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This week, Sony's PlayStation turned 20. The original grey system launched in Japan back in December 1994, and through its ups and downs, the brand is still going strong. To commemorate the system's anniversary, the GameSpot staff share some their standout PlayStation memories from across the various consoles.

Final Fantasy IX to the End

I lugged my PlayStation 2 with me everywhere before it finally died while I was in college. The last game I ever played on it was my third or fourth playthrough of Final Fantasy IX. I remember constantl y cleaning out the system, cleaning the disc, switching cables, finagling with whatever I had to in order to get the console to work, just to finish FFIX one last time. And when the credits rolled, it died. It felt like I lost a beloved friend.

I've since replaced it, but that first piece of hardware saw me through my adolescence, numerous heartbreaks, the stress of getting into the best high school classes and THEN the best college. It was my companion, bringing me away from the cares of the world when I needed it most. -- Alexa Ray Corriea

Snaaaaaaake!

Lame but true: During my first year of uni versity, in 2002, I feared the dance floor. So when my housemates went out for the night, sometimes I would hang back and play a friend's PS2. I probably would have regretted this more at the time had this social hang-up not led to all-nighters with Grand Theft Auto III and Metal Gear Solid 2. Both these games conjure beautiful memories, but the night I'll never forget was my final stretch on Metal Gear.

I remember hearing the Colonel confessing his financial problems. I remember glimpsing at that skull overlaid on his face. I remember how he turned away from me. I remember hearing the rumours that my wife was having an affair. I remember the game becoming self aware, collapsing in on itself, presenting phoney game over screens with the words "Fission Mailed". I remember freezing in my seat, awestruck, confused, legitimately paranoid. Each year that goes b y, I look back on that breakdown with a sense of awe. It's one of the bravest things a triple-A game could do, and considering how safe things have become, it's something I don't suspec t we'll see again. -- Rob Crossley

To Midgar and Beyond

The first time I saw the PlayStation, I felt one emotion: incredible envy. For the longest time, Final Fantasy was synonymous with Nintendo consoles, and I bought a Nintendo 64 with the hope that the series might still come to the system that brought it so much initial acclaim. But that never happened. Instead, my first look at Final Fantasy VII, with it's unbelievable (for the time) graphics and cinematics is the first game that made me question my unwavering devotion to Nintendo's consoles.

We didn't get an RPG on N64 until the mediocre Quest 64 a year later. Instead, I was fo rced to watch my favorite franchise get better and better with each iteration on PlayStation's platform. When the PlayStation 2 came out, I finally succumbed to the other side in the console war. After being a Nintendo fanboy for so long, I never thought that the PlayStation 2 became the place where I spent the majority of my gaming time. And it all started with FFVII. --Justin Haywald

My Summer Vacation

I was a Nintendo kid growing up, and had limited exposure to anything PlayStation-related. One fond memory, however, was a trip my family took to the Outer Banks of North Carolina one year in my youth. We were excited to enjoy the beach and some lovely, sunny weather, but my father's "poor weather" curse held true and it rained for a good portion of our trip. Thankfully, the house we rented for the week had a PlayStation 2, and boy we put it to good use. Tony Hawk and Spyro dominated the TV, with me and my brothers fighting over the controller--there was only one, as I recall. Thank you, PlayStation, for saving our vacation. -- Eddie Makuch

Cleaning up Liberty City

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