

Unfortunately, unlike other recent celebrations of games, there are no production notes or manuals or images or anything. The games can be changed to use different regions, or jump into a couple of online-enabled games, or do some challenge modes for trophies and all that jazz. There are a few settings you can mess around within this era, but nothing that is going to make this selection stand out from anything. The main interface is actually quite good with a recreation of a 1990s playroom or lounge room where you would have played these games back in the day as a kid. Sadly, this collection of old-school games doesn’t bring anything interesting to the formula. To be honest, it’s what you expect when it comes to something that is emulating the old games on modern day consoles or PC.

Of course, you get the usual retro effects like making the screen have scanlines, curve the screen to emulate the surface of a CRT TV, and change the borders. Graphically, SEGA Mega Drive Classics are faithfully recreated here in their 4:3 resolution glory. I don’t know why these three have been left off the list (Ecco might have a different licensee now) and it’s sad in the case of Ecco and Sonic 3 since those are some of the best games on the system PERIOD. Ecco the Dolphin is missing, as is Sonic 3 & Knuckles… And Eternal Champions (but no one cares about that). For some reason, something that is meant to be a more complete collection and a celebration of the era is missing some very key titles. The difference between this version and others is the game selection. The PlayStation controller does feel odd to use with these games as the layout is nowhere near the same as the original Mega Drive/Genesis controller layout, but it doesn’t take long to get around the change mentally and adjust for the difference. So when you press a button, things will work almost immediately leading to a lag free experience that you would have had when things like this were “less than legally” emulated on systems like the PS1 & PS2. The gameplay found in SEGA Mega Drive Classics’ is pretty much the same thing you would get using any emulator or digital platform release, the controls are tight as they were in the Mega Drive/Genesis days. Mode(s): Single Player & Online Multiplayer Platform(s): PlayStation 4 (Reviewed), also on Xbox One and PC SEGA Mega Drive Classics (or Sega Genesis Classics over in the West) is one of those things that you would think you would need with every console generation, but all this shows is that SEGA needs money and you want to give it to them for a collection of games and a fancy emulator UI.
