يحاول ذهب - حر
Sony PlayStation: the game changer
January 2025
|PC Pro
David Crookes looks at how the first PlayStation turned the gaming world on its head, impacting rival console manufacturers, videogame developers and the perception of games themselves

In December 1994, it was becoming clear where gaming was heading: straight down the road to the third dimension. Although 3D games had been around for a while DOS titles Wolfenstein 3D and Doom being the most notable - one play of Ridge Racer was all it took to convince larger numbers of gamers that 3D was the future.
Ridge Racer was a launch title for Sony's PlayStation, a console that had made its debut in Japan. As history will attest, this machine forever changed the course of the videogame industry by successfully smashing the longheld Nintendo-Sega duopoly. It drove forward with fresh thinking and a determination to turn the industry on its head. In short, the PlayStation was a game changer.
It could have been so different. Six years earlier, Sony had no desire to become a major player in the console market. Instead, it partnered with Nintendo to create a CD-ROM add-on device for Nintendo's 16-bit SNES called the Play Station (with a space between the words).
Yet when Sony announced the partnership during the 1991 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nintendo poured cold water on the deal. It said it had signed a separate arrangement with Philips for a CD-i add-on, and it was later confirmed that the Sony-Nintendo project was off. Understandably annoyed, Sony decided to go it alone with a product that would eventually go head to head with its former partner. The desire for revenge appeared strong.

هذه القصة من طبعة January 2025 من PC Pro.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من PC Pro
PC Pro
How connected tech could fix roads
Oceans of data, AI-managed traffic signals and more autonomous cars on the road all have the potential to make our roads safer.
9 mins
October 2025

PC Pro
"I'm an evil system tester, thinking up software-breaking situations, and this occasion was no different"
What would life be like without Google if its services were unavailable due to a deliberate act of sabotage?
9 mins
October 2025

PC Pro
"Ransomware is an extortion racket, and the people behind it are as caring as the Kray twins"
Guilty: it's another column about ransomware, but this one is different as Davey asks whether the government is right to ban ransom payments
8 mins
October 2025
PC Pro
Synology DiskStation DS1525+
A well-priced and powerful desktop NAS with top performance and heaps of data protection features
3 mins
October 2025

PC Pro
LENOVO THINKSTATION P5 TOWER
Great design, but Intel's Xeon can't compete with AMD's processors
2 mins
October 2025

PC Pro
Will Intel ever be back in the workstation market?
Certainly not this year. But there are promising signs for next year, if Intel hits all its claims - and assuming AMD doesn't jump ahead once more
4 mins
October 2025

PC Pro
Commodore: The comeback
David Crookes looks at how a once powerful and influential tech brand hopes to shine once more, including an exclusive interview with Commodore's new owner
8 mins
October 2025

PC Pro
Real world computing
\"I think cynicism is a good thing. And blunt sarcasm has been my trademark for 30 years\". New age-verification laws for 18+ sites raise questions about the trust we can place in third-party services that promise not to keep our data
10 mins
October 2025

PC Pro
Six things to look for in a workstation
There are few bigger and more important investments to make than a new workstation, or a fleet of them. Here's what you need to consider before taking the plunge
8 mins
October 2025

PC Pro
IDrive RemotePC Enterprise
Secure cloud-hosted remote support that's easy to use, very versatile and incredible value for larger businesses
2 mins
October 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size