I distinctly remember everyone playing Ocarina of Time in 1998. I didn’t know anyone that was playing Pokemon Red/Blue.
You have a really small circle then. Pokemon literally was making the news with how much it was dominating media at the time of it’s western release in 1998.
To be fair, it’s not like OoT wasn’t popular. Even the article says it was second. But Pokemon was a phenomenon
It’s probably something to do with age. In 1998 I was 22. I was probably too old for Pokemon. I remember my nephews played the card game throughout the 90s. I didn’t play Ocarina or Pokemon, but I knew tons of people into Ocarina, like my nephews. Memory is also unreliable and yes, it’s listed as number 2, which surprised me, my poor or selective memory would have placed it number 1.
eh, consoles maybe. Starcraft wasnt in that last though.
Mario Kart mechanics peaked in MK64
I had no idea call of duty was such a big deal. It’s not my jam so I never notice it.
I was thinking the same thing. I’ve never played a single one or even seen gameplay footage of them. Who is playing these games? I assumed they were just generic shooters.
Sure, but they’re the generic shooter. And it had a big resurgence during COVID with everyone and their mothers playing Warzone. I hadn’t touched CoD since MW3 in like 2012 and I put so many hours into the 2019 Modern Warfare game with Warzone.
GRAND THEFT POKEMON OF DUTY
I made $100 million just from typing that out
This is why Sony was making such a big deal about Call of Duty during the discussions about Microsoft acquiring Activision (owners of the Call of Duty franchise). Sony wanted reassurance that the Call of Duty games would still come out on the PlayStation consoles, and not be exclusive to Microsoft’s platforms (Xbox and Windows). When you see that Call of Duty has been the best selling game nearly every year recently, you can understand Sony’s plea.
It’s a shame that it doesn’t go back far enough to include DooM.