If you were a kid in the 90s, you probably look back on gaming with nothing but nostalgia in your heart. The 90s were a golden age, producing games such as The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, Half-Life, Doom, Super Mario 64, Resident Evil 2, System Shock 2, and Silent Hill, amongst many, many others.
However, gaming has changed a lot since the 90s, and nostalgia often puts a rose-coloured filter over the wide range of difficulties that the fairly new advent of gaming technology was prone to. Whether you hung out in arcades, played games on a PC, or indulged in consoles produced by Sega, Nintendo, or Playstation, there were things about those experiences that no gamer from the modern era has ever had to deal with. Dial-up, for instance - the sound of a connection booting can never be accurately described. Or having your Playstation console as the only CD player in the house. Here are 10 common problems that only plagued gamers in the 90s. Losing Your Game Genie Booklet The original Game Genie guide for the NES
Remember kids, there really was a time where the internet wasn't the omniscient source of infinite information that it is today, and that time is the 90s. The World Wide Web - the prototype version of the internet we know and love - wasn't invented until 1989, and it wasn't until the early 2000s that it really started developing into what we know it to be.
In the absence of web forums where game cheats and walkthroughs could be shared, we needed a more grassroots way to spread game cheat codes and patches. Thus, a company called Codemasters developed the Game Genie - a device that comes with a cartridge that essentially holds the data for the cheats of a particular game. Before you could use the cheats, you'd have to enter a cheat code - each Game Genie cartridge came with a corresponding booklet that contained all of the codes that you could use.
