You
pc gaming is not console gaming, so there was no need to mention it. unless, your arguement is that modern consoles are no longer specific gaming machines but in fact pcs. pcs, by nature, progress in a forward momentum. as long as the pc supports the o/s and the o/s supports the software, then the pc can to. this was evident with DOS as each version brought new games but also continued to supported the hardware necessary to run old games. to this day you can install old dos games into a modern windows pc and they will work (not all, and as the o/s changes the list grows smaller).
the sega mark III was a re-release, the original master system was not backwards compatible with the sg1000.
Colecovision played atari 2600 carts with an addon device
Gamecube plays GBA games with hardware addon
Intellivision I/II played Atari 2600 carts with hardware addon
the intellivison II was also a rerelease. the colecovision and intellvision were not atari systems. they required extra hardware to accept the atari2600 carts.
i really don't see what point you are attempting to make. you are reaching for examples to challenge my comments. software made companies realize that compatibility with more systems would mean a greater library. but these things were not realized at first. as i said, these were after thoughts or completely new system designs.
-another world
You said back in "your" day BC did not exist , while it clearly did. ( with or without addon )
These devices where ( more or less ) official converters/ hardware upgrades exclusively to get BC going.
The idea was to narrow the gap between new hardware and old software sales.
The whole idea of BC came forth to stimulate the games market and make more money.
So it WAS present in "your"day, as you yourself quoted.
and yes I'm old enough to know and to own all these retail devices.
Back in the day it was a bargain to get a Megadrive and get the Mastersystem converter included, for instance. In the end Sega made more money out of the sales offcourse.
The same applies to PC software, it a marketing strategy known for years.
It's not for creating a bigger library for the consumer at all. It's for keeping sales up when new hardware/ software arises. Remember computers in the past were not a common household item as it is today. I think it a very naive way to think it was though up for the consumer.
It's has been around since a second version of a system arose.
I could not care less for Sony to include it as I really did not like the PS3 game offer, I was into pc gaming at that time, wich was cheaper in comparison to Sony's offer.
It's nice to have on the new console and in PS4 case it could potentionally hurt sales.
In my case it feels like starting over for them with the PS4 since I lost faith after the PS2.
They tried to market the PS3 with the idea you get a Blu-ray player aswell, "somewhat BC with PS2" and offcourse boost the cell processor marketshare, later even coupling the console with Bravia TV's, talking about losing focus.
BC nowadays basicly means "keeping your fanbase", because I'm clearly stepping out of the Sony hype. especially making the fans pay for a second time ( at least that part they got right from the past...) Game industry nowadays is a multi-billion industry but there's a reason.
You either are very original in regards to gameplay quality, or you keep supporting your most popular system, to keep your investing companions happy. (Remember Atari 2600 games and alike were programmed mostly by ONE person. There was no budget on advertising, global releases etc. Big profits were made over the backs of the programmers so they were very happy if their cart got sold in the next generation of cf a console.No million dollar contract were signed at that time...remeber the programmer of the original Tetris?)Thus try keeping out of the red, at least when a new system is launched. Keeping the fanbase is also important this way, as you can clearly read following this thread. Back in the day, that was'nt any different also but, it also proofs it's important to keep original, it's hard in these times to stay original, I know. Retro becomes more important, as the "children" of the past are the "father and mother" of present day.
Specs to not mean a thing, originallity/quality does. 30+ years of gaming talking here.