AeroMatter wrote:They have 8-bit depth, but can take colors from 24-bit RGB color space just to clarify.
What you're talking about has nothing to do with the NES limitations people usually think about. 16-bit and 24-bit depth is typically an absolute color value system. But it makes very little sense to use absolute colors when you have as few colors as 256, so 8-bit color is typically based on palettes instead. The colors used in those palettes is completely arbitrary; the limitation isn't based on the word size of the CPU, but what the GPU and monitor can support.
Magician wrote:It doesn't bother me at all, but I happen to be one of those heathens who can willingly listen to a blend of "8-bit sounds" with other more traditional live instruments or synths from a different style. There might be a divergent genre of "Pure 8-Bit" if there's really any demand for that but I'm not sure people care enough beyond those who want to, I guess, show off that they understand the distinction. I think its pop culture attraction is mostly the style of it by how it can stand out among other kinds of instruments/soundfonts.
The "16-bit style" is a bit of a thing too.
And another thing to note: the typical bit depth for audio today is 16. That's what CDs use. The limitation that affects what kind of samples you can use in music has absolutely nothing to do with bit depth, but rather has to do with what the sound card can support and the space available for you to use. Old cartridge-based systems were typically starved for storage space, so the only reasonable option was music similar to MIDI, where a set of built-in instruments were used. It was only when CDs started getting used when music in basic audio formats (which can sound an arbitrary way, limited by the sound card and speakers' capability) were realistic.
The thing I'm getting at here is that if someone is being pedantic by saying, "That sound file/image file is not truly 8-bit!", they're being pedantic about entirely the wrong thing. What they should be saying is "That image uses colors the NES doesn't support!", or "That piece uses samples the NES doesn't have!" Personally, though, I couldn't care less about the limitations of old systems; it's not a limitation of
my system, so all I care about is whether or not it looks or sounds good.