Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
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Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
In the early 80s I had a CBS Colecovision games console. They stopped making them after a short while but you could play Atari games on them with a cartridge adapter. One of the most addictive games I ever played on it was this thing called Pressure Cooker. I'm tempted to try to write a smartphone clone version of it one day. It was awesome.
- Rum
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Re: Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
I got much more of a thrill when the first games came out for the Spectrum, MSX and then the 16 bit computers. Perhaps it was the novelty, but I enjoyed them more I think than the modern day multi-million pound blockbusters.
Plus I dabbled at programming them too, to make games - even a bit of machine code for screen swapping and the like. I wouldn't know where to start these days.
One of my favourites: Ant Attack!
Plus I dabbled at programming them too, to make games - even a bit of machine code for screen swapping and the like. I wouldn't know where to start these days.
One of my favourites: Ant Attack!
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Re: Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
This robbed me of many hours of my life:
Stewart Lee vomits into the gaping anus of Christ:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=scwf7KmZLec
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AF9HSFunI20
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=scwf7KmZLec
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AF9HSFunI20
Re: Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
Ah, Ultima IV on my Apple IIC...
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Re: Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
That game was AMAZING!Rum » wrote:I got much more of a thrill when the first games came out for the Spectrum, MSX and then the 16 bit computers. Perhaps it was the novelty, but I enjoyed them more I think than the modern day multi-million pound blockbusters.
Plus I dabbled at programming them too, to make games - even a bit of machine code for screen swapping and the like. I wouldn't know where to start these days.
One of my favourites: Ant Attack!
Also...
"What started as a legitimate effort by the townspeople of Salem to identify, capture and kill those who did Satan's bidding quickly deteriorated into a witch hunt" Army Man
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Re: Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
You picked some of the best there!
- Audley Strange
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Re: Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
I still play them from time to time. I have couple of emulators 2 48k spectrums one 128k + plus loads of Roms tapes and a working tape recorder!!!
I'm seriously daft on gaming and am often disappointed these days that the game aspect of games these days seems almost secondary to the virtual worlds generated to play them in, leaving a disconnect between these elegantly crafted worlds and what you are meant to do in them.
Also I read recently that like the comic buying public the average gamer is 37 years of age. Knowing this and knowing they have the cash to spend and that most like games that are challenging, I really think a lot of Gaming Houses need to (ahem) raise their game.
This isn't so much a problem with online gaming since you are playing against each other usually at breakneck speed.
But for single player games something seems to be lacking. I know why, Risk=potential loss.
In the last month I've played Bulletstorm (which the score mechanic was a nice addition)
Assassin's Creed (Beautiful but tedious)
Dead Space 2. (Suffers from the same door block problem as Deus Ex)
Red Dead Redemption (which had a plot so dull it's the first Rockstar Game I've played that I've abandoned before completion)
Also Street Fighter IV (which is great)
and Beyond Good and Evil (which is astonishing)
Perhaps it's just the usual jaded feeling I get near the end of every console or computer cycle, but over the last 18 months mostly I've found most of the triple A games increasingly dull to play while being in awe at the design of the worlds they are often set in.
It may well be just nostalgia, but I do think there are too many games out there at the moment that are exactly the same except for the wallpaper.
I'm seriously daft on gaming and am often disappointed these days that the game aspect of games these days seems almost secondary to the virtual worlds generated to play them in, leaving a disconnect between these elegantly crafted worlds and what you are meant to do in them.
Also I read recently that like the comic buying public the average gamer is 37 years of age. Knowing this and knowing they have the cash to spend and that most like games that are challenging, I really think a lot of Gaming Houses need to (ahem) raise their game.
This isn't so much a problem with online gaming since you are playing against each other usually at breakneck speed.
But for single player games something seems to be lacking. I know why, Risk=potential loss.
In the last month I've played Bulletstorm (which the score mechanic was a nice addition)
Assassin's Creed (Beautiful but tedious)
Dead Space 2. (Suffers from the same door block problem as Deus Ex)
Red Dead Redemption (which had a plot so dull it's the first Rockstar Game I've played that I've abandoned before completion)
Also Street Fighter IV (which is great)
and Beyond Good and Evil (which is astonishing)
Perhaps it's just the usual jaded feeling I get near the end of every console or computer cycle, but over the last 18 months mostly I've found most of the triple A games increasingly dull to play while being in awe at the design of the worlds they are often set in.
It may well be just nostalgia, but I do think there are too many games out there at the moment that are exactly the same except for the wallpaper.
"What started as a legitimate effort by the townspeople of Salem to identify, capture and kill those who did Satan's bidding quickly deteriorated into a witch hunt" Army Man
Re: Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
Earliest game I can remember playing was BurgerTime on my Commodore 64.
Great, now I'm hungry.
Great, now I'm hungry.
Re: Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
"Whatever it is, it spits and it goes 'WAAARGHHHHHHHH' - that's probably enough to suggest you shouldn't argue with it." Mousy.
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Re: Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
Lords of Midnight on my old Speccy. Happy days
"I grow old … I grow old …
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled"
AND MERRY XMAS TO ONE AND All!
http://25kv.co.uk/date_counter.php?date ... 20counting!!![/img-sig]
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled"
AND MERRY XMAS TO ONE AND All!
http://25kv.co.uk/date_counter.php?date ... 20counting!!![/img-sig]
- Audley Strange
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Re: Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
You can actually play LoM on your PC, someone adapted it... hold on...
http://www.icemark.com/downloads/index.html
Enjoy. See if you can get Morkin four feet before it tells you as usual "Morkin Was Slain by Wolves, Dragons, Air, etc"
http://www.icemark.com/downloads/index.html
Enjoy. See if you can get Morkin four feet before it tells you as usual "Morkin Was Slain by Wolves, Dragons, Air, etc"
"What started as a legitimate effort by the townspeople of Salem to identify, capture and kill those who did Satan's bidding quickly deteriorated into a witch hunt" Army Man
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Re: Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
Heh, have played that icemark conversion
"I grow old … I grow old …
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled"
AND MERRY XMAS TO ONE AND All!
http://25kv.co.uk/date_counter.php?date ... 20counting!!![/img-sig]
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled"
AND MERRY XMAS TO ONE AND All!
http://25kv.co.uk/date_counter.php?date ... 20counting!!![/img-sig]
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Re: Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
Missile Command, Asteroids & Joust in the arcade, Elite on my old PC
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Re: Ah nostalgia... old video games you loved.
Before the Xbox 360 I've never owned a console. The first game I played on my Sharp Mz-800 was called Nakamoto, a platform game where you could also create your own levels. This was back in 1986.
I also made my own games for the MZ-800, my best one so far was "boksen", a boxing game with vector gfx. It was slow and not very accurate, but I was proud on how I managed to compose and squeeze "Eye of the Tiger" out of the 3 tone sound generator. I used this machine well into the first years of the 90's, until I got a Commodore PC20-III. There I played Prince of Persia on Hercules monochrome.
After a year of horror and pain, I saved up enough money and bought a new PC, a AMD 386DX40 with 387 Co-processor. There I played a lot of games on and was active in the Demo-scene. I had that computer for many years as it was top-of-the-line when I bought it, and was one of the first in the Netherlands to have a CD-Writer so I could save a lot of data away from my hard drive. I played 4D-Stunts by Broderbund, The incredible Machine (a Rube Goldberg puzzle game), Lemmings, all the Leisure Suit Larry games (up to 5), and many more awesome games.
I also made my own games for the MZ-800, my best one so far was "boksen", a boxing game with vector gfx. It was slow and not very accurate, but I was proud on how I managed to compose and squeeze "Eye of the Tiger" out of the 3 tone sound generator. I used this machine well into the first years of the 90's, until I got a Commodore PC20-III. There I played Prince of Persia on Hercules monochrome.
After a year of horror and pain, I saved up enough money and bought a new PC, a AMD 386DX40 with 387 Co-processor. There I played a lot of games on and was active in the Demo-scene. I had that computer for many years as it was top-of-the-line when I bought it, and was one of the first in the Netherlands to have a CD-Writer so I could save a lot of data away from my hard drive. I played 4D-Stunts by Broderbund, The incredible Machine (a Rube Goldberg puzzle game), Lemmings, all the Leisure Suit Larry games (up to 5), and many more awesome games.
Best regards,
Leo van Miert
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Horsepower is how hard you hit the wall --Torque is how far you take the wall with you
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Horsepower is how hard you hit the wall --Torque is how far you take the wall with you
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