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GamesBeat’s PlayStation 2 memories

GamesBeat’s PlayStation 2 memories

Sony has ceased production of the PlayStation 2. We mark the occasion by looking back on one of the most popular systems in gaming history.

PlayStation 2

It was a good run. After 12 years, Sony has ended worldwide production for its incredibly successful PlayStation 2 video game console.

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Affectionately called the PS2 by fans, Sony’s second system dominated the market even though it was less powerful than its competitors, the Microsoft Xbox and Nintendo GameCube. How? With games. The PS2 (warning, opinion incoming) had one of the best gaming libraries ever, including Japanese role-playing games like Final Fantasy X and bloody action titles like God of War.

So let’s not mourn the end of an era. Instead, GamesBeat is going to celebrate this magnificent machine by sharing our favorite PS2 memories.


Contributor Stephanie Carmichael

I remember going from GameStop to GameStop before a cashier finally told me that my copy of Gauntlet: Dark Legacy wouldn’t work on my PS2 because it was a blue-backed, CD-based disc, and those could cause problems. Also, my original PlayStation games would skip all the time on my PS2, but I still loved that console, especially for games like the Jak series, Final Fantasy X, Prince of Persia, and Silent Hill 2.

Staff writer Jeff Grubb

I held off on getting a PlayStation 2 because I was young and stupid — like so stupid. I kept close tabs on Shadow of the Colossus though, and when it finally came out I picked up a system with that game. I had an amazing time playing through the incredible battles. When I beat the game, I made a list of PS2 classics that I missed out on but wanted to go back and finally try. One day, I got my check from my job at the time, went out, and bought three games (Maximo, Sly Cooper, and God of War.)

When I got home, all of my game systems were gone. Someone opened my front door, which was never locked since I lived with a couple of other cretins, and they walked in and stole my stuff. I couldn’t afford to replace my consoles, so I just returned the games and started saving up again to buy new hardware.

I eventually got a PS2 again a few years later, but I’ve still never played Maximo, Sly Cooper, or God of War. Still, I loved the time I had with the system and feel like now is the time to go back and dig into the stuff I missed.

Contributor Jason Lomberg

I was working at Electronics Boutique when the PS2 came out and — along with the rest of the gaming world — weathered the insane shortages. I distinctly remember one customer offering my manager $500 to “move up on the list.” But that was nothing compared to the secondary market.

Intern Sam Barsanti

I have a similar story to Jeff (though not as bad): In highschool, once a year they would let nerds (like me) hang out in the library on a Saturday and play video games on the school TVs and projectors. One year, I brought my PS2 and one of the Grand Theft Auto games (which had come out maybe a week or so before). At some point while I was there, somebody stole my PS2 and swapped it with a broken one, which I figured out the next day by breaking the PS2 open and realizing my GTA disc wasn’t inside. Of course, nobody believed me, and they thought I had just broken my PS2, including the teacher that was in charge of the event (who I’m pretty sure was in on it).

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A few days later I went to the store and bought a new PS2, cause it was such a rad system and I didn’t want to go without it.

Oh, wait … favorite PS2 memories ….

Intern Jasmine Maleficent Rea

My favorite memory is actually the great memory card shortage. Remember that?

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I got a PS2 around that time and picked up a copy of Baldur’s Gate Dark Alliance. Since I didn’t have a memory card, I had to set aside seven hours to rush through the story. A month later, when my dad finally found a card, I could burn through the game in less than five hours.

I’m really good at Dark Alliance, you guys.

Intern Giancarlo Valdes

The PS2 shortage was especially memorable/painful for me:

I was so hyped for the console after reading the news in my PSM and OPM magazine subscriptions, but I always came up empty-handed when I would visit EB and other stores. Around three months after its launch, I finally came across a big blue PS2 box behind the cash register at a KB Toys store, and I was stoked. I barely managed to convince my mom to buy it at the time, but she told me we didn’t have enough to get any PS2 games. I got it anyway — I was more in love with the idea of owning the console itself than playing any of its new games just yet.

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So, for a few months after that, I played nothing but old PS1 demo discs and role-playing games, geeking out over how much smoother some of them looked (heck even Final Fantasy VIII looked like a totally different game to me). I didn’t get a PS2 game until Zone of the Enders came out, mostly for that gorgeous Metal Gear Solid 2 demo. I must have played that like a million times before actually starting ZOE.

Contributor Chris Hoadley

Jeff, I got a PS2 because of Maximo and loved it. It took me a while for my brother and me to get one since we got the Dreamcast first and then support for it died a year later. I tried to play Maximo again a few months ago, but since I got it from Blockbuster back when they used that weird sticker thing on the discs it won’t play. Or it could be because it takes forever for my system to do the initial disc load now.

During my senior year of high school, I obsessed over Star Ocean 3 and sunk 200+ hours into it. If I ever played it again I’d probably couldn’t get past the first few hours, but something with that game clicked with me. The game had alternate endings that paired the protagonist with different characters, so throughout it I was checking the player’s guide to get the ending I wanted. I even rejected a character from ever joining my party to get it. Once I got to the (copout) ending, I waited through the credits and found out I also got the ending with the game’s heroine, who spent half the game kidnapped and was kind of unnecessary after you finally got her.

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I did the math and found out that all of the choices I made to get one ending also led to the ending with her. I ended up having to make items to reduce the heroine’s likability in order to get the ending I wanted. The misspent times of youth.

Contributor Rus McLaughlin

You just couldn’t beat the PlayStation 2’s catalog. Developers threw everything at that console just to see what might stick, and gamers got a ton of strange, edgy, experimental games as a result. The PS2 was where we started to get a real idea of what video games could really do. And it’s where I stumbled on a funny no-name game called Robot Alchemic Drive.

R.A.D. took the old giant-robot anime and made a freaky-ass game out of it. You didn’t play as the robot … you played as the plucky teenager remote controlling the robot from a distance (or, if you felt really daring, perched on your Meganite’s shoulder) and taking it into hand-to-hand combat against alien monsters. But here’s what really impressed me: Your character’s controller mirrored the PS2 controller. Throwing a punch meant winding up with the thumbsticks and kicking forward to land a solid-steel knuckle sandwich, while the triggers controlled the legs and walking. It felt clunky, a bit plodding, and entirely like piloting a 150-ton robot in ways nothing I’d seen, done, or played before had.

I ran into this quirky, little title nobody knew about on a demo kiosk in a Toys R Us. You could make those discoveries on a PlayStation 2. That’s what made it great.

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Copy editor Jason Wilson

In 2001, I took a job at a newspaper in Redding, Calif. Redding is at the far-north end of the Central Valley, and while in Northern California, it felt more like someone took a slice of Kentucky and dropped it into the Golden State. As a Jewish lad from the Bay Area, I never felt right there. Redding and I never clicked.

So between errands and rounds of golf on my off days, the thing that kept me sane was my PlayStation 2. Seriously — when it’s 118 degrees outside (yes, Redding is one of the hottest regions in NorCal), what else are you going to do? I have fond memories of playing games like Final Fantasy X and Dark Cloud while trying to keep cool during the hot summers and warm during the cold winters. The other thing that made the PlayStation 2 so rad? The DVD player! Throw in this newfangled service called Netflix, and I had a steady stream of great movies and TV shows to enjoy.

I don’t have a specific good memory from my PS2 days — let’s face it, they were almost all good. But I am grateful for that little box helping me stay sane during two difficult years.

Contributor Jacob Lopez

I was living in Arizona, and my grandfather (seriously, one of the most badass guys I know) got me a PS2 Slim for Christmas. I played the hell out of Final Fantasy X-2 because it was the only game I had. Being a poor student helped me appreciate gaming that much more. It was like being a kid again. You’re limited to one game for several months, and you have to enjoy what you have. Now, I can pretty much buy a game whenever I feel like it, and I don’t find myself enjoying individual games nearly as much.

Intern Evan Killham

The PlayStation 2 was a system of firsts for me. The day I bought it was the first time (and only time, so far) that I used a cart at Best Buy. It was my first DVD player, and I used it to watch the first DVD I’d ever bought. That movie was Hannibal, but I like to think I’ve done better since then.

Most notably, though, the PS2 was the first gaming system I owned that showed me what this medium is really capable of, due mostly to its vast, kitchen-sink library. It had the first game that forced me to deny that I was tearing up (Shadow of the Colossus), the first title that I nearly snapped in half out of frustration (Stuntman), and the first game that I refused to play alone at night (Fatal Frame). I discussed the plot, themes, and subtext of Silent Hill 2 with my friends the way we would normally talk about a book or a movie, and that was a new one for me. And I’ve replayed Way of the Samurai more times than any other bit of software I’ve ever owned.

I haven’t switched on my PS2 in years, but it’s still hooked up to my TV, just in case.

Intern Mike Minotti

One of my favorite PS2 games was Kingdom Hearts II, which combined two of my favorite things: Final Fantasy and Disney movies. Seriously, I was convinced that  Square made the series specifically for me.

One time a friend and I played through the final boss together. Now, this was a single player game, so we just tossed the controller back and forth, but there was a part at the very end where you had to tap the triangle and X buttons repeatedly. We each took a button and beat the holy hell out of that controller. It was one of the most rewarding victories I’ve ever achieved in a game.

In fact, we were so pumped up that we went outside and attacked a beehive with golf clubs and a hammer while we wore my dad’s motor cycle helmets. Best. Night. Ever.