You know, um, the specs have processor on the cube slower, memory slower, less memory, slower graphics card, less memory on the graphics card...i don't think it's faster. I guess it depends partially on the OS, but not that much. I guess we'll just have to see.
Althons and Pentiums are just melted rock. Who’s rock is better? Who cares, let’s play some games
I always win at monopoly. So you don't have to worry about ms taking over the world, it wil be me hahahahahahahahahhahaahhahahhahahhahahahhahahahahahahahhhahahhahahahah...um where was i oh yeah, so who wants to play d&D?
<b><font color=purple>Change the sig of the week!</font color=purple></b> And where's my COOKIE!!
Ya, but see that made me an xbox convert. Xbox will have the Phantasy Star series and sonic the hedgehog (my favorite things sega-produced), so i'm content
Althons and Pentiums are just melted rock. Who’s rock is better? Who cares, let’s play some games
I miss sega *sniff* *sniff* they were always so good. They just gave up on their consoles way to easily. I thought they had a good Idea with the cdx. I believe it was supposed to play genesis games along with saturn games. Now would that not have been the sh!t.
<b>Change the sig of the week!</b> what's the dif between pink and purple? the grip
Well u know, it's a good thing they stopped. Look at track records. No company has "owned" more than one generation of gaming consoles. It was just their time. Sony and Nintendo will realize that soon
Althons and Pentiums are just melted rock. Who’s rock is better? Who cares, let’s play some games
On one hand, I miss Sega. Their Nomad was a cool idea. To actually be able to play Genesis games on a hand-held system was cool. (Even if it did suck up batteries like a swarm of dehydrated mosquitos in a blood bank.)
But on the other hand, Sega had to be the most unoriginal hardware company on the face of the Earth. The Sega Master system was original. The Sega Genesis was just a dual-CPU Master System that could either run parallel 8-bit for speed, or emulated 16-bit for graphics, but was slower than mud in an Alaskan winter. (No wonder it was so easy to make it portable...)
Then their stupid 32x was just a quad-CPU version of the same thing, able to run 4 8-bit processors in parallel, emulate two 16-bit processors in parallel (which finally gave it a slight edge over the SNES which was a true 16-bit CPU), or emulate a single 32-bit processor (which royally sucked compared to all other 32-bit systems).
Sega may have had some good software (and I emphisize some, because there sure wasn't much) but their hardware engineers needed a boot to the head.
It's no wonder that by the time a finally original and inspired product (the Dreamcast) came from Sega, the game companies had all given up on licensing with Sega and most of the 3rd party software titles had moved to other systems.
Sega dug their own grave. So while I kind of miss them, it isn't much.
<pre>(Change sig of week!)
<b><font color=orange>AROOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!</font color=orange></b></pre><p>
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