NB: This email and its contents are subject to our email legal notice
which can be viewed at http://www.sars.gov.za/Email_Disclaimer.pdf

----
HI all

I would like to give my 2 sense regarding something I noticed with main
stream games. I'm not sure if this is the same as Nintendo. For you guys
who first had sight, have you also played these tv games? It's a
cartridge with 60 games on it which you connect to your standard tv;
it's a whole procedure to   configure it,  because  you need an extra
channel for it. Anyway when I was  a child, my mom bought me a cartridge
with 60 games on it. I played these games with the help of my sighted
friends.   My mom paid r100 for the whole  cartridge. ON there is games
like pack man, Mario brothers, etc. It's a pitty that accessible games
costs more than mainstream games on a  cartridge. . Oh sorry, I  forgot
to say, r100 south African money is equal to  12 dollars.  So for 12
dollars you get 60 main stream games, some of them are small games and
some are multi level games. The obvious reason why accessible games is
not that cheap is because it needs more sounds. The difference  between
accessible and mainstream games is that accessible games   uses sounds
instead of graphics, so that is why accessible games costs  more.   I
know of  many sighted kids who exchange cartridges with games between
them  for free.  It's a pitty accessible games is not that popular.  I
mean a kid would go to his friend's house and give him a cartridge with
newer games for  free.  If only accessible games were that cheep so that
60 accessible games could fit onto a cartridge and plugged into the
computer and we only had to pay 12 dollars for it but the sounds it uses
is much larger than sighted games.

I'm just trying to discuss my point of view  regarding main stream
games.

_______________________________________________
Gamers mailing list .. [email protected]
To unsubscribe send E-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] You can visit
http://audyssey.org/mailman/listinfo/gamers_audyssey.org to make
any subscription changes via the web.

Reply via email to