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It's a Very Special Episode of NES Works this week as we hit August 1989 and perhaps the single most seismic month in the entire history of video games... or at least since Famicom, SG-1000, and MSX all landed in Japan at the same time. But even August 1989 puts July 1983 to shame, really, with the launch of four new game consoles all at once! The NES has been running the tables to this point, but can its luck hold out? How will Game Boy fare against the technologically superior Lynx? Will TurboGrafx-16 dampen the NES's glow the way PC Engine had in Japan?

We know the answer to these questions now, of course. But at the time, it could have gone any way. This episode touches on those questions, but it also celebrates all the NES has done to this point while attempting to convey just how pervasive Nintendo had become in youth pop culture as of 1989. If you were there, you remember. And if you weren't, well, here's this episode. Enjoy.

Beginning next week, we dust off our boots, climb back on the Sega horse, and embark on the road to Genesis.

Files

Nintendo at the top of its game: Peak NES | NES Works 1989

It's August 1989 and the NES is on top of the world (or at least unstoppable in the U.S., anyway). This is the ideal console. You may not like it, but this is what peak performance looks like. Things are about to change radically here in the NES Works chronology, though. I mean, the NES itself has another five years of life left in it—that's not about to change. But the NES has entirely dominated the American console market since its tentative debut at the end of 1985. It hasn't run the race without competition, but it's lacked a serious challenger to this point. Beginning in August 1989, though, Nintendo has to deal with powerful new rivals on all fronts. Sega Genesis and NEC TurboGrafx-16 launch this month in history, unflinchingly presenting game fanatics with genuinely more capable console hardware. And on the handheld front, Nintendo's brand new Game Boy portable arrives neck-and-neck with Atari's Lynx, a device that undeniably possesses more horsepower and a better screen than Game Boy (including color). Some of these competitors would fare better than others, but there's simply no denying that the NES no longer represents the only game in town, both figuratively and literally. In this episode, I pause a moment to look back at where the NES has been and how it got to the point that it enjoys now, and look at the looming shape of things to come. Production notes: Video Works is funded via Patreon (http://www.patreon.com/gamespite) — support the show and get access to every episode up to two weeks in advance of its YouTube debut! Plus, exclusive podcasts, eBooks, and more! Why watch when you can read? Check out the massive hardcover print editions of NES Works, Super NES Works, and Virtual Boy works, available now at Limited Run Games (https://limitedrungames.com/collections/books)! SG-1000 Works: Segaiden Vol. I is available NOW, and Metroidvania: The First Decade and NES Works Gaiden are due in 2025. NES footage captured from Analogue Nt Mini. Video upscaled to 4K with RetroTink 4X and 720p with xRGB Mini Framemeister.

Comments

Nicholas A. Jalowick

Oh man, Video Games and Computer Entertainment! I had a subscription to that, back in the day! So many memories. My dad bought me my first issue of it from a gift shop because it had an article on Zelda 2! Oh, and also, I remember later issues had rather risqué ads for japanese PC games, that I'm pretty sure were early visual novels! Wow, so awesome!

Daniel Hoffman

You can make it to Shantae! I believe in you!