I still remember blowing into Famicom cartridges until my cheeks hurt.

I was watching some retro gaming videos on YouTube the other day. There was a channel diving deep into the story of SEGA’s Sonic. As I scrolled through the comments, I saw other old-time players sharing how they saved up for cartridges as kids, or how they first held a Mega Drive controller in a small shop. Their memories overlapped with mine.

What surprised me more was the comment section itself. People were rational. They disagreed without fighting. And they were quite welcoming to me, a Chinese commenter.

So I thought: I’ll write too. I’ll write about how we played, growing up on this side of the world.

Not to compare who had it worse, nor to claim we understood games better. Just our real experiences — blowing into Famicom cartridges, getting yelled at by arcade owners, going from grey-market PS2s to an official Chinese version of the Switch.

We are all gamers who love life. We just grew up in different places.

Before I begin, I want to say a few things. Not as a defense, just to let you know where we started.

First, we don’t run from the piracy issue. Back then, there was no other path. When we grew up, we bought legitimate copies — not to whitewash the past, but because we genuinely wanted to pay that ticket.

Second, Steam helped a lot. For many Chinese players, the concept of buying legitimate games began with Steam. For older games that never got remastered, we still seek out original physical copies from back in the day.

Third, the game console ban and the “war on gaming addiction” did shape us. I’m not here to talk politics, but to say this: it was a generational disconnect, not anyone’s fault.

Fourth, the shift from grey imports to legitimate copies was a natural process. I’m optimistic about China’s console market and its games. If you’re interested, you’re welcome to join us.

Fifth, we just live in different places. The love for games is the same. Chinese people are often busy, but the way we support legitimate games may be a little different from yours.

Alright. Let’s begin.

(Small note: AI helped polish the grammar a little. Every story here — blowing cartridges, the Water Level 8 rumor, the arcade owner’s noodles, using PSP as an MP4 player — is 100% my real experience.)

    • MigratingApe@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      You have no idea how much of this was common in 1990-2000s in Poland. I remember the Famicom clones, including the keyboard one, and bootleg cartridges sold at every corner of every bazaar. It was THE game console here, mostly known by the name of one such clone called Pegasus :)

      The issue with mismatched cartridge got so bad at the near end of an era that sellers started using portable TVs powered from car battery so the customer could test it before buying, right there at the bazaar. :)

      • frenchfrynoob@lemmy.worldOP
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        2 days ago

        The VCD300 carried the childhood memories of countless children from impoverished families, allowing them to access the outside world and experience simple joys through discs in an era of material scarcity

      • Zanshi@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        I remember that! Mine looked like an N64 and gamepads looked like they were from PS1. On the bazaar there were so many PolyStations, and games were often hidden under clothes or some other stuff

    • hzl@piefed.blahaj.zone
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      2 days ago

      We blew into Nintendo cartridges in the US too. It certainly did feel like it helped, but I imagine in reality the point of failure was the wobbly connection inside the console.

      Though maybe the moisture was doing something?

      • frenchfrynoob@lemmy.worldOP
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        2 days ago

        "I’ll add a picture of a Subor learning machine. Even though what we played back in the day were bootlegs, our love for gaming was still real

      • frenchfrynoob@lemmy.worldOP
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        2 days ago

        Blowing on game cartridges and smacking old TVs seemed to work mainly because reinserting the cartridge improved the connection, while the smacking temporarily fixed loose solder joints in aging CRT televisions — it wasn’t the blowing or hitting itself that actually did the trick.

        • hzl@piefed.blahaj.zone
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          2 days ago

          I dunno, sounds to me like blowing and hitting worked pretty good, if not for the reasons we thought.

    • fiat_lux 🆕 🏠@lemmy.zip
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      2 days ago

      Buy, buy, buy — may not always play, but definitely buy. We know this habit is a bit odd.

      不太奇怪,西方人也这样。谢谢你的故事。很有意思啊!我希望你以后会多分享一些。

  • Brum@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Thank you for taking the time to write this. As a millenial from the Balkans I thoroughly enjoyed the story and the similarities of our experiences. If you ever start a blog, I would be very much interested in a retro gaming perspective from China - we don’t get enough non-western human perspectives like this in Europe, and love how similar gamers are throughout the world, which could be a wonderful unifying factor in this uncertain world.

    • frenchfrynoob@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 days ago

      "We have a Reddit-like forum called Baidu Tieba (Baidu Post Bar), which features Chinese-language content and has very few posting rules. However, a common posting habit there is to break a long article into multiple short replies. I’m also getting familiar with the forum culture of Lemmy.

      The timeline of this article is as follows: Subor Game Console, stories from arcade halls, PS2 rental shops, PSP handheld study rooms, the game console ban and the war on Internet addiction, the rise of Steam and support for legitimate games, and finally a Q&A section."

      Following the timeline development order, already modified.

    • frenchfrynoob@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 days ago

      “Personal blogs are not very popular in China. I posted the Chinese version on Gcores, which is a pretty good gaming media website.”

  • altkey (he\him)@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    That was interesting to hear, thank you. I don’t have anything to reply as of now but a suggestion to make your posts a chain of replies. One comment - reply to it - reply to that: in that manner it would keep them in order next time you’d be open to write something.