2:20 Wow, look at that crappy framerate. The NES version of this game runs so much smoother, and it was an 8-bit console! Wasn't the CD-I 16-bit? How could this console be so bad?
Blame the SCC66470 video controller... it can scroll a background (as far as I can tell) but it's a lot more complex than on NES (and you have to keep track of which regions of the screen have sprites and erase them before redrawing). This is similar to software rendering on PC (Jazz Jackrabbit etc). A lot of people just gave up and just redrew the whole frame with the blitter every time which is stupidly slow. The NES doesn't have a blitter, it just figures out all the objects that go on each scanline and reads it on the fly from the cartridge, so you can't really make a slow game, either your game is fast or it doesn't work. :3
@@boptillyouflop Jazz Jackrabbit ran pretty smooth on a 386 PC, but of course the CD-I was a lot slower than that. Also, you CAN have a slow game on a NES. A few games had slowdowns when there were too many enemies on the screen, but it was certainly rare. Thanks for the explanation on the video controller. I guess the reason the CD-I was ill equipped for videogames was that it wasn't exactly conceived as a videogames console in the beginning, but more like a multimedia enabled video player for interactive educational titles and the like. That's why it was less than ideal for demanding games.
The CD-i is roughly the predecessor of DVD movie menus. It was originally intended for viewing slideshows, short movie clips, full movies, viewing text from encyclopedias and so on. Unfortunately it was massively over-hyped and advertised. You can technically also make games with it, but it is always really limited. It could never take the place of established consoles and was too limited and expensive for average people to justify getting one. The PC compatibles rapidly evolved and quickly replaced the CD-i except in very niche applications and in education.
@@nrdesign1991 For a predecessor of DVD movie menus, it was a lot more advanced than that! It might have not been good as a console, but it still could run things way more advanced than DVD menus.
I really wanted a CD-i with Hotel Mario
An equivalent model of the CDI 220 exists in Europe branded as a Grundig
1:25 wow, it inserted the disk upside down
don't worry it's a lightscribe disc
0:11 look like you flinch when the cdi tray opening
LMAO
NULL
LOL
In the Philips CD-I theme, the Roland D-50 PN-D50-00 patch "Flutish Brass" was heard.
1:21 Philips startup
why is that start-up so smooth
Still thinks this is one if the coolest formats. Seeing this in the mid 90s blew my fing mind hehe.
1:21 it's more smooth on an crt
1:23 CD-L VAT
2:20 Wow, look at that crappy framerate. The NES version of this game runs so much smoother, and it was an 8-bit console! Wasn't the CD-I 16-bit? How could this console be so bad?
Blame the SCC66470 video controller... it can scroll a background (as far as I can tell) but it's a lot more complex than on NES (and you have to keep track of which regions of the screen have sprites and erase them before redrawing). This is similar to software rendering on PC (Jazz Jackrabbit etc). A lot of people just gave up and just redrew the whole frame with the blitter every time which is stupidly slow.
The NES doesn't have a blitter, it just figures out all the objects that go on each scanline and reads it on the fly from the cartridge, so you can't really make a slow game, either your game is fast or it doesn't work. :3
@@boptillyouflop Jazz Jackrabbit ran pretty smooth on a 386 PC, but of course the CD-I was a lot slower than that. Also, you CAN have a slow game on a NES. A few games had slowdowns when there were too many enemies on the screen, but it was certainly rare.
Thanks for the explanation on the video controller. I guess the reason the CD-I was ill equipped for videogames was that it wasn't exactly conceived as a videogames console in the beginning, but more like a multimedia enabled video player for interactive educational titles and the like. That's why it was less than ideal for demanding games.
The CD-i is roughly the predecessor of DVD movie menus. It was originally intended for viewing slideshows, short movie clips, full movies, viewing text from encyclopedias and so on. Unfortunately it was massively over-hyped and advertised. You can technically also make games with it, but it is always really limited. It could never take the place of established consoles and was too limited and expensive for average people to justify getting one. The PC compatibles rapidly evolved and quickly replaced the CD-i except in very niche applications and in education.
still better than my computer trying to load a minecraft chunk lol
@@nrdesign1991 For a predecessor of DVD movie menus, it was a lot more advanced than that! It might have not been good as a console, but it still could run things way more advanced than DVD menus.
That's the thing, I do like the PS1 more, I'm shocked that it has a less powerful processor.
Arc Possibly bad optimization on a CDi and More GPU core on PS1
Es La Mejor Marca De Consolas, Electrodomesticos y mucho mas es la grande: Philips Y la unica consola Philips Interactive y Philips Media
Philips interactive media / Codemasters Logos (1995-)
Proof that someone owns a cdi and plays hotel mario and zelda
2:05 get ready!
Is that Philips CDI can play another disc? Such as CD MP3, DVD, and VCD? It seems only can play CD Audio disc.
It can play CD-I titles as well as regular audio CDs
There was like a megachonker expensive card that you installed in the back of the machine to play like video dvds and shit
Even some of these can play CD+G disks.
@@rodrigotudancafernandez17 what
No just only CDs (Compact disc).
Ah yes. The classic :)
That When I Was Born In 17/12/2004
17? is that docksember
ps1 have a lower frequency -_-
Thanks for this
Yay me to ........
Is it just me or the frame rate on the startup is higher
Alabama JVC Startup Sound 1:32
Who said I liked the PS1 any more?
1:32 reminds me when you select a character in Mario kart
It is the sound dude
Childhood
De Maravilla Loco Cdi a 5 pesos
Hmm it's not too broken it's a normal cdi
First shuttle is broken and also PS1 has a Sony shuttle.
The Micro Machines loaded because of broken shuttle.
PS1 has lower shuttle.
And CD-i is the 95s!
I like PS1 more powerful 😂
I like CDi more interactive 😂
1:21
DODO PHILLIPS MAGNAVOX 0:48
Bruh he have 3 philips cdi 💀
SANYO CDi Portable Prototype
Panasonic CDi Prototype
Fujitsu CDi Prototype
Pioneer Laserdisc CDi Prototype
Sunday February 7 2010
I hope she made lots of spaghetti
Oh man a lots of cdi
1:21 start now
Codemasters sounds like Alabama
JVC
The yuyy😮😂🎉
That looks pretty old
But can it play sonic cd
Nah, it needed to be a cd-i title. Not Just any title
2:37 Face Reveal
What happnd with ya tv
Cameras don't like to work with CRT TVs very well.
vamos philips vamos brincar philips interactive media
OK
ytp intro
1:18 Hotel Mario?
80s
Philips
Amongus
.
CD-I
na-no
We now present you, the shittiest video game console ever.
Well, it wasnt ment to play games at first
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I luk like bk4
It's u
0
The CDI had a measly 50 MHz processor. piece of shit
What's your problem now?
Spongebob: That wasn't nice! (no really it wasn't nice and that reference was from Walking Small)
@@Moviesxp Haven't you figured it out SpongeBob! Nice guys finnish last!!!
Only aggressive people conquer the world HAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!!!
50 MHz wasn't a bad clock speed for 1991, when the CD-I got released. The problem with the CD-I wasn't the processor speed at all.
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