

The choice of Diablo 3 for 2012 may require some explanation, since I once described it as the largest disappointment and did not give it my ‘game of the year’ award. Since then, I have played the PS3 version inside out and enjoyed every moment of it. Furthermore, just last week Blizzard (finally!) massively overhauled the PC version and ‘fixed it’. The wrongs have therefore been righted, it seems, and I believe that Diablo 3 will be giving me enjoyment for a long time to come.

So, fellow gamers, what do you think? I’m sure I have a few controversial choices on here. What did I miss?

A Life In Lists #2: Songs

It’s time for list two!

As with the previous, this is of course subjective. And as with the previous, I’m sure you’ll all agree because it’s not as if we’ve got strong opinions about our music! 😉

Now there are a few more rules this time around, but the foremost one – before you start reading – is that this is a list of favourite singles. The criteria are described afterward…

My favourite singles of the last 42 years

1972 – Rocket Man (Elton John)  {Possibly the best single of all time.}
1973 – Life On Mars (David Bowie)
1974 – Waterloo (Abba)
1975 – Autobahn (Kraftwerk)
1976 – Dancing Queen (Abba)

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1977 – Sound and Vision (David Bowie)
1978 – YMCA (The Village People)
1979 – Cars (Gary Numan)
1980 – Keep On Loving You (REO Speedwagon)
1981 – Vienna (Ultravox)
1982 – Don’t Change (INXS)
1983 – Total Eclipse Of The Heart (Bonnie Tyler)

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1984 – Forever Young (Alphaville)  {My favourite song of all time}
1985 – Take On Me (A-ha)
1986 – Love Missile F1-11 (Sigue Sigue Sputnik)
1987 – Never Let Me Down Again (Depeche Mode)
1988 – A Little Respect (Erasure)
1989 – Free Fallin’ (Tom Petty)

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1990 – Enjoy The Silence (Depeche Mode)
1991 – You Could Be Mine (Guns N’ Roses)
1992 – November Rain (Guns N’ Roses)
1993 – Everybody Hurts (REM)
1994 – Circle Of Life (Elton John)
1995 – Missing (Everything But The Girl)
1996 – It’s All Coming Back To Me Now (Celine Dion)
1997 – Candle In The Wind (1997) (Elton John) {Powerful}
1998 – My Heart Will Go On (Celine Dion)

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1999 – Praise You (Fatboy Slim)
2000 – Oop’s I Did It Again (Britney Spears)
2001 – I Feel Loved (Depeche Mode)
2002 – n/a
2003 – Solsbury Hill (Erasure)
2004 – Amerika (Rammstein)
2005 – Don’t Let The Man Get You Down (Fatboy Slim)  {The video}

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2006 – In The Future When All’s Well (Morrissey)
2007 – n/a
2008 – All You Need Is Me (Morrissey)
2009 – Wrong (Depeche Mode)
2010 – Firework (Katy Perry)

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2011 – When I Start To Break It All Down (Erasure)
2012 – She Wolf (Falling To Pieces) (David Guetta featuring Sia)
2013 – n/a
2014 – ?

Songs were eligible if they charted (top 100) in either Australia, England or the USA during the year listed.

Compared to the list of movies, this was really, really difficult!

If 1973 was incredibly hard (due to Drive-In Saturday, 20th Century Boy, You’re So Vain and Ballroom Blitz) then the late 70s and early 80s were all but impossible! Given that a choice like Keep On Loving You vs Xanadu vs Enola Gay (all in 1980) gave me a cold sweat, the unfairness of 50 amazing songs in 1984 (from which I had to choose one) caused me to weep openly.

By contrast the 2000’s were a wasteland for someone like myself that isn’t a fan of rap or hip-hop. Happily both Erasure and Morrissey rose to new heights that decade, releasing great album after great album, and having many successful singles. That said, and as you can see, there were entire years where I couldn’t even pick one charting song I considered outstanding (or in some cases even good).

The list is quite a genre timeline isn’t it? Glam became disco became new wave became the anthems of the 90s became… well the flotsam of the 2000’s! It’s easy to imagine that ‘good’ music ended 15 years ago but I think this is more a symptom of me growing old and the unusual effect digital music has had on the release of ‘singles’. I believe it is certainly true that compared to the 1980s and 1990s, ‘singles’ no longer have the widespread appeal they once did.

So what do you think? Any pieces of trash on this list? What perfect songs did I miss?