nintendofan85
Good grief.
The reasons I say that are:
First of all, it's not really clear if it's a home console or a true portable handheld, although maybe you could say it was the precursor to how with the GameCube, and especially the Switch, Nintendo tried to blur the lines between the two.
The way it is propped up looks strange to me. It seems like a telescope. (You could say that this also applies with how you have to look into it, although it's more similar to a pair of binoculars)
Its screen (although I'm not sure if you'd even call it that) seems incredibly odd. The fact that it had to be red and black seems even more unusual to me.
There also seemed to not really be much space for it in Nintendo's lineup. Nintendo already had two consoles out at the same time as the Virtual Boy's launch in 1995: the Game Boy and Super NES. What in the world was the need for the Virtual Boy in the first place? I can't imagine that the fact that the Nintendo 64 was about to be released helped any, either.
What are your thoughts on the Virtual Boy? Whenever people talk about it, they largely seem to focus on the fact that it was a huge commercial failure for Nintendo and how its screen would hurt people's eyes. I get that, but I'm not quite sure if people have really analyzed it quite like I have. For the record, I've never played one before, nor any console older than a N64, but still, what was the purpose or even really the need for the Virtual Boy in the first place? Considering how Nintendo had great success with the Game Boy, the SNES did fairly well, and the N64 was on its way, what did it even have to gain from the Virtual Boy?
First of all, it's not really clear if it's a home console or a true portable handheld, although maybe you could say it was the precursor to how with the GameCube, and especially the Switch, Nintendo tried to blur the lines between the two.
The way it is propped up looks strange to me. It seems like a telescope. (You could say that this also applies with how you have to look into it, although it's more similar to a pair of binoculars)
Its screen (although I'm not sure if you'd even call it that) seems incredibly odd. The fact that it had to be red and black seems even more unusual to me.
There also seemed to not really be much space for it in Nintendo's lineup. Nintendo already had two consoles out at the same time as the Virtual Boy's launch in 1995: the Game Boy and Super NES. What in the world was the need for the Virtual Boy in the first place? I can't imagine that the fact that the Nintendo 64 was about to be released helped any, either.
What are your thoughts on the Virtual Boy? Whenever people talk about it, they largely seem to focus on the fact that it was a huge commercial failure for Nintendo and how its screen would hurt people's eyes. I get that, but I'm not quite sure if people have really analyzed it quite like I have. For the record, I've never played one before, nor any console older than a N64, but still, what was the purpose or even really the need for the Virtual Boy in the first place? Considering how Nintendo had great success with the Game Boy, the SNES did fairly well, and the N64 was on its way, what did it even have to gain from the Virtual Boy?