3DOKid wrote:This harks back to the old Jag is better than 3DO business. The Jag didn't have an OS, developers went straight for the CPU: a Motorola 680xx something-or-other (?) Now, people argue that because of this the Jag was capable of much more and is much faster.
Now - I've never seen Battlesphere, which I'm told does push the Jag tin quite hard, but I have seen a lot of the other stuff. Iron Soldier and Alien Vs Predator are impressive but Hauzer, Star Fighter, Space Hulk and Foes of Ali royally kick it's arse. Killing Time is very technically impressive.
The difference is the coders. It's all swings and round-abouts as far as the hardware is concerned. The 3DO's off-the-shelf ARM60 was pretty powerfull back in the day, and more than a match for the Jag with it's aging CPU and custom chips. It's like bickering whether the PS3 is more or less powerful than 360. It doesn't matter, and in 15 years it still won't matter.
What i would say is that I suspect the 3DO OS allowed developers to get grips with the 3DO hardware a lot quicker than they could with jag hardware.
...and then there was documentation to worry about...
Your right for the most part about the Jaguar, though lets get one misconception straightened out from the start; The Jaguar has a 68000 CO-PROCESSOR, that IS NOT the CPU. It is SUPPOSED to be used just for bootstrapping the system; getting the BIOS up and running and handling the controller input/output. The Jaguar has another chip with multiple processors in it that is it's true CPU, and is even labeled as such on the chip. But, the Jauguar's hardware, when used properly, doesn't really have a specific CPU at all, but several multi-tasking processors.
But the lack of an OS WAS the Jaguar downfall. It's true that more of the Jaguar's raw power CAN be tapped becuase it can be programmed directly, but it makes it extremely hard to program, therefore takes top programmers to make work well. This turned off many developers, with a lack of an OS and programming tools, and others, who were less capable ended up using the 68000 as a CPU, becuase it can be (3 out of the Jaguar's 5 processors can have total control like a CPU, the 68000 being one) used as the CPU, but drastically bottle necks the system, and thus there were many crappy games or games that just didn't use the systems power and were labeled "16-bit" quality becuase they essentially were. If the Jaguar had a proper OS and tools/software library like the 3DO, it would have had as many developers and games as the 3DO, and while a few of the Jaguar's gems that tap into real power may have been more cripple due to an OS, overall the games would have tapped more of the Jaguar's 64-bit power.
Now, in the aftermath, after years of homebrew research and hardware bug-work-arounds by good programmers, the Jaguar's real power can be tapped, and new development tools are in the works to make it so every programmer can tap it's 64-bit power, time will tell if we see some evidence of this in the future from the hombrew community.
The 3DO is however still better in this regard, as even though there is less hombrew/underground dev. taking place, the 3DO got a lot more high quality titles in it's life due to it's OS, then the Jaguar did, and the Jaguar will most likely never catch up, but it will get a few more Jaguar power titles.
So while the 3DO has a couple hundred games in it's library, with at least 50% high quality, and 50% average or bad, the Jaguar has about 75 titles in it's library(so far), with about 33% high quality, and 66% average or bad(and about 3% that actually uses the Jaguar's real power). So the 3DO has already won with it's software library; there will always be more great games on the 3DO than on the Jaguar, but the Jaguar still has great games too and is worthy.
Enjoy what you have, and don't worry about what Jaguar owners are getting now or in the future if you, unless you are a Jaguar owner/fan like me. people like me, who own and love both systems are the real winners, with lots of incredible games from two incredible systems, many of which no other systems have.
Be thankful the 3DO had a powerful multi-tasking OS to take advantage of it's powerful multi-tasking hardware. Both Atari and 3DO had the ahead-of-their-time parallel and multi-tasking capable processors, but only 3DO had the advance OS to match. Plus, the 3DO had an extra megabyte of video ram that the Jaguar doesn't have, so due to lack of ram, the Jaguar's incredible processors can never be fully exploited, it will only ever see about 75% of the multiple RISC processor's true powers due to Atari being cheep and only including 2MB of main ram. The processors were designed to handle 6-8MB directly. The 3DO has 2MB of main ram and 1MB of video ram. Ram is a distinct advantage. The 3DO also had the advantage of CD memory for mass rom storage, and the Jaguar had a max 6MB cart space, and the largest actually released was 4MB. Even with incredible compression routines it's still far less than a 3DO CD. Now, if you look at the Jaguar CD's games, also second generation sequals, like Battlemorph (sequal to Cybermorph) and Iron Soldier 2, they are much more impressive than the cartridge versions including great texture-mapping like 3DO games. These second-gen. Jag Cd titles are not well known of due to rarity.