Well, I did it. Watched all of RoboCop 2 on VCD—on a CRT—outdoors, in my backyard.
Why? Not because it’s the “best” way to watch RoboCop 2. That would be a projector in a dark room. But I still own a Sony Trinitron and a Toshiba DVD player that’s backwards-compatible with VCDs. So when I found a copy in a thrift shop, I jumped at the chance to cosplay as a Tokyo salaryman in 1998.
VCD has always fascinated me. I remember seeing it demoed on a Philips CD-i—back when that was supposed to be the future. But I was a teenager, and there was no way I could convince my parents to spend $600 on something that looked like a toaster and played Burn:Cycle.
Probably for the best. The CD-i flopped in North America, and VCD barely made a dent. But in Asia? Massive success. So successful, you can still import brand-new titles. In 2025. For real.
Now let me be clear: on modern TVs, VCD looks awful. Low-res MPEG-1 video smeared across a 1080p screen is pain. But on a CRT? It works. You get sharper colour separation, no tape degradation, no tracking issues, and discs are far more heat- and humidity-resistant than tape ever was. I totally get why this format won out in hot climates.
That said, it has real flaws. Most movies come on two discs. You can see pixels—even on a CRT. And occasionally, compression artifacts float across the screen like ghosting shadows. VHS was blurrier, yes—but it was also more forgiving.
Still, let’s be honest: rewinding tapes was always a chore. VCD boots instantly. No hiss. No jammed reels. No chewed-up tape. Just press play.
So how was RoboCop 2 on VCD? Surprisingly great. The movie itself feels built for this exact experience: digital source, analog display. Grainy, loud, kind of ugly—but in a good way. Total time capsule energy.
Should you collect VCDs in 2025? Only if you’re like me and romanticize obsolete tech. If you hate pixels, compression artifacts, and pre-DVD formats, then no—run away. But if the idea of watching cyberpunk trash on a 4:3 CRT in your backyard sounds fun? Then yeah. Absolutely.
I don't even know what a VCD is, but I love Robocop and Robocop 2 in particular. After reading your description of the experience, I am inspired. Thank you. NUKE
I don't know how much you know about video formats but VCDs use MPEG1, a standardized version of the MPEG format. Depending on the TV mode, your looking at a video resolution of 352x240 for NTSC, PAL is a little larger at x288.
Films were usually released in the pan and scan format to fill the entire TV picture. Wide-screen releases would be so small, you'd probably not be able to see what was going on.
Back in the day, pirate films were released in the VCD format as it was easy to make and almost all DVD players could run them. Apparently there was a website called VCDQuality that not only told you about new releases but included screenshots so you could check out the quality of the copy.
Then the format was upgraded when DVDs were invented as they use the MPEG2 format.
VCDQ days making me feel all nostalgic.