Version: 2008

Comments on: Remembering the Game Boy: We loved you, man

As the Game Boy turns 20, Don Reisinger looks back fondly on the old handheld.

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by sting7k April 23, 2009 7:48 AM PDT
You know of all the electronics I've ever had the only one I've ever kept after I was done with it was my original Game Boy. Yup, the one in the picture of this article. I remember when my Grandma got it for me for Christmas 1989 (I was 7!). The original Tetris theme song is forever burned into my brain. I got a Game Boy Advanced SP when it first came out to bring some new life to my old games. I got rid of the SP but still have my original, still works. I still play Tetris (on my iPhone now) but I always remember the monochrome days, kind of sad the original theme was remixed by EA in the iPhone version.

Great reminder Don. Maybe today I'll put down the iPhone and go back to the old days for a little while for the memories.
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by Tronman161 April 23, 2009 8:05 AM PDT
Horray! Goodness how I loved my Gameboy. I still have it, and all my games, in fact I gave it to my Mom after I got my SP and she takes it on bus trips to play Super Mario and Tetris :) I can clearly remember how insanely happy I was when I got it ... few things have matched the pure excitement of it since then. Thanks for trip down memory lane.
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by CallMeKiz April 23, 2009 8:29 AM PDT
Ahh, just the mention of Tetril starts the usic playing in my head. I got it soon after launch (I was 5) complete with tetris and Spiderman, and have owned every gameboy (Except the GBA) since. It was this Machine alone that started my love affair with one of the greatest games of all time: Zelda.
Keep going GB ! I feel you may have annoyed alot of people with the removal of the GBA slot for a poor performance novelty camera In the DSi, but I imagine you will be forgiven !
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by infinitely April 23, 2009 9:21 AM PDT
I think the most interesting part is that it was created by a former janitor. Now you wouldn't get near there without some ******* marketing or business degree.
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by viper396 April 23, 2009 2:11 PM PDT
CNET is trying to be dramatic with the way they phrased it. Gunpei Yokoi had a degree in Electronics and was the maintenance guy who repaired and maintained their production machinery. His job duties may have included some janitorial work but that certainly was not his primary resposibility.
by Fletch02 April 25, 2009 7:37 PM PDT
Also, it should be noted that Gunpei Yokoi had risen up in the ranks long before he made the Game Boy.
by zhakidd532 April 23, 2009 9:52 AM PDT
Gameboy's are awesome. I remember getting the Pokemon game on Gameboy. That game was epic. I logged so many freaking hours on that thing.
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by Sporlo April 23, 2009 10:42 AM PDT
The only two games I've played on the original Game Boy have been Tetris and Paper Boy (can't remember if that's its name or something different). I would play them every time I went to my aunt/uncle's house. Tetris really was the best ever.
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by techgeekdude April 23, 2009 1:01 PM PDT
The Gameboy is an example of much I miss simplicity. Everything else these days are about glitzy graphics or who has the biggest screen. The Gameboy was really one of the best gaming devices ever for what it delivered: fun.
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by Inconnux April 23, 2009 4:04 PM PDT
Nintendo knows that FUN not graphics is what really sells... I loved my Gameboy, then my GBA and now my DS lite. All of them are 'underpowered' compared to their competitors, but each of them win the FUN factor.
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by maxnewsroom April 23, 2009 5:26 PM PDT
wow, what a terrific story! I still have both my original Game Boy, and Game Boy Color, along with my more recent Nintendo DS Lite. Amazing that some of the basic functionality of all three devices continued through all three iterations. I just found it amazing that Nintendo stopped publishing Tetris DS even though demand was still high. I had to dig out a used copy at a Game Stop in Orlando to find one, to give me my favorite game on the new platform!
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by CyberNutter April 23, 2009 6:52 PM PDT
I was Tetris Queen ... I still remember the elation when I finally cracked Tetris Game B, Level 9, High 5. It took me ages and my thumbs still bear the callouses. There are photos of me from that time, at parties, sitting in the background, totally absorbed in my Game Boy. The shape of things to come.
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by benjwah April 23, 2009 9:45 PM PDT
"And that's why we loved the Game Boy. It rebuffed the wisdom of the day and brought gaming back to its basic goal: fun."

Yeh, because the Atari Lynx and Sega Game Gear were mainly useful for spreadsheets.

Another over-simplified article from the Reisinger.

Also, this gem: "The Game Boy was, quite simply, the best handheld ever released, and for one big reason: simplicity. "

Had nothing to do with Nintendo's bundling strategy? The Gameboy's battery life? Or cheaper price? Or about a billion other factors?

I put it to Don Reisinger that there were more than ONE reason for the Gameboy's success. I know that might mean that he'd have to think about what he's writing, but one might expect as much from a "professional writer".
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by BenAl02 April 24, 2009 11:06 PM PDT
Being a 22 yr. old guy, Gameboy is one of those things that introduced me to a bigger and wider electronic world. I remember how me and my cousin take turns with "MY' Gameboy that he Loves to Borrow whenever we're together.

And that's what gameboy taught me, how to share things that you love selfishly.
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by iioolluaah April 27, 2009 10:32 AM PDT
im 17 so i havent been around when the first versions came out but i know that ive spend a lot, a lot, a lot of time on my game boy colour. damn... that was like the friend i never had. LMAO. kidding. it was cool. those fresh ideas are dead right now... nothing can compare to that, right?!
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About The Digital Home

Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has covered everything from HDTVs to computers to Flowbee Haircut Systems. Besides his work with CNET, Don's work has been featured in a variety of other publications including PC World and a host of Ziff-Davis publications.

Don writes product reviews for InformationWeek and is a regular contributor to Processor Magazine. You can visit his personal site at DonReisinger.com or if you would like to email Don with questions or comments, drop him a line at CNETDigitalHome@gmail.com. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.

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