Even though the NES has been emulated perfectly for nearly 10 years now I was still buying NES carts. The reason was because NES games look horrible when displayed in the accurate, sharp, pixel perfection that a computer offers. A CRT television with its interlaced pixels adds an amount of blurriness to the image that somehow gives it depth, smooths out jaggies, and makes dithers look more like solid colors. After all, the programmers knew the display they were designing for and they took advantage of it with tricks and methods optimized for an interlaced CRT display. Same goes for any 8 and 16 bit system.
I have a 20″ LCD screen now as my only television (so I can port it easily to any room) and I attached my NES to it awhile back. It looked just like the computer. What’s worse the low rez of the NES did not translate well onto the 640×480 LCD display. Some lines were repeated, others were skipped. Every flaw of the old technology was exposed in harsh detail like Barbara Walters in a focused camera shot with no make-up.
So now I ask, as we throw our bulky CRTs out the door, what becomes of retro-gaming? Is it forever ruined as it was intended to be seen? I laughed as a sold my 90lb 23″ CRT for an unprecedented dollar per pound. I did hand springs as I lifted my 18lb LCD up with one hand and placed it on a credenza in my living room that would have bent and cracked with a conventional monitor on it. I nearly split my pants when I saw how bright and sharp Jerry Sienfeld’s teeth were now. But as I type this I have anxieties that my glorious 70+ carts and multitude of stupid controllers are going to forever gather dust because the experience on TV is no better than experience just 5 feet away on my computer. I worry that I’ll never see that fuzzy, well rounded Samus sprite again, rather I’ll be shedding tears onto a Logitech dual action as a skinny, jagged Samus runs her pixilated ass across a monochromic cave.


[...] ablo Belmonte, the man behind the Nintendo On video here. Will the switch from CRT to LCD hurt retro gaming? Everything in life has them; Gamings little nuances and big frustrations. And final [...]
I think that’s why nintendo might be redoing some classics, for the revolution