this post was submitted on 01 Jan 2024
96 points (96.2% liked)
Nintendo
18490 readers
51 users here now
A community for everything Nintendo. Games, news, discussions, stories etc.
Rules:
- No NSFW content.
- No hate speech or personal attacks.
- No ads / spamming / self-promotion / low effort posts / memes etc.
- No linking to, or sharing information about, hacks, ROMs or any illegal content. And no piracy talk. (Linking to emulators, or general mention / discussion of emulation topics is fine.)
- No console wars or PC elitism.
- Be a decent human (or a bot, we don't discriminate against bots... except in Point 7).
- All bots must have mod permission prior to implementation and must follow instance-wide rules. For lemmy.world bot rules click here
Upcoming First Party Games (NA):
Game | Date
|
Mario & Luigi: Brothership | Nov 7 Donkey Kong Country Returns HD | Jan 16, 2025 Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition | Mar 20, 2025 Metroid Prime 4 | 2025
Other Gaming Communities
- Gaming @ lemmy.ml
- Games @ sh.itjust.works
- World of JRPG's @ lemmy.zip
- Linux Gaming @ lemmy.ml
- Linux Gaming @ lemmy.world
- Patient Gamer @ lemmy.ml
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
An interesting article, but something ahead of its time will continue to be ahead of its time no matter how many years pass
Someone could have changed their mind on whether or not something was ahead of it's time.
There, I fixed the title.
That's fair!
I guess there'd be times when the opinion changes. Like maybe the original iPhone seemed ahead of its time, but nowadays it's recognized that it wasn't the first for any of its features, just the right combination at the right time.
You haven't understood. OP is saying that something being ahead of its time isn't a function of how much time has passed since. It will always remain ahead of its time. As stated, it is an intrinsic, rather than an extrinsic, property.
See: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intrinsic_and_extrinsic_properties
I agree, and especially in this case, but I can think of corner cases where "its time" gets fuzzier as time passes and expands to include more competition.
For example, the Compaq Presario 2100 seems to have been about the first PC with a price under USD$1000 - I remember that being a big deal at the time! ... for a few months. Now it's just a footnote that took me some Google-fu to find at all, but it was ahead of its time at the time and was a cover story on magazines.
Something being ahead of its time is ahead compared to its contemporaries. 100 years later its contemporaries are still the same because being contemporary of something means "being of the same period", therefore no matter how much time passes, it will still be ahead of its time.
I wasn't saying it was unsurpassable. I was saying that "its time" was a fixed point in history, and if it was ahead of its time (aka. 1983), it will always be ahead of its time (1983).
The Famicom is definitely not ahead of the Switch, or even the N64. I'm sure someone could argue it was ahead of the SNES in some ways. Or anything else. But as a whole, it's been surpassed a long time ago.