@noiob omg the ngage!! Like, how powerful was the gaming systems on that, that it could run a basically almost entirely intact PS1 game??? I'm kinda in awe!
@Nine Also Tomb Raider plays super well on it! I've only stopped playing because for some reason you can't just release forward to stop moving, it sticks, and you have to push it again or push back to stop running which is super not how Tomb Raider is played.
It has a replay function which I think allows you to post your playthroughs of levels to N-Gage Arena, Nokia's online portal, but I can't try that nowadays for obvious reasons
@Nine oh yeah Tomb Raider's missing its soundtrack which is a bit sad, but then again I'm sure MMCs were expensive
which reminds me of the fact that I still haven't got a MMC to work with my N-Gage, I don't know if I've just had bad luck with MMCs or if my N-Gage eats them lol
@noiob jeez I'm imagining now what could have been had Symbian taken off and evolved more instead of Android
@Nine Nokia lost the license and had to go back to making awful S40 systems, I had two phones running that trainwreck of an OS…
I wish MeeGo had taken off tbh, it had some amazing concepts and is based on pretty solid Linux work, but it was too little too late. It kinda lives on in Sailfish OS but well, they support like one and a half phones
@Nine the N-Gage brand kind of lived on in N-Gage 2.0 which was some kind of download-based games platform for the most powerful Nokia phones. Had some impressive games afaik, they even got a Metal Gear
@Nine the N-Gage is an impressive Handheld (especially considering its competition was the Gameboy Advance, where 3D means pushing the hardware to its limits) and a really good phone thanks to Symbian (it has real multitasking! on a dumbphone!). I think with a different strategy it and a launch model without obvious flaws it could've been very successful.