• Hey Guest. Check out your NeoGAF Wrapped 2025 results here!

What Original Gameboy version of NES games were better?

I dunno if I can count this one, since it's original platform was not the NES, but Donkey Kong '94. It starts out as just the standard Donkey Kong, but that's just the beginning. The game opens up to so many levels, all with a new puzzle to them.
 
The Game Boy is missing one channel that the NES has, the triangle wave, often used for bass. That's it's primary shortcoming.

However, Wikipedia says that it has "one audio input from the cartridge," and I'm not sure what that means exactly. I think it means that if the cartridge wanted to include an expansion chip for audio, they could, but I'm not sure if this was regularly used.
The Game Boy's third audio channel uses a program-defined 32-sample waveform, which can be used to closely simulate a triangle wave (among others like sawtooth).
 
Which frankly I enjoyed more as a kid cause I actually could make progress in t his rather than getting endlessly loss in the 'progression' of the original NES game.
Fun thing: I hated this game, because I finished it during my first playthrough, 20 minutes after unpacking it.

I found it way too easy, without any challenge and little to no replay value. I felt I wasted my money, even if beside the lack of difficulty the game is fine.

I agree that TMNT on NES is brutal, though, with really bad design choices.
 
How dare you !

VR05mTG.gif

Bullshit! Those pot holes suck harder than hookers!

One guy is going to get that reference.
 
Most of the games in the OP and thread are not 'versions' at all, just games with the same or similar names.

Tennis, Golf, TMNT:FOTFC and Donkey Kong (94) are completely new games, not versions, ports or adaptations of anything. Might as well say Game Boy Golf is a version of the Atari VCS game 'Golf'.

Games which were actually ports of the same game are things like Duck Tales and Hook - same levels just somewhat remixed for the smaller screen.

I can't recall any actual ports I'd say were better on the GB. the best were games specifically for the console, like most of Konami's stuff e.g. Contra/Operation C.

Tetris is a great answer though.

Oh and Game Boy is two words people...

This is actually true and I probably should've edited it to say 'Which original game boy game do you prefer over NES similar games'

I'm aware they're not actually ports. So chill out.

Metal Gear on the NES is amazing. It's all very hipster to claim the janky movement MSX version is better (because the humble man who made the masterpiece of cinema called MGS4 said so), but the NES version is IMO superior and at the very least is still a very very good game.

And now that you say this, I'm not taking any of your onions seriously ever again thanks.


Metal Gear nes good..Cmonnn
 
Tennis and Golf are very much enhanced versions of the NES originals. So are Baseball and Yuakuman. R&D1 and Intelligent Systems were tasked with pumping put these early conversions asap.

Metal Gear is way better on MSX but it's alone in that. Gradius, Salamander, Contra, Castlevania, Track & Field and basically everything else was better on NES. In some cases they were even different games really.
 
And now that you say this, I'm not taking any of your onions seriously ever again thanks.
Metal Gear nes good..Cmonnn
Is this some new internet thing, to be down on Metal Gear NES, even though it's 90% the same game? And regularly features on 'best games on the NES lists?

Or are you all confusing it with Snake's Revenge?

Here's an HG101 article comparing the two versions, which concludes the NES version is slightly better overall.
http://blog.hardcoregaming101.net/2009/08/metal-gear-msx-and-nes-comparison.html?m=1
 
Zelda on NES is a classic, of course. But, and maybe therefore, was the subsequent Gameboy version better.

You mean Link's Awakening, right? Holy shit. Yeah that game is a hundred times better than Zelda NES.

Donkey Kong '94 is better than any shit they put on the NES in the DK series.
 
Kirby's Dream Land 1 & 2 > Kirby's Adventure

In regards to music, the Game Boy reigns supreme for me. Sure, there are tons of memorable ones on the NES, but I think the quality felt higher on the GB in my opinion. It got rid of one channel but it has a 32 entry Wave channel to it which is really cool. I feel like the basses are a lot better in the Game Boy too, which rounds it out really well.
 
The GBC ports of Dragon Warrior 1, 2 & 3 (based upon the Super Famicom remakes) are often considered to be preferable to the NES ones. They're a lot easier, but they're definitely superior in a lot of areas.



Edit: LOLCAN'TREAD. Sorry.
 
sörine;139721566 said:
Tennis and Golf are very much enhanced versions of the NES originals. So are Baseball and Yuakuman. R&D1 and Intelligent Systems were tasked with pumping put these early conversions asap.

Metal Gear is way better on MSX but it's alone in that. Gradius, Salamander, Contra, Castlevania, Track & Field and basically everything else was better on NES. In some cases they were even different games really.

I vastly prefer the MSX contra. It has twice the levels of the NES version.
 
how about gameboy games better than their SNES counterparts?

Link's Awakening over Link to the Past
Mr. Do! on the gameboy is a better port than the SNES one
 
Donkey Kong '94 is better than any shit they put on the NES in the DK series.
it was released 11 years later, two entire console generations (Famicom launch to PS1 launch).

How anyone can possibly think of them as 'versions' of each other defies belief. DK94 is so much more modern a game it contains the whole of DK just as a reference.
 
The GBC ports of Dragon Warrior 1, 2 & 3 (based upon the Super Famicom remakes) are often considered to be preferable to the NES ones. They're a lot easier, but they're definitely superior in a lot of areas.

Got a copy of DW3 in the mail, hoping to confirm your statement.

how about gameboy games better than their SNES counterparts?

Link's Awakening over Link to the Past
Mr. Do! on the gameboy is a better port than the SNES one

This is going to get push-back.
 
Is this some new internet thing, to be down on Metal Gear NES, even though it's 90% the same game? And regularly features on 'best games on the NES lists?

Or are you all confusing it with Snake's Revenge?

Here's an HG101 article comparing the two versions, which concludes the NES version is slightly better overall.
http://blog.hardcoregaming101.net/2009/08/metal-gear-msx-and-nes-comparison.html?m=1

Well, I thought that, nowadays, since people actually know about the MSX game, noone in their right mind would play MG NES. The MSX version changes screens so much faster that, to me, makes it far more playable. I won't even mention the game design changes.

I also thought it was well-known that Ultra Games is shit, but I guess some people love them. Maybe it's an acquired taste or something. I guess modern day Konami doesn't look so bad to those people.
 
how about gameboy games better than their SNES counterparts?

Link's Awakening over Link to the Past
Mr. Do! on the gameboy is a better port than the SNES one

This is true and I loved both games.

As long as we're being loose with choosing a peer.

Alleyway > Arkanoid NES (without paddle)
Bases Loaded GB > Bases Loaded NES
Revenge of the Gator > Pinball
Escape from Camp Deadly > Bart vs the Space Mutants
Super R.C. Pro Am > R.C. Pro Am
 
Is this some new internet thing, to be down on Metal Gear NES, even though it's 90% the same game? And regularly features on 'best games on the NES lists?

Or are you all confusing it with Snake's Revenge?

Here's an HG101 article comparing the two versions, which concludes the NES version is slightly better overall.
http://blog.hardcoregaming101.net/2009/08/metal-gear-msx-and-nes-comparison.html?m=1

From a plot point of view, the NES version has no Metal Gear, Snake parachutes in with other soldiers who are never referenced or heard from again and Big Boss's final message is removed.

There's also things like being able to cancel an alert by moving to the next screen and messages appear in the wrong place due to their triggers not aligning with the redesigned game, the redesign also results in location changes which are also affected by these messages.

The best change it made was to the inventory sorting and the fact you can walk under cameras.

It's not a bad game, but very sloppy.
 
Wow, really? I thought the GBC version was trash when I tried playing it years ago. Game was weird as hell.

The NES and GB versions are amazing though, you should absolutely play them if you like Rearmed. The GB version is even on the 3DS virtual console these days.

Yeah, wasn't the GBC game one of the first to release on GBC? I remember it getting pretty good reviews but I thought it was bad, too.

I dunno if I can count this one, since it's original platform was not the NES, but Donkey Kong '94. It starts out as just the standard Donkey Kong, but that's just the beginning. The game opens up to so many levels, all with a new puzzle to them.

That was a really clever set-up. It was fun playing through those original levels with Mario's crazy SM64-style jumps and abilities. DK94 is simply one of the best GB experiences around.

sörine;139721566 said:
Tennis and Golf are very much enhanced versions of the NES originals. So are Baseball and Yuakuman. R&D1 and Intelligent Systems were tasked with pumping put these early conversions asap.

Metal Gear is way better on MSX but it's alone in that. Gradius, Salamander, Contra, Castlevania, Track & Field and basically everything else was better on NES. In some cases they were even different games really.

Tennis and Golf are still great today. I have Mario Golf and Mario Tennis on GBC; both are great games as well, but I may prefer the purity of those original GB releases.

it was released 11 years later, two entire console generations (Famicom launch to PS1 launch).

How anyone can possibly think of them as 'versions' of each other defies belief. DK94 is so much more modern a game it contains the whole of DK just as a reference.

Good point but I'm always happy to see DK94 get love on GAF. Was also happy to see that Link's Awakening is a bit of a GAF darling, too. It may be my fav Zelda game, but I've only played the NES and GB/GBC games ...
 
Well, I thought that, nowadays, since people actually know about the MSX game, noone in their right mind would play MG NES. The MSX version changes screens so much faster that, to me, makes it far more playable. I won't even mention the game design changes.

I also thought it was well-known that Ultra Games is shit, but I guess some people love them. Maybe it's an acquired taste or something. I guess modern day Konami doesn't look so bad to those people.
It's fine to prefer the MSX version, but you described (at the very least perfectly competent) NES version as 'shit'.

And who ever said Ultra games was bad? It's literally just Konami. Metal Gear, Rollergames, Ninja Turtles II, Operation C, Nemesis, Motocross Maniacs, the GB Turtles games - all great games. Some of the games they published from other dev were bad (e.g. Skate or Die), which sounds a lot like modern Konami...

Konami were kings of the Game Boy too. Belmont's Revenge god damn.
 
From a plot point of view, the NES version has no Metal Gear, Snake parachutes in with other soldiers who are never referenced or heard from again and Big Boss's final message is removed.

There's also things like being able to cancel an alert by moving to the next screen and messages appear in the wrong place due to their triggers not aligning with the redesigned game, the redesign also results in location changes which are also affected by these messages.

The best change it made was to the inventory sorting and the fact you can walk under cameras.

It's not a bad game, but very sloppy.

My main beef were those jungle mazes. They never give you any clue in game what path to take and you had to read Nintendo Power to know.
 
Also add me as one of those weirdos that loved Snakes Revenge. I must have rented it 5 or 6 times back in the day because i wanted to finish the game so bad because i found it fun.
 
I vastly prefer the MSX contra. It has twice the levels of the NES version.
Fair enough, I just don't like the screen flip personally. I think it's less of an issue in Vampire Killer or Metal Gear though.

I also thought it was well-known that Ultra Games is shit, but I guess some people love them. Maybe it's an acquired taste or something. I guess modern day Konami doesn't look so bad to those people.
Ultra Games was just a paper company so Konami could get around Nintendo's dumb QC policies and publish twice as many games annually in America. Same for Palcom in Europe. Both companies basically were Konami.
 
Also add me as one of those weirdos that loved Snakes Revenge. I must have rented it 5 or 6 times back in the day because i wanted to finish the game so bad because i found it fun.

Yup, loved Snake's Revenge too. How can you NOT like names such as Higharolla Kockamamie and Vermon CaTaffy.
 
Both of the Mario Land games were better than their console counterparts (SMB and SMB3).

WHOA.

As much as I think that Six Golden Coins is a massively underappreciated gem, SMB & SMB3 stomp holes through Land 1. SMB1 gives SGC a good smack and SMB3 kicks it while it's down. SMB3's level design alone makes this impossible to compare.
 
Yup, loved Snake's Revenge too. How can you NOT like names such as Higharolla Kockamamie and Vermon CaTaffy.

I never even knew about those names until EGM pointed them out. I never had access to the manual because the video stores always threw them out.

Those names were never actually used within the games but Konami's manual writers thought they were funny making stuff up as they went.
 
I never even knew about those names until EGM pointed them out. I never had access to the manual because the video stores always threw them out.

Those names were never actually used within the gmaes but Konami's manual writers thought they were funny making stuff up as they went.
Yeah there was something special about 80s Konami. The flawless presentation in the silver boxes, beautiful cover art, cheesy (and pun-filled) but nicely done manuals and back of box scpiels. And their classic blocky 'no character faces' in-house style.

I recently completed a boxed set of all silver box Konami NES games, including the ones that were Ultra in the US (like Metal Gear) and Palcom in Europe (like Castlevania 3). It's a thing of beauty.

Now onto the silver box GB games.

I would say Vampire Killer is an entirely different game from castlevania.
That's because it is? It's a completely different game using the same assets game because the MSX is too weak to scroll tiles very well.
 
It's fine to prefer the MSX version, but you described (at the very least perfectly competent) NES version as 'shit'.

And who ever said Ultra games was bad? It's literally just Konami. Metal Gear, Rollergames, Ninja Turtles II, Operation C, Nemesis, Motocross Maniacs, the GB Turtles games - all great games. Some of the games they published from other dev were bad (e.g. Skate or Die), which sounds a lot like modern Konami...

Konami were kings of the Game Boy too. Belmont's Revenge god damn.

Ok, let's put it this way: MG NES has a LOT of shitty decisions (and oversights). If you can put up with them, you can actually enjoy the game. I don't see the need to put up with them anymore since there's MG MSX.

About the other games... They are all pretty shitty, except Operation C, which is mediocre but perfectly playable, and Nemesis I don't think of as an Ultra Games games (didn't realize it has the seal).

Belmont's Revenge is awesome, but I thought it was a KCEK game.

sörine;139731301 said:
Ultra Games was just a paper company so Konami could get around Nintendo's dumb QC policies and publish twice as many games annually in America. Same for Palcom in Europe. Both companies basically were Konami.

Might be a paper company, but their games do feel like they were made by the same people. Same smell of shit.
 
GB Tetris is not better than NES Tetris. For one it is slower and feels clunkier to play and secondly the playfield is only 18 by 10 instead of 20 by 10. It does have multiplayer though so I'll give it that. Not saying it is bad by any means though, but I just don't agree that it is better than NES Tetris.

I guess the proper comparison would be with the first Tetris on Famicom, which was also made by Bullet-Proof Software. Famicom Tetris is really really crap and the GB version is a million times better.
 
Star Wars - One the NES version I'd lose most of my lives in The Asteroid Field so could never get much further, in the Gameboy version you could hide in the corner of the screen and not take a single hit which let me go on to complete the game.

Dude, yes.
 
That's because it is? It's a completely different game using the same assets game because the MSX is too weak to scroll tiles very well.

Vampire Killer is an MSX2 game, and the MSX2 supports both hardware vertical page scrolling (as did the MSX) as well as hardware horizontal scrolling by putting the machine into mode 4, then adjusting register r#18 to adjust scroll steps of 1 to 16 pixels per character, with each tile being 8 pixels and each character being made of two tiles.

Example of konami games scrolling horizontally: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gcZJ64PgtgA

Vampire Killer uses page flipping because of design choice, not because the MSX was 'too weak to scroll tiles very well."
 
I hesistate to say its the de facto better since its been a while since ive played them, but the GB version of Ducktales 2 added features like items that would help you find the hidden treasure that I dont think were in the NES original. I remember preferring the level design changes it made to some of the areas too.
 
Vampire Killer is an MSX2 game, and the MSX2 supports both hardware vertical page scrolling (as did the MSX) as well as hardware horizontal scrolling by putting the machine into mode 4, then adjusting register r#18 to adjust scroll steps of 1 to 16 pixels per character, with each tile being 8 pixels and each character being made of two tiles.

Example of konami games scrolling horizontally: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gcZJ64PgtgA

Vampire Killer uses page flipping because of design choice, not because the MSX was 'too weak to scroll tiles very well."
And your example, like all scrolling on the MSX (1 or 2) is jerky?

Yes it's a design decision, likely because scrolling sucks on the MSX.

I actually owned a one-chip MSX and played through these games on original hardware (and sold it for a massive profit a few years ago). Gradius and Contra for example are clearly massive downgrades from the NES versions, as is AKumajou Dracula.
 
Oh man, dat Tennis game. Loved it. I have it on some bootleg cartridge I got from a friend, it has like 12 different games on it, despite saying 52 or something on the sticker. All other games are just repeats with different names. You know those bootleg games ? lol
 
Daffy Duck: The Marvin Missions: Not NES, but the Super Nintendo version was terrible. Loose controls (you shoot, you get a slight recoil), enemies blend together with the background, and too spacious, boring levels. While the Game Boy version has tighter controls, a colder atmosphere and music (fits better with the space theme), and the levels themselves were better to play due to being more compact and linear. Not a great game by any means, partially because of the cheap deathtraps that could nearly rival Battletoads, but definitely better than its console counter-part.

BattleToads: It's better because they fixed the motorbike stage, as well as the stage where a saw keeps chasing you and you have to press the correct directional buttons to escape. Just recently played both on the NES and Game Boy, and I couldn't for the life of me beat the latter level on the NES, while on the Game Boy I got it within a few tries. Yet it's the same pattern.

I would also say F1 Race by Nintendo, but I might be biased since I played and owned the Game Boy version first.
 
And your example, like all scrolling on the MSX (1 or 2) is jerky?

Yes it's a design decision, likely because scrolling sucks on the MSX.

I actually owned a one-chip MSX and played through these games on original hardware (and sold it for a massive profit a few years ago). Gradius and Contra for example are clearly massive downgrades from the NES versions, as is AKumajou Dracula.

..I just explained to you how scrolling on the MSX2 isn't jerky. You're describing character-width scrolling, a limitation of the MSX1, which stepped at 16-pixels. I just showed you single-pixel scrolling, the same as any other hardware scrolling. Any jerkiness you are perceiving is solely in your mind, it is scrolling at 1 pixel steps.

Guess what: I own these game and, unlike you, I don't use a SOC MSX clone to play them on, I use actual, real hardware.

Gradius is an MSX1 game.

Contra displays more colors at once, and more sprites on screen than the NES version, and has twice as many levels, and better music. The only "downside" is that it uses page flipping instead of scrolling - again, a design choice not made because of hardware limitations. It is clearly superior in almost every way to the NES version.

This is the "jerky" scrolling you are referring to: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jIIPCUTxFjk

Space Manbow does not scroll like that. In fact, here is Salamander on real MSX hardware scrolling at 16 pixels per step: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4rYffqQaBmM

And here is a port of the game running on a PSP through a special emulator in the Salamander Portable pack with the MSX2 hardware scrolling included, with the Salamander rom hacked to support 1-pixel hardware scrolling like space manbow:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ebNF9_NZ1PM
 
The Adventure Island games on GB were infinitely better than the NES games, something about the slower and smoother scrolling, less shit on the screen made them very enjoyable. Tiny toons too.

As a side note, there are GBC versions of N64 and PS1 games that are immensely better.

Mario Golf, Mario Tennis, Superman (less crappy at least, playable even), Quest 64, Rayman GBC (compared to Rayman 1 PS1), Grinch (was a great stealth/arcade game instead of a crappy PS1 platformer).
 
Top Bottom