It was 20 years ago, not 15.
The Xbox 360 is now as old as the NES was when the 360 released. While there’s no actual definition of retro I feel the general idea is around 20 years old, meaning the 360 generation and all first year games are now retro.
There are a few definitions, all plausible in some way. One is simply “20 years or older”, which I feel doesn’t really work with how much technology has slowed down. 20 years ago was 2006. 20 years before that was 1986. The difference between 2006 games and today is far more minor than 1986 games and 2006. Another is “when games weren’t all native widescreen and weren’t widely played online”, which would be anything pre-Xbox 360 and PS3. I like this one, and also “anything that isn’t playable on current console hardware”, which would be (some) Xbox 360, PS3, and Wii or earlier - technically Wii U counts, but almost every notable game from that era was ported to Switch. It’s currently similar to “20 years or older”, but focuses on accessibility rather than technology.
It was 20 years ago, not 15.
The Xbox 360 is now as old as the NES was when the 360 released. While there’s no actual definition of retro I feel the general idea is around 20 years old, meaning the 360 generation and all first year games are now retro.
The game in the screenshot came out in November of 2010 so people were playing it 15 years ago.
There are a few definitions, all plausible in some way. One is simply “20 years or older”, which I feel doesn’t really work with how much technology has slowed down. 20 years ago was 2006. 20 years before that was 1986. The difference between 2006 games and today is far more minor than 1986 games and 2006. Another is “when games weren’t all native widescreen and weren’t widely played online”, which would be anything pre-Xbox 360 and PS3. I like this one, and also “anything that isn’t playable on current console hardware”, which would be (some) Xbox 360, PS3, and Wii or earlier - technically Wii U counts, but almost every notable game from that era was ported to Switch. It’s currently similar to “20 years or older”, but focuses on accessibility rather than technology.
Nope, “retro” is staying as 16-bit & earlier; just like “classic rock” is pre 80’s…
I die a little Everytime I hear 90’s grunge on the classic rock station.
Classic rock is limp biscuit
Then where the 90’s grunge belongs to?