I see they released the ancient arcade game Dragon's Lair on XBLA (with kinect support). Does anyone remember this (or the sequel, Timewarp) in arcades? Moreover, does anyone remember the Philips CD-i? I got one for free (short story, but won't tell it) back in the early 90's. From Wikipedia and Google image search I can say it was mostly likely of the 220 series. Had a Palm Springs golf game, Escape from Cyber City (felt really hard at the time, wonder if it still would), Caeser's World of Gambling, Text Tiles, 7th Guest, and some Rave CD with flashing graphics (this music was popular in the UK at the time).
I later bought Micro Machines, Litil Divil, and really wanted Mad Dog McCree, which I had liked in the arcades. Also got both the Link and Zelda games they released as well as some medievil knight story where I remember you had to farm gold.
But my favourite of all was the Don Bluth games they released. They felt truly arcade perfect ports at a time I was always disappointed with the liberal use of the term 'true arcade port' for home console games. There were both Dragon's Lair games available as well as Space Ace, and later Brain Dead 13, which took a bit of getting used to before I enjoyed. The former three were amazing though. I've bought the XBLA version but haven't downloaded it yet. I think I've sighed heavily at any quicktime event that's occured in a game I've been playing since the Xbox came out, so I'm a bit apprehensive I'm not going to experience anything like the joy these games used to give when I was younger.
Does anyone remember this console or these Don Bluth games in the arcade?
This is really an appreciation thread, you do a simple google search for 'Philips CD-i' and you'll see nothing but bad reviews, almost copying each other. There's nothing new in that angle, so it'd be great to hear from anyone that has fond memories of this system.