Your 3 fondest PC games memories.
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Fallout (I love this game, first RPG that made me crazy) StarCraft (I used to stayed up all night and played on battle.net) Diablo 2 (the reason I signed up for DSL, the fastest connect I could get at the time)
1. PONG - I spent many hours in a coffee shop with one of the designers sketching and analyzing circuit designs and trying to get video rates up to an acceptable speed. That was nearly impossible, and was one of the most important features of the game, as the TTL technology at the time was first generation - slow, noisy, and power hungry. The folks at DGI finally whipped the problem, and began the revolution. Me, I just had a blast brainstorming designs, drinking coffee and beer late at night in their factory in San Dimas with Dan, playing the prototypes and fiddling with ideas. 2. Space Invaders - Played on a HP dumb terminal at General Dynamics using code on a cassette tape running on the terminal's internal microprocessor (a Z80, IIRC). Many a great missile test system design grew from the mix of frenzied bouts of creativity and periodic vegetative states induced by the game. 3. Centipede - The epitome of video games in its day, it was the fastest moving game I ever played for any length of time, and proof that the challenges PONG faced in its time were finally overcome once and for all. I still love a good game of Centiede, when I can find it. Since then nothing has impressed me enough to want to play, though, but the new stuff is truly awesome by comparison - all of them. "...a photo album is like Life, but flat and stuck to pages." - Shog9
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Fallout (I love this game, first RPG that made me crazy) StarCraft (I used to stayed up all night and played on battle.net) Diablo 2 (the reason I signed up for DSL, the fastest connect I could get at the time)
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Fallout (I love this game, first RPG that made me crazy) StarCraft (I used to stayed up all night and played on battle.net) Diablo 2 (the reason I signed up for DSL, the fastest connect I could get at the time)
I used to love playing this game called Protector on the Atari 800. My friend and I would stay up late carrying people to safety under our space ship. It was sort of based on Defender, but less "arcadey". Protector II[^]: was basically the same, IIRC. Man, there were a lot of games I used to play, but Necromancer[^] probably ranks up as one of the best. Of course, it would probably suck today, but I loved wasting my time with it. I remember spending days on end playing Civilization when it came out, too. BW
If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate.
-- Steven Wright -
Fallout (I love this game, first RPG that made me crazy) StarCraft (I used to stayed up all night and played on battle.net) Diablo 2 (the reason I signed up for DSL, the fastest connect I could get at the time)
Zelda Civ Starfleet Command
"The key, the whole key, and nothing but the key, so help me Codd"
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Edbert P wrote:
Indiana Jones: Fate of Atlantis
This was a great game. So good, a few years ago, I bought the latest Indiana Jones game. It sucked. Badly. What a shame. Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine. - P.J. O'Rourke
It can't have been as bad as the origninal: http://indianajones.ugo.com/games/raiders_of_the_lost_ark/[^]. That game was horrible.
I can imagine the sinking feeling one would have after ordering my book, only to find a laughably ridiculous theory with demented logic once the book arrives - Mark McCutcheon
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Fallout (I love this game, first RPG that made me crazy) StarCraft (I used to stayed up all night and played on battle.net) Diablo 2 (the reason I signed up for DSL, the fastest connect I could get at the time)
1. Myst - there were many quests especially from Sierra like Space Quest (5) or Larry or King's Quest that were relly really good, but Myst stood out of them because of its otherworldly atmosphere. Very fun to play, although I must admit I cheated once on the clock (or whatnot) island to get through the railway system. 2. Quake - I might have written Doom or Duke Nukem 3D or Blood, but quake was the first game where I actually played multiplayer. There is nothing like playing Quake with you buddy via direct modem connection on nightmare difficulty level when at times all you have is a frigging axe. 3. Need For Speed 1/2 - simply for the amount of time I spent playing those. I hated the AI though because of 'unfair advantage' it would give itself in the form of faster machines, it would always gain on you sooned or later if it managed to fall behind. Stupid... Often the only time to win was to knock the car out just before the finish, otherwise you'd just fall behind despite the fact you've been driving exactly the same car as computer.
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Fallout (I love this game, first RPG that made me crazy) StarCraft (I used to stayed up all night and played on battle.net) Diablo 2 (the reason I signed up for DSL, the fastest connect I could get at the time)
Just three? hmm... I still like playing some of the old BBS games like LoRD and a few others. ;) Can't forget MUDs either. I tend to play the Discworld MUD a lot. And for the third: Half Life 1/2 - I thought both games made user of good story and the technology they had available at the time.
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Fallout (I love this game, first RPG that made me crazy) StarCraft (I used to stayed up all night and played on battle.net) Diablo 2 (the reason I signed up for DSL, the fastest connect I could get at the time)
Doom and Doom 2 Diablo Mega Mud (I think that was the name of it) -- the text only thing on bbs's Man I loved those
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Personally - I think Civ2 was the best. Civ3 and Civ4 were dissapointments. --------------------------- 127.0.0.1 - Sweet 127.0.0.1
> I think Civ2 was the best. Civ3 and Civ4 were dissapointments I'm totally with you. Civ2 is the only game that got me to play overnight (eg, 'til 7:00am). Naturally when 3 came out, I was first in line to buy it...and I only fired it up maybe half a dozen times, but I could never get into it.
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Fallout (I love this game, first RPG that made me crazy) StarCraft (I used to stayed up all night and played on battle.net) Diablo 2 (the reason I signed up for DSL, the fastest connect I could get at the time)
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Old School CGA (not even EGA, how sad is that) 8086 game: StarFlight [edit](What part of 3 didn't I understand!)[/edit] Wolfenstein Quake Showing my age a little...:sigh:
- S 50 cups of coffee and you know it's on! -- modified at 2:32 Thursday 20th July, 2006
Steve Echols wrote:
StarFlight
Man I loved that game. I played it on advanced Tandy 16 color mode though. I remember being impressed that they used some fractal type algorithm to generate terrain for the hundreds of planets you collected resources on. :-D
I can imagine the sinking feeling one would have after ordering my book, only to find a laughably ridiculous theory with demented logic once the book arrives - Mark McCutcheon
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Fallout (I love this game, first RPG that made me crazy) StarCraft (I used to stayed up all night and played on battle.net) Diablo 2 (the reason I signed up for DSL, the fastest connect I could get at the time)
The thread's already this long, and I haven't seen a single mention of a Sierra quest series? Space Quest, King's Quest, Police Quest, Leisure Suit Larry...am I that old school? :~ I'll have to add Civilization 2, the original Age of Empires... I'm also guilty of spending way too much time with The Sims, but I mostly prefer experimenting with house building...it really is a poor man's [brain dead easy] home designer. :-) Also, my list would never be complete without mentioning Operation Flashpoint. The game's ancient by now (2001), but (IMO) nobody's managed to come up with better gameplay--I still play it to this day. It single-handedly managed to convince me that every other FPS game out there sucks. :-D
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Monty2 wrote:
I hope they are not in any particular order
why ? indeed they are ! in the descending ordre from which i most prefer...
TOXCCT >>> GEII power
[VisualCalc 3.0 updated ][Flags Beginner's Guide new! ]
:laugh:
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Civlization (first game to make me loose track of time. Got home from school that day at around 14.00, next thing I knew it was 02.00) Fallout 2 (not my first RPG, but the first I really liked) Wing Commander (Not much to say, one of my first computer games and I simply fell in love with the series) I miss the games of yore --------------------------- 127.0.0.1 - Sweet 127.0.0.1
If you liked Wing Commander, you might like Freelancer[^], although it's more like Privateer than WC...
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Ultima III Tomb Raider II Unreal Tournament - spent many many hours designing levels Do the chickens have large talons?
Finally someone mentions Ultima! I started with Ultima V, so you're slightly cooler than me I guess ;)
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Fallout (I love this game, first RPG that made me crazy) StarCraft (I used to stayed up all night and played on battle.net) Diablo 2 (the reason I signed up for DSL, the fastest connect I could get at the time)
Outpost freddy pharkas frontier pharmacist Kings Quest V What a surprise, they are all from sierra! A man said to the universe: "Sir I exist!" "However," replied the Universe, "The fact has not created in me A sense of obligation." -- Stephen Crane
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Fallout (I love this game, first RPG that made me crazy) StarCraft (I used to stayed up all night and played on battle.net) Diablo 2 (the reason I signed up for DSL, the fastest connect I could get at the time)
LoadRunner on the Macintosh 512 KE The very first Civilization on the PC - Now I loathe Civilization III and IV - something is missing ... The first Railroad Tycoon on the PC - Now I like to play Railroad Tycoon III Currently: Railroad Tycoon III SimCity 4 Dungeon Siege II I've seen better runs in my shorts! - Patches O'Houlihan
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Personally - I think Civ2 was the best. Civ3 and Civ4 were dissapointments. --------------------------- 127.0.0.1 - Sweet 127.0.0.1
I agree. I played the DooDoo out of CIV II. Civ III got shelved after about 2 days, and then I tried Civ IV - well, I WON'T be buying Civ V. Civ IV got shelved after about 4 hours! I really liked the Civilization : Call to Power version of the game. I keep a Windows 2000 drive alive just to play that game! It uses some strange video system that won't work on Windows XP and you have to pay like $25 to get the driver for Windows XP - no thanks. I've seen better runs in my shorts! - Patches O'Houlihan
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1. PONG - I spent many hours in a coffee shop with one of the designers sketching and analyzing circuit designs and trying to get video rates up to an acceptable speed. That was nearly impossible, and was one of the most important features of the game, as the TTL technology at the time was first generation - slow, noisy, and power hungry. The folks at DGI finally whipped the problem, and began the revolution. Me, I just had a blast brainstorming designs, drinking coffee and beer late at night in their factory in San Dimas with Dan, playing the prototypes and fiddling with ideas. 2. Space Invaders - Played on a HP dumb terminal at General Dynamics using code on a cassette tape running on the terminal's internal microprocessor (a Z80, IIRC). Many a great missile test system design grew from the mix of frenzied bouts of creativity and periodic vegetative states induced by the game. 3. Centipede - The epitome of video games in its day, it was the fastest moving game I ever played for any length of time, and proof that the challenges PONG faced in its time were finally overcome once and for all. I still love a good game of Centiede, when I can find it. Since then nothing has impressed me enough to want to play, though, but the new stuff is truly awesome by comparison - all of them. "...a photo album is like Life, but flat and stuck to pages." - Shog9
Roger Wright wrote:
PONG
My first year of college was 1972 at San Diego State. The student union there had what I think was one of the first Pong machines and my friend Tom and I quickly became the campus gurus at playing the game (needless to say I did not attend class much that year!). Whenever we played a fairly large crowd would surround us and cheer us on. It was a great ego boost! Thanks for allowing me to remember that; those were great times... Later I had an Atari 800 and one of my favorite games for that was Journey to the Planets. You had to land a spaceship on each of several planets and solve a puzzle, generally involving finding and retrieving something of importance. If you did that and survived you could take off and go to another planet. I never solved all the puzzles so I don't know what happened if you got them all... 'til next we type... HAVE FUN!! -- Jesse -- modified at 12:35 Thursday 20th July, 2006
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Doom and Doom 2 Diablo Mega Mud (I think that was the name of it) -- the text only thing on bbs's Man I loved those
I used to play Eamon on the Apple II I've seen better runs in my shorts! - Patches O'Houlihan