Website Temporary Closed

Hello everyone. We are moving to a new, bigger premises so website ordering will be closed for the next month while we move everything to our new building, reorganise and do a full stock take. We will not be taking any orders or able to reply to any messages during this time. We will be open again at the start of December. Many thanks. Console Passion

Sony Playstation

The first conceptions of the Playstation console date back to 1988. Nintendo had been attempting to work with disk technology since the Famicom, but the medium had problems. Its rewritable magnetic nature could be easily erased (thus leading to a lack of durability), and the disks were a piracy danger. Thus, when word came out of a new optical storage technology being developed by Sony and Philips, Nintendo was interested. Nintendo approached Sony to develop a CD-ROM add-on, tentatively titled the "SNES-CD". A contract was struck, and work began.

In 1991, the SNES-CD (now titled the Play Station) was to be announced at the June CES. However, when Hiroshi Yamauchi read the original 1988 contract between Sony and Nintendo and learned that it allowed Sony 25% of the profits from the machine, he was furious. He deemed the contract totally unacceptable, and secretly cancelled all plans for a joint Nintendo-Sony SNES CD attachment.

[collapse collapsed title=read more...]

Indeed, instead of announcing their partnership, at 9AM the day of the CES, Nintendo chairman Howard Lincoln stepped onto the stage and revealed that they were now allied with Philips, and were planning on abandoning all the previous work Nintendo and Sony had accomplished. Lincoln and Minoru Arakawa had (unbeknownst to Sony) flown to Philips headquarters in Europe and formed an alliance of a decidedly different nature- one that would give Nintendo total control over its licenses on Philips machines.

The 9am CES announcement was a huge shock. Not only was it a complete surprise to the showgoers (Sony had only just the previous night been optimistically showing off the joint project), but it was seen by many in the Japanese community as a massive betrayal- a Japanese company snubbing another Japan-based company in favour of a European one was considered unthinkable in Japanese business.

Initially, Nintendo's abandonment of the joint project caused Sony to consider halting their research, but ultimately the company decided to use what they had developed so far and make it into a complete, stand alone console. This led to Nintendo filing a lawsuit claiming breach of contract and attempted, in U.S. federal court, to obtain an injunction against the release of the PlayStation, on the grounds that Nintendo owned the name. The federal judge presiding over the case denied the injunction. Thus, in October 1991, the first incarnation of the new Sony Playstation was revealed. As for the deal between Philips and Nintendo, it fell through as well. However, because of the deal, Philips was able to create games for its CD-i computer based on Nintendo licenses. The games were terrible, and seen as another attempt by Philips to market the ill-fated computer.

The PlayStation was officially launched in Japan on December 3, 1994, the USA on September 9, 1995 and Europe on September 29, 1995. In America, Sony enjoyed a very successful launch with titles of almost every genre including Toshinden, Twisted Metal, Warhawk, Philosoma, Wipeout and Ridge Racer. Almost all of Sony's and Namco's launch titles went on to produce numerous sequels.

The PlayStation was also able to generate interest with a unique slew of ad campaigns. Many of the ads released at the time of launch were full of ambiguous content which had many gamers rabidly debating their meanings. The most well-known launch ads include the "Enos Lives" campaign, and the "You Are Not E" ads (the "E" in "You Are Not E" was always coloured in red, to symbolize the word "ready", and the "Enos" meant "ready Ninth Of September", the U.S. launch date). It is believed that these ads were an attempt to play off the gaming public's suspicion towards Sony as an unknown, untested quantity in the video game market.

The first new version was actually a revision in early 1996, produced in response to complaints that PlayStations were overheating. Sony did not change the technical aspects or the cosmetics but did remove the RCA ports left over from the Japanese release. The parallel port (which was mostly unused by Sony) was also removed to reduce production costs. Sony also slightly improved the laser assembly. Many gamers experienced skipping full-motion video or dreaded physical "ticking" noises coming from their PlayStations. The seemingly universal fix for this was to turn one's PlayStation sideways or upside-down—although some gamers smacked the lid of the PlayStation to make a game load or work. This problem was carried over to many first-generation PlayStation 2s in the form of the very well known Disc Read Error message.

Sony produced a redesigned version of the original console, called the PSone, in a smaller (and more ergonomic) case which was introduced in September 2000. The original PlayStation was abbreviated in Japan to "PS" and was often abbreviated as "PSX" by American gamers, as this was Sony's internal code name for the system while it was under development (PlayStation Xperimental). This led to some confusion in 2003, when Sony introduced a PS2-derived system in Japan actually called the PSX. The PlayStation is now officially abbreviated as the "PS1" or "PSone," although many people still abbreviate it "PS" or "PSX". There were only 2 differences between the "PSone" and the original, the first one being cosmetic change to the console, and the second one was the home menu's Graphical User Interface.

A version of the PlayStation called the Net Yaroze was also produced. It was more expensive than the original PlayStation, coloured black instead of the usual gray, and most importantly, came with tools and instructions that allowed a user to be able to program PlayStation games and applications without the need for a full developer suite, which cost many times the amount of a PlayStation and was only available to approved video game developers. Naturally, the Net Yaroze lacked many of the features the full developer suite provided. Programmers were also limited by the 2MB of total game space that Net Yaroze allowed. That means, your whole game had to be crammed into the 2MB of system RAM. You couldn't officially make actual game discs. The amount of space may seem small, but games like Ridge Racer, ran entirely from the system RAM (except for the streamed music tracks of course). It was unique in that it was the only officially retailed Sony PlayStation with no regional lockout; it would play games from any territory.

Another version that was coloured blue (as opposed to regular console units that were grey in colour) was available to game developers and select press. Later versions of this were coloured green. Contrary to popular belief, the RAM was not 4 megabytes but instead the standard 2 megabytes. The console included a CD-ROM emulator board connected to a PC. It was also able to run in-development games which lacked region coding (which would be rejected by a normal PlayStation as though they were pirated copies). A few of these units eventually appeared for sale through somewhat dubious channels at high prices.

The installation of a modchip allows the PlayStation's capabilities to be expanded. This allows unauthorized copies of games to be played, but it also allows the playing of games from other regions, such as PAL titles on a NTSC console. Since modchips allow playing games recorded on a regular CD-ROM, it created a wave of games developed without official Sony approval, using free GNU compiler tools.

The console was extremely popular, spawning the so-called "PlayStation Generation". Well known titles on the PlayStation include Tomb Raider, Final Fantasy 7, Resident Evil, Tekken, Wipeout, Gran Turismo, Crash Bandicoot, Spyro, Parasite Eve, Silent Hill, and Metal Gear Solid. As of May 18, 2004, Sony has shipped 100 million PlayStation and PSone consoles throughout the world. As of March 2004, there were 7,300 software titles available with cumulative software shipment of 949 million. The PlayStation logo was designed by Manabu Sakamoto, who also designed the logo for Sony's VAIO computer products.

[/collapse]

Pocket Fighter

Facebook
Box: 
yes
£20.00
Manual: 
yes
£20.00

It's the most outrageous fighting game ever! Innocent but deadly, these pint-sized champions from Street Fighter and DarkStalkers pack one heck of a punch. Battle to collect power-up gems and duke it out with most insane attacks and hilarious fighting combos of all-time. 12 pint-sized characters from the Street Fighter and DarkStalkers series including Ryu, Chun-Li, Akuma, Felicia, Morrigan and more. Loaded with surprise Capcom cameos. The world's most outrageous attacks, moves and combos. An enhanced version of the Arcade Hit Super Gem Fight, with added modes of play.

Pitfall 3D - Beyond the Jungle

Facebook
Box: 
yes
£7.00
Manual: 
yes
£7.00

The inveterate explorer Pitfall Harry leaps into a new dimension of danger and action in full, go-anywhere 3-D in Pitfall 3D: Beyond the Jungle for the Sony PlayStation. This time out, Harry falls through a dimensional rift and finds himself in a mysterious world where the ancient Moku civilization has been decimated by an Evil Temptress. Harry must fight an army of evil henchmen, rescue a beautiful rebel and stop the Temptress before she destroys Earth.

Planet of the Apes

Box: 
yes
£5.00
Manual: 
yes
£5.00

Fight for humanity as Ulysses, a deep-space astronaut shipwrecked on Earth nearly 2,000 years into the future. To his horror, a deadly breed of intelligent apes have evolved from mankind and now dominate the Earth. Hunted to near-extinction, the rag-tag human survivors huddle in fear of the Ape Empire. Against impossible odds, Ulysses must infiltrate the simian society and halt the genocidal plan of Ape General Ursus to exterminate mankind forever. Familiar faces like Cornelius and Dr. Zaius - even new terrors like Mandrill assassins and renegade baboons - await in this pulse-pounding tribute to the sci-fi cinema classic. The future of the human race lies with one. It lies with you.

PGA Tour 97

Box: 
yes
£3.00
Manual: 
yes
£3.00

EA SPORTS proudly presents the only golf simulation licensed by the PGA TOUR ; the only place you can compete with a field of real TOUR golfers on real TOUR courses. Fourteen featured PGA TOUR pros - 58 in all! Two incredible championship golf courses. Unrivalled gameplay, graphics, sound effects and music. Unique riskreward feature factors degree of difficulty into every shot. Play a round or a tourney, a shoot-out or Skins. But play to win because this isn't just golf.

PGA European Tour Golf

Box: 
yes
£4.00
Manual: 
yes
£4.00

You played on every fairway, beat every champion. Now discover the European touch: PGA European Tour Golf. Official game supported by the European Tour. 6 authentic course, 5 fun games types including a night golf session. Live and authentic commentary from BBC's famous double act Peter Alliss and Alex Hay.

Peter Pan - Adventures in Neverland

Box: 
yes
£6.00
Manual: 
yes
£6.00

Based on Disney's new animated feature film, Peter Pan leaps to life in a PlayStation world! Play as either Peter Pan or Tinkerbell and explore over 20 levels filled with leaps, puzzles, races and fights. Bonus and hidden stages let you discover every nook and cranny of Never Land in a game designed for the very young or, in a special challenge mode built for the best players, the young at heart who never grow old.

Parodius

Box: 
yes
£0.00
Manual: 
yes
£0.00

Shoot 'em ups don't come any weirder than Parodius - dodge through waves of killer penguins, neon rabbits and 50ft tall dancing girls. An intense experience of one or two players.

Parasite Eve 2

Box: 
yes
£18.00
Manual: 
yes
£18.00

An evil breed of Neo Mitochondrion Creatures has taken over the Akropolis Tower, eliminating everyone who stands in its way. The situation is getting out of hand and the Los Angeles Police Department desperately needs your help. As MIST (Mitochondrion Investigation and Suppression Team) special agent Aya Brea, you are assigned by the FBI to embark on an investigation that takes you from Downtown Los Angeles to a Sinister research centre deep under the Mojave desert. You must stop the new breed of creatures that threatens to eliminate the entire human race.

Paradise Casino

Box: 
yes
£4.00
Manual: 
yes
£4.00

Paradise Casino brings the excitement and entertainment of Las Vegas to your home with 4 very addictive gambling games. Learn and practice the most popular casino games at your pace without risk.

Pandemonium 2

Facebook
Box: 
yes
£24.00
Manual: 
yes
£24.00

Nikki is a tough and sexy spell slinging sorceress. Fargus is a pyromaniacal goof ball. His partner, Sid, is a viper tongued puppet-on-a-stick turned boomerang. Together they wreak PANDEMONIUM! Explore huge, bizarre levels of hallucinogenic alien landscapes. Hijack a giant mechanical robot for a 3D flying joyride. New moves! Edge and rope climbing. Swinging on monkey bars! Fresh power-ups; deadly fireballs, devastating lightning, and the dreaded Sid-erang attack.

Syndicate content