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Jiggle this cartridge article to make it load

Bitmob
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
EDITOR'S NOTEfrom Eduardo Moutinho

If the jiggling doesn't work, blow into it three times and try again. I did that once and it worked for me.

Ker-chunk.

There is nothing quite as satisfying as inserting a cartridge into a console and listening to that clicking sound.

The cartridge itself is an afterthought when it comes to modern gaming. Most of today's home consoles utilize DVDs, Blu-rays, or increasingly popular digital downloads.

With the advent of disc-based media, carts slowly lost ground. Packing a game into a tiny, plastic package was difficult. As any Nintendo 64 fan can tell you, side effects like blurry textures and muddy sound were inevitable. Classics such as Conker’s Bad Fur Day were exceptions, and they stood as technological feats.

Limitations aside, the cartridge signifies something larger: the unmistakable representation of a video game.

 

Anyone can look at the physical copy of a Sega Genesis title and immediately know its purpose. The shape is unique -- one that wouldn't fit into a DVD player or USB slot.

Carts are meant for one piece of equipment: a game console.

I feel that discs don't have that characteristic form factor. Compare the bottom of an Xbox 360 DVD to a movie DVD, and they are exactly the same. The only thing that separates the two is the label printed on the top.

Is this a game or movie? Your guess is as good as mine.

Discs are easier to produce and reproduce. Perhaps gaming's shift in media was necessary in order to enter the entertainment mainstream. The industry has thrived since it made the move.

But sometimes I wish that inserting a video game into a modern console had at least an ounce of that clunky feel. Feeding an ultra-slick disc tray isn't the same.

Maybe I’m just old-school.

 
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Comments (7)
37893_1338936035999_1309080061_30825631_6290042_n
August 15, 2011

I totally agree. Although the progression from cartridges to discs and digital downloads was necessary, I too miss the days of chunky, grey and black pieces of plastic.

I can't display discs (they're too fragile anyway,) but my Atari 2600, NES, SNES, N64 and Genesis games get prominent shelf space.

It's a damn shame we've moved away from such an iconic media, but it is kind of nice not having to blow on my digital copy of 'Splosion Man to get it to play.

Jon_ore
August 16, 2011

Some care into presentation, like thoughtful disc art and instruction manuals with more than barebones operation details, would help. Music CDs have done this for a long time, but cool video game packaging in the DVD/Blu-Ray era are few and far between. Sadly, the slow progression towards digital distribution means disc-based games may never get the golden age of "album art-like" supplemental material.

Photo-3
August 16, 2011

I heard Nintendo continued to use cartridges for so long because they are kid proof. You can spill stuff on them (well, maybe not on the connector pins), drop them, etc. and they still should work.

37893_1338936035999_1309080061_30825631_6290042_n
August 16, 2011

Oh absolutely. It seems like everyone has stories about Nintendo cartridges that have stood up to incredible conditions.

Jon_ore
August 16, 2011

Durability is a part of Nintendo's legacy as much as anything else, in my mind. The original Game Boys could tumble down more stairs than a Slinky and still keep going.

Default_picture
August 16, 2011

I really liked the title and the theme of this post, but I can't stop thinking that they would have made a perfect introduction to a multi-part Game Cartridge Retrospective ...

Default_picture
August 17, 2011

Remember blowing into NES catridges so long that you almost passed out?. Or using alcohol to clean the dust out them with a Q-tip? Lmao, the good ol' days of classic gaming!

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