• @SkunkWorkz
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      153 months ago

      Some PS1 and 2 just had shitty laser assemblies that had trouble reading even non scratched discs.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      53 months ago

      My PS2 would randomly decide not to read the disc sometimes. IIRC, we were pretty careful with both the disks and console.

      From what i remember, the issue was the laser was either dirty or otherwise shotty and sometimes wouldn’t read the disc

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        43 months ago

        I remember opening my PS2 to clean like a quarter inch of dust off the laser. And then losing money when trading it in to GameStop because the seal was broke

    • @Ultraviolet
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      English
      23 months ago

      Rentals and used games had no such guarantee.

    • @[email protected]
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      3 months ago

      THIS. 100% THIS.

      Simple rule for discs: always touch the edges, never the surfaces! It’s…it’s not that hard. I never had PSX disc read problems.

      Not throwing shade at the kids who did because of shoddy lasers or something, of course. :)

      (I did have OG Xbox disc read problems… because those crappy Thompson drives shredded discs over time)

      Seeing people hold the surfaces of discs with their snack-greased fingers would infuriate me. Same with seeing them put label-up on the dusty VCR / cable box / dvd player rather than back in the case to switch games.

      Nowadays it seems even more common because people don’t seem to know how discs work.

      On that note, It’s the same thing with RAM. Watching tech review channels where they’re just pinch-holding RAM sticks or fanning them out like playing cards makes me twitch.