These guys complete each other. Reggie is more of a hardcore gamer, who happens to keep his games in a collection. Metal Jesus is more of a hardcore collector, who happens to play games! (Love from Italy)
TUFUNGA TATTS I don’t think you understand hoarders, this guys collecting games because it’s a passion, hoarders literally keep EVERYHING, wrappers, moldy food, random shit.
@@bradvandongen2777 let them, they are actually the ones who support the channel more than regular viewers. If you think about it from a buisness side, they sit through the whole length of the video and do not skip the ads. They are basically what every RU-vidr wants hahaha
@@alexthebarber6029 Man when I try to do videos it get kinda hard and time consuming to record everything and with so many systems it's hard to get them out in a timely fashion
Your comment "Out of the way" lol 55:35 - Metal Jesus look right after... why did you say that look... sounded like it was a hassle to make the vid for the fans, lol
@@maxque2841 well thanks for your diagnosis i suppose lol... he looks normal, actually looks younger and shaved, tho' i cant literally see the stubbles grow during the video :-)
This is one of my favourite series on youtube, i rarely even look up games these days because I know i will get plenty of solid ideas(with video!) every once in a while. Love it!
The standard PS3 system can also play PS3 discs from any region which is nice. I've purchased a lot of JPN imports for mine. Games such as Strider Hiryu, Ketsui, Ratchet & Clank Quest for Booty, Dungeons & Dragons Shadows over Mysteria, and more.
I own the magma red PS Vita and it's the Japanese version. After getting Japanese versions of the Vita, I prefer them. You can easily set them up in English and like always no region lock.
ItsSoDane Fat Vita I got for $96 on ebay with a glass screen protector installed and a case with 8gb memory (switched for a 64gb card). Trying Persona 4 for first time, I got like 4-5 hours in and haven't picked back up yet but will. great story.
@@jpesicka492 Good for you. I prefer the sexy slim models of the vita and they typically run under $200 at the moment but tend to last longer with the Japanese versions than the US models.
That Mappy version for the Atari 2600 completely blew me away. I thought is was the Gameboy Color version. And yes: it was a very, very hard arcade game. 😊
Love these pick-up videos, probably my favorite on the MJR channel. I like most of the videos on here, but these videos always have something for everyone. Great job as always!
Sphinx is so damn good! I remember playing it PlayStation 2. Back when I would buy games based on front cover art cuz I didn’t have good internet to research lol.
Aaron Clayton yes you need to!! It has this weird mix of 3D Zelda adventure games and Metroidvania. It’s a really big game in size for when it released
Why is it so exciting to see another pick up video? Its two guys on a sofa showing off their consumerism. The thing is I like watching both of you since this channel first started. I am quite a fan. Thank you and keep it up. You are both so watchable xx
I had the talking baseball game as a kid. My older brother shared it with me back in the vert early 90's and left it for me when he went to college along with his master system. A tear jerker seeing that again.
Dang I remember when I was really young I had that exact baseball game. I didn't use it much but I think my brother ended up with it. It's long gone now.
17:18 I just bought a copy of GitarooMan Lives! for the PSP also. The PSP version is a bit harder do to the 16:9 aspect, but they added 2 new songs that aren't in the PS2 version so that's nice. I also bought Ghosts & Goblins Ultimate Kai (Japanese version) for the PSP. This version is JPN only, and fixes all of the issues with the original game (which is also included on the UMD). So the Kai version ditches the fetch questing, starts you with the double jump, and plays much more like classic GnG arcade games.
@24:30 Oh my! Calling a Commodore 64 in the mid/late 80's a PC was like calling a Sega console a Nintendo back in the early nineties! X-D These were called home computers or microcomputers back in the day.
i sent metaljesus a game, sent him a picture of it beforehand and even chatted briefly with him about it on discord. he said he was going to show it in a few months. it's been over a year now. i don't care if he shows it or not, but i really hope he didn't sell it instead of sending it back or saying he didn't want it for his collection
Sorry if we didn't show your game... but I can't always guarantee we show every game sent to us as these videos are already almost an hour long. As for games that are duplicates or I don't want, I will donate them to one of the MJR Crew for their collections. I don't remember what game you sent, but DM me and I'll see where it ended up and perhaps I will even mail it back to you if you are truly disappointed. Thanks so much.
Have to love a video that includes both Commodore AND Starpath supercharger games. You can use roms converted to mp3 and an mp3 player with the Starpath Supercharger for the 2600 as well. Frogger is by far the best Supercharger game and so hard to find at a reasonable price!
Going to be taking a trip to a eBay dealer closing his business down. Buying his whole retro and new video game inventory. PC Boxed games, consoles and more. $6500 worth of stuff. Looking forward to see what treasures he’s got mixed in there. Did a haul last week of around $4000 just on rare stuff for the channel from a guy on Let Go. The hunt never ends.
You can try going back to omega strain but I honestly can't recommend it. The biggest issue i had with it was that it felt like a multiplayer game first while single player second. I also hated how there were a lot of timed objectives that made it feel like unless you know what exactly to do you'd fail. Also there are some objectives that you can no longer do cause of them being online only. (although with glitches i think you can do the majority of them)
When I was a kid, I'd use the notes section at the end of my SNES/N64 manuals to write down cheat codes. Very convenient, especially when there was only one computer in the house to look it up, or if you went over a friend's house and they had some kind of guide with the code.
Why bother buying repro SNES games of hacks when you can copy them all to a SNES flashcart and play them all from there? The idea of store X profiting from the work of other developers never sat well with me. For example. That ZAMN hack... Konami programmed it.... And some other person worked on the hack. All the repro seller did was download the rom, apply the IPS patch, and throw a sticker on it to make easy money. It's profit for pirating no matter how you look at it. A flashcart would pay for itself after copying only a few of those games.
You're not paying for the ROM hack, you're paying for them to make a nice looking label with new artwork and give it its' own cartridge to make it look like it was actually released for the system, and making the ROM hack work with actual hardware. Of course it'll work on a flash cart, but some people, including myself, would rather have a physical cart for their favorite ROM hacks that looks great on the shelf next to their other games.
Some Jeep Guy I suppose. I don't like to mix bootleg or repros in with my original games. It kind of cheapens the collection. To each their own, but i personally dislike when repros or real looking hacks end up on eBay and are hard to distinguish from an authentic original. I nearly bought a ColecoVision game which I thought was an original because it copied the same cover style, CV, Coleco logos as the originals, but it was just a port of an MSX game. The seller's description also made it sound like it was an original Coleco branded game.
I modded my Saturn to play CDR back in 1997, but now you can easily play backups with an Action Replay. You can even flash those to "Pseudo Saturn Kai" and get a ton of options; play CDR, region free,+ 4MB RAM + game saves,cheats, etc. They are cheap too.
@@videogameobsessionFor me, having a flash cart feels like it cheapens my collection, but owning a few rom hack carts doesn't. I tend to think of them as physical DLC for the original game. It's not like I own super mario kart R, but then don't own a legitimate original super mario kart cartridge right next to it on the shelf. It's obviously not a replacement for the real thing, it's extra content built on the back of the original. Like you said though, to each their own. There's no reason our collections have to meet each others' standards. I also dislike fake cartridges that people try to pass off as legitimate, but that's not what these ROM hack carts are. Any collector should know something's up when they see "super mario world: return to dinosaur land". Most of them actually say "rom hack", or "copyright 20XX", or "reproduction cart" on the label. The majority of these companies putting rom hacks into physical carts aren't trying to trick you into buying fake carts, they're making physical versions for those of us that prefer it that way. I'd have a problem with it if it was just "super mario world" with a repro board being passed off as original.
I got that talking baseball game for Christmas the same year I got my Nintendo. My folks didn’t have a lot of money, so I was amazed to get both of them. Best Christmas ever!