On its 10 year anniversary we recall our fondest memories.

The Dreamcast is 10 years old today. SEGA's last home console may have had a short, unloved life, with Sony's all conquering PlayStation 2 obliterating it off the face of the planet - or at least off of store shelves - but we loved it (well at least some of us did). So to mark its 10th birthday (it lives on in our hearts), we've put together our fondest Dreamcast memories and experiences of the console many agree paved the way for the “current generation”. Seb, sickeningly, was only 12 years old when the Deamcast launched, but even he has loads to say about it.

Tom Orry, Editor
I couldn't believe my eyes when I saw that giant Killer Whale leap out of the sea. I remember lugging the console and games round to a friend's house just to show him how amazing Sonic Adventure looked, and it worked. We'd all been big N64 fans for the years previous to the Dreamcast launch, and seeing games like Sonic Adventure just blew our tiny minds. It was a real step up from anything we'd seen before. I remember watching the first videos of Sonic Adventure on an ancient laptop using what can't have been any better than a 28.8k dial up internet connection. The videos were tiny and took hours to download, but it was so worth it. I loved my Dreamcast and stood by it until the end. It was a console that ushered in a new generation and did things other consoles took years to copy, and years more to better. Sega's little white box brought my friends and I years of entertainment, and was home to some of the best first-party games a console has ever seen. Bring on the Dreamcast 2!

Wesley Yin-Poole, Deputy Editor
My fondest memory of the ill-fated Dreamcast is buying a second hand one, as well as Virtua Tennis 2, for next to nothing from GAME back in the early Naughties. As a member of staff I was allowed to buy traded-in games for pretty much the value they were traded in at, within reason. As soon as the Dreamcast was handed in as part exchange for a PS2 (something I imagine a lot of people did), I wrapped it in a huge plastic GAME bag, sealed the opening with tape and stuck a Post-it note marked: WEZ on it. I love Virtua Tennis, and this was just the opportunity I had been waiting for – with any luck, management would let slide the fact that they would miss out on the tidy profit reselling the console would bring. Somehow, it worked, but I never made the most of my good fortune. While I know the Dreamcast is considered by many to be one of the greatest, if not the greatest, home console ever released, it never did it for me. Shenmue didn’t interest me, nor did Sonic Adventure. And (hush hush), I thought the PS2 looked worth waiting for.

James Orry, News Editor
So, I was going to write about how I spent hours downloading thumbnail sized videos released during a Tokyo Game Show on a 28.8 modem many moons ago in order to get a pixelated glimpse of Sonic running around in fancy 3D. But I see Tom has already beaten me to the punch on that one. My second most vivid Dreamcast memory, other than the day the console arrived along with what must have been almost all the UK launch games (thank you Simply Games for getting me my console at launch), is of a few weeks before launch, when I got to play a Dreamcast at my local Virgin Cinema. SEGA had littered the place with demo pods, featuring playable versions of Sonic Adventure and SEGA Rally. I'd turned up with Tom and a friend to watch some films using our six week cinemas passes, but ended up spending hours stood huddled around the pod, each taking turns to grasp the controller in our hands. In fact, the only thing to leave a bigger impression on my summer was The Matrix.

Neon Kelly, Previews Editor
Shameful though it may be to admit, I only ever played the Dreamcast once - so my lone memory of the console is also my fondest by default. One day, at the age of sixteen, I found myself loitering around Kingston with a mate during our college lunchbreak. We went into Argos (ah, the glory of adolescence) and had a go on the demo for Ready 2 Rumble Boxing. I thought it was pretty good, but I remember saying that I thought that the PS2 would be much better. My friend took deep offence at this, because his uncle supposedly worked for SEGA. This didn't make much sense to me at the time, but then he was probably talking bollocks anyway. That's my one and only memory of SEGA's little grey box, although I vaguely recall that everyone complained about the controller leads falling out. Oh, and I really, really wanted to play Shenmue. But I never did.

Seb Ford, Video Producer
Technically it was my brother’s, but no doubt I got more than my fair share of time on the thing. In many ways the Dreamcast really was well ahead of its time; during a drunken retrospective game of SoulCalibur I was truly shocked by its excellent graphics. But games like Sonic Adventure 2, Phantasy Star Online, Shenmue 2 and Crazy Taxi are what instantly spring to mind when I think of the Dreamcast. With Sonic you could keep your pet Chao on the VMU and train it up on the go, much like a Tamagotchi, only with purpose. I think in the end we got both of the Crazy Taxis, and succeeded in completing neither of them. I forget if it was the overall difficulty level or just our ears being over-saturated with the same three or four Offspring tracks that finally saw those games hit the shelf of eternal dust-gathering. Our Dreamcast was wired up to a tiny old TV, and it never really felt like we got the most out of it, and ultimately about two years after it joined our family, it left, stubbornly refusing to display anything at all. Nevertheless I treasure some fond memories of that thing, and it would be nice after all these years to let those dusty games see some use once again.

The Safety Badger, Health and Safety Officer
During its THREE YEARS of retail activity, there wasn't a single FATALITY or ACCIDENT resulting in PERMANENT DISFIGUREMENT that can be directly linked to USAGE of the SEGA DREAMCAST. On the basis of this CRITERION, I deem the console to have been a SUCCESS.

What's your fondest Dreamcast memory? Do you like SEGA's console more than most of this miserable lot? Let us know in the comments below.

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User Comments

Mar27w's Avatar

Mar27w

One stand out moment i remember is that in Shenmue you could actually pick up and use the phone in your house and at the time thinking that it was the most amazing thing i had ever seen,sad really ho ho
Posted 13:31 on 10 September 2009
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dav2612@ CheekyLee

Chu Chu Rocket worked very well online, I played that probably even more than Quake 3 online.
Posted 09:29 on 10 September 2009
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CheekyLee

I could, and WOULD, write far too much if I were to try and list everything I loved about the DreamCast era. So, I shall just limit it to what was the most important part. Online multiplayer on a console.

Quake 3 Arena is probably my favourite game of all time. Having already played an absolute mountain of it on the PC, I actually only got it for the offline split-screen 4 player mode. (I used to game with friends much more than I do these days.) However, the very first time I played it online, I was hooked. Things were just so much more friendly and relaxed than on the PC, and it made the game a lot more fun. The exclusive DC maps were really well-designed, too!

Phantasy Star Online was simply the best thing I have ever been a part of. Things did get a bit ridiculous after a while, but for the first couple of months it was like logging into digital Nirvana. The online community that I was part of pretty much all got the game, and it was possible to wake up and play for the entire day. A friend of mine even got a £500 phone bill as a result of his addiction.

My biggest regret is that I never tried Chu Chu Rocket online. Because I loved it offline! The world needs an XBox Live version of it, ASAFP.
Posted 09:09 on 10 September 2009
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Rogue_Soul@ Ghost_Dog

The interwebs is a marvellous place Ghost_Dog. There are a few unreleased titles floating about.

I also have Propeller Arena - a decent flying game which was cancelled after 9/11.
Posted 01:06 on 10 September 2009
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Nickmon

I too have a dreamcast, but mine still have pride under the TV (along with the PS2/ps3, xbox, wii, gamecube) and is used often (last time was sunday with Street Fighter 3). Got mine for simply games just for House of the dead and Soul Caliber.

I too have the Half Life game....
8-)
Posted 00:54 on 10 September 2009
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Ghost_Dog@ Rogue_Soul

Where did you get Half Life for the Dreamcast?

I believe that it was never released, despite development being completed.
Posted 22:47 on 09 September 2009
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Ghost_Dog

I was a huge SEGA fan and proud owner of a Master System, Mega Drive and Saturn.

However, after spending £300 on a launch day Saturn (I was about 12 years old, so it was a huge amount of money at the time), I was a bit unsure about forking out again at launch for the Dreamcast, despite being very excited about the impending release.

Having bought a PS1 after the demise of the Saturn (I supported it to the final day), I ended up sticking with Sony and went with the PS2.

The Dreamcast is the one console I regret never buying and feel somewhat guilty after Sega subsequently pulled out of the console race. But I think the seeds of Sega's downfall had already been planted with the commercial failure of the Saturn.

It is good to see that SEGAs final console is still so fondly remembered.
Posted 22:45 on 09 September 2009
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Rogue_Soul

I have nothing but fond memories for my Dreamcast.

It was the first console I had ever bought ‘at launch’. As a long time Sega fan I remember wandering into GAME, in Cardiff, with a near irrepressible excitement. With my pre-order receipt in hand I was torn between which games I should buy. At the time I could only really afford to buy two titles, but unsurprisingly I got a bit caught up in the moment, and eventually walked away with: Ready 2 Rumble, Sega Rally 2, Sonic Adventure... and a second joy-pad. I convinced myself it’s what my student loan was meant for. :D

Even though whirlwind romance only lasted for a couple of years, they were damn fine years. It was the perfect University console – four controller ports allowed for some classic multiplayer action: Virtua Tennis, Le Mans 24, Rush 2049, Quake III Arena, PowerStone1&2, Soul Calibur, ChuChu Rocket!, Fur Fighters. Young ladies jiggled away on late night sessions of Samba De Amigo. The console itself wowed me with some superb single player experiences: Rez, Shenmue, Grandia II, Skies of Arcadia, Bangai-O, Crazy Taxi, Jet Set Radio, Ikaruga, Half Life and Cosmic to name a few.

But, for me, the system excelled in the online department. I had dabbled in online PC gaming, but there was just something special about playing online with the DC. Phantasy Star Online, in particular had a special community, something which I had never experienced before. Other online games I enjoyed: Quake III Arena (brutal fps), Ferrari F355 (hardcore racer), StarLancer (challenging space shooter), ChuChuRocket (manic puzzler), and Metropolis Street Racer (for racing scoreboard whores!). I dare not think about how much time I spent online back then, in the days of a dial-up connection you had to pay per minute!

When the Dreamcast’s demise eventually arrived, I more or less hopped straight onto the Xbox, skipping Sony’s PS2 entirely. I wanted online gaming, Microsoft promised and delivered with Xbox LIVE!

My Dreamcast still sits under my TV (its soul still burns), a little dustier than it should be, but I wouldn’t swap it for anything else. In fact, I’m always on the lookout for a cheap broadband adapter for it...
Posted 21:28 on 09 September 2009
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SebVG

I forgot about Skies of Arcadia! Another excellent title I stole from my brother
Posted 19:27 on 09 September 2009
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pblive

Fond memories of the Dreamcast, Crazy Taxi, my first taste of Tony Hawks (back when the games were good), the fantastic Skies of Arcadia, the prequel to Project Gotham, MSR, and of course, Shenmue and an import copy of Godzilla.

Plus those funny little VMUs that seemed to run out of batteries every 5 minutes!
Posted 19:24 on 09 September 2009
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oddball72

I still have my Dreamcast boxed up in my loft. I usually sell on old outdated consoles but I just can't get rid of this machine.
Shenmue is still one of my all time fav games. Jet Set Radio, MSR, Soul Calibre, RE Code Veronica....mmmmm, sweet, sweet memories. Right it's no good I'm going up to the loft. I may be some time.
Posted 19:09 on 09 September 2009
rbevanx's Avatar

rbevanx

I think I mentioned the Dreamcast recently in the forums.

Yeah it was a decent console except the game cases snapped easily and the discs were easy to scratch as well.
They tried to compress 1GB on to a CD and they should have used normal CD's instead.
I wasn't amused when they pulled the plug early on it, I had 20 games go rocket down in value.


But on a positive note.

Happy Anniversary Dreamcast.
Posted 18:45 on 09 September 2009
Mr_Ninjutsu's Avatar

Mr_Ninjutsu@ wyp100

Quote:
Originally Posted by The Wezmeister
For me, PS2 was where it was at.

Yeaaaaaa Booooiiii! Thats where my hardcore gaming fuel started.
Posted 18:32 on 09 September 2009
Mark_S's Avatar

Mark_S@ wyp100

Shenmue was only a ten hour game, twenty at most if you obsessively collected every capsule toy. The sequel was around two thirds bigger, though - but I get your point. :-p
Posted 18:32 on 09 September 2009
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mydeaddog

Sorry Mark, just being honest! I have nothing against the Dreamcast, I just never really got the chance to use one.
Posted 17:54 on 09 September 2009