Everyone's comments and contributions here add together to produce a justified answer as to why 3dfx is still alive.
I agree with every single one, because I believe these are the people that keep 3dfx alive. This kind of loyalty and closely knit community helps to make everyone stand up and take note that 3dfx still has a presence today among many gamers.
For me, like gdonovan said (I think it was actually me that made the reference to this in the first place
), the 3dfx Voodoo chipset was the most largely evolutionary advance in 3D arcade computer game graphics. There is no denying it.
There has never been such a huge leap in this area.
Ok, so we've had our pixel and vertex shading technology improved and the memory bandwidths are on the up, but none of these compare to the jump from your old ATI 2Mb 3D Rage Pro (which would stretch to 512x384 @ 25 fps for DFII; Jedi Knight
) to the Orchid Righteous 3D (running in an amazing 640x480 16bpp in a smooth Glide API running any game at 60fps!
)
Every gamer who exxperienced the difference had to go out and buy one!
Today, I see the Radeon 9800 and I think "Yes, I'd love one, but I can manage without one". The Voodoo was a must have! A neccessity!
When my dad and I went to buy my first PC for Christmas (back in '96) I knew NOTHING about computers. I was 16. I had just got out of the console area and wanted to try something different. Plus I needed something to help me with my homework (or so that's what my dad thought!
)
We got lumbered with an ATI 2Mb 3D Rage Pro. At the time I didn't know how good the machine would be at playing games, but they also had another machine on show. It was running Moto Racer on an R3D, and the graphics looked brilliant!
I asked the guy if our PC would be like that and he laughed saying:
"No, that has a Voodoo chipset graphics card inside. Having that would cost you a LOT more!"
We never got the Orchid Righteous and I eventually forgot about it, until the Voodoo2 came out in late '97. I bought a Creative 12Mb and a 2nd one 3 months later. Those cards were my first Voodoo experience and I loved every minute of them! They lasted me right up until summer 2001. They played every game at super fast framerates all the time! That's how good they were!
Still using the 3dfx cards is more nostalgia for me now, and going back to the old retro games and playing them with the best hardware around at that time to support them!
It is a shame that 3dfx went the way they did. Given them another chance and a different strategy during their dark time and I am certain they would have come out head and shoulders above the rest! I mean look how early they developed blueprints for the Rampage technology! 3dfx were no slouches!
I love everything about 3dfx and always have (from the technology to the marketing retail boxes) and that dies hard!