I've played most of the games on this list and most of them are "meh" at best.
Seriously though, I finally caved into the DC hype a few years ago and bought one at a yard sale. "The hefty amount of introductory text doesn't do justice to the curious party of mute girl, annoying fairy, and one-eyed man with giant sword and arm cannon." Well, there was one thing: letting your friend get all the stones, dodging his special attack, and then laying a beating on him while he shouts, " Aw, come on!" It was a blast to play with friends, and nothing was quite as satisfying as beating the stones out of your friend and absolutely crushing him with gem-fueled special attack.
You and your opponent each start with one, and getting all three (or four, or five) will turn you into a more powerful version of yourself. Power Stone's hook, though, was the eponymous stones. The basic mechanics of the two games were similar: you control a character with a couple special moves, and your goal is to use those moves, along with various weapons/objects that fill a given stage, to defeat your opponent. First, the Nintendo 64 got Super Smash Bros., then the Dreamcast got an arcade port of Power Stone. These are just a few of the games that will inspire you to scour the web and shell out the $20 needed to get a Dreamcast of your own:ฤก999 was a great year for fighting games that strayed from the traditional formula of two guys performing special moves and combos until one of them fell over. Games that introduced elements that have become so widespread that we're downright sick of them now. Games that eschewed the traditional tropes and formulas. In its short run, the Dreamcast brought us a collection of truly unique games. Only two years into the console's lifespan, Sega pulled the plug. Unfortunately, Sega just couldn't keep that momentum going once the PS2, Xbox, and Gamecube came onto the scene. Heck, it even came with four controller ports built in so you wouldn't need to buy some peripheral if you were one of those weirdoes with more than one friend.
Players marveled at its cutting edge graphics and online capabilities. Sega released the Dreamcast to an eager public well before any of the other consoles of its generation. Now I bring you the brief, but tragic, tale of Sega's final foray into game consoles: In the past, I've told you about Sega and its unfortunate Sega CD system, which had some good games buried beneath an avalanche of FMV shovelware.