I don't agree that Ridge Racer is an excellent game, but it
was popular.
Daytona USA isn't nearly so dated as it continues to make money as an arcade machine, even while arcade games in general have almost completely died out.
Daytona is a classic like Doom and Super Mario games. Ridge Racer was more of a tech demo for the Playstation. Personally, I prefer good art and style like Daytona has over technical achievements and Ridge Racer has always looked bland and boring to me. But I know that my tastes weren't popular during that generation.
The way that I see it, even if the difference in graphics is as huge as some claim, the Saturn had some of the greatest games of all time early on while the Playstation had a bunch of mediocre stuff. Although Doom seemed kinda dated to me at the time, I
do think that it was by far the Playstation's best game early on. These 'match the games' comparisons don't really count for much to me, since it's all a bunch of 'just okay' or 'not so great' games on both sides, with some classics that have stood the test of time on the Saturn's side.
The Playstation's early library was like the Jaguar, where there are many games in the same category as some classics for various platforms, but having a game in the same genre as a classic
doesn't cancel out. Not even close.
It's like a match up like this-
Console A > Console B
Plok = Sonic 3
War 2410 = Shining Force II
Gunforce = Gunstar Heroes
Syvalion = Thunder Force IV
Final Fantasy Legend = Phantasy Star IV
Brawl Brothers = Streets of Rage 2
Fighter's History = Super Street Fighter II
Super Pinball
Q-Bert 3
Aerobiz
Super Bowling
As you can see,
Console A has a similar game for everything
Console B has, plus a few extra games. So
clearly Console B has the superior library.
Sure the Playstation and its library was marketed better and was more popular, but Sega's mistake of giving us quality over quantity is still our win to this day.
As for game magazines being corrupt, biased, or simply incompetent, all you have to do is judge them by how they followed through on their duty to steer the consumer clear of garbage. Toshinden is completely worthless, just as many fmv games were early on. Did any magazines
not praise Toshinden as the greatest fighter ever that will stand the test of time? It doesn't matter which of the possible reasons are behind their incorrect coverage in cases like this. It just goes to show that you can't use game mags as a way of measuring the quality of games for their time. Metacritic scoring is broken
today, there's no reason to apply a flawed formula to flawed data from the past.
You can say that the Sony lineup was smarter from a marketing standpoint, but it wasn't the best for a consumer who appreciated good games.