I've been thinking about classic computer games recently, and eventually I found myself making a list. As I did, I wondered: how many of these legendary games have folks here played? So I thought I'd make a poll about it.
Which then had to turn into two polls, since only 20 choices are currently permitted here.
How many of these have you played?
(There are plenty of these I haven't played myself. And I will understand if there are some favorites that aren't on this list -- there wasn't room for some of my personal favorites, either. I tried to select games that, whether I played them or not, are generally held to be important in one way or another. If anyone feels I left out too many, please feel free to create an additional poll!)
Post
Sun May 28, 2017 11:53 pm
#2
Re: Classic Games Part 1: 1971 - 1991
There should be an option for "Non of above"
Automation engineer, lateral thinker, soldier, addicted to music, books and gaming.
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Flatfingers wrote: 23.01.2017: "Show me the smoldering corpse of Perfectionist Josh"
Post
Mon May 29, 2017 7:42 am
#3
Re: Classic Games Part 1: 1971 - 1991
No mention of Moria or Angband under the roguelike category? Shame on you, Flatfingers
Post
Mon May 29, 2017 10:37 am
#4
Re: Classic Games Part 1: 1971 - 1991
I played zork in the video game museum in berlin
Was about as user friendly as expected
Was about as user friendly as expected
Post
Mon May 29, 2017 11:13 am
#5
Re: Classic Games Part 1: 1971 - 1991
I actually did consider including Angband, but that option line was already starting to run long.HowSerendipitous wrote:No mention of Moria or Angband under the roguelike category? Shame on you, Flatfingers
Post
Tue May 30, 2017 10:02 am
#6
Re: Classic Games Part 1: 1971 - 1991
what no pong or space invaders ?
or even pacman ?
or even pacman ?
"A sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."
- Arthur C. Clarke
- Arthur C. Clarke
Post
Tue May 30, 2017 10:04 am
#7
Re: Classic Games Part 1: 1971 - 1991
Pacman was an arcade game, not a PC game.
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Post
Tue May 30, 2017 10:16 am
#8
Re: Classic Games Part 1: 1971 - 1991
Pacman was on everything..... . . . .
and that just the original version.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pac-Man_(series)[/1980 – Arcade[2]
1981 – Atari 2600, Atari 800[2][3] (See Pac-Man for Atari 2600)
1982 – Commodore VIC-20, Atari 5200, Atari 8-bit[4][5][6]
1983 – Apple II, Commodore 64, IBM PC (PC booter), Intellivision[7][8][9][10]
1984 – Nintendo Entertainment System, MSX[11][12]
1990 – Game Boy[13]
1991 – Game Gear[14]
1999 – Neo Geo Pocket Color, Game Boy Color[15][16]
2003 – Mobile[17]
2006 – Xbox Live Arcade, iPod Classic[18][19]
2007 – Virtual Console[20]
2010 – Windows Phone 7
and that just the original version.
Last edited by N810 on Tue May 30, 2017 10:25 am, edited 4 times in total.
"A sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."
- Arthur C. Clarke
- Arthur C. Clarke
Post
Tue May 30, 2017 10:20 am
#9
Re: Classic Games Part 1: 1971 - 1991
Originally arcade, though. I think this is for things that were originally for PCs.
Have a question? Send me a PM! || I have a Patreon page up for REKT now! || People talking in IRC over the past two hours:
Post
Tue May 30, 2017 11:40 am
#10
I was trying to get a good representation of all the major genres.
Re: Classic Games Part 1: 1971 - 1991
Yep, or a few classic console games that had big impacts on PC games.Talvieno wrote:Originally arcade, though. I think this is for things that were originally for PCs.
I was trying to get a good representation of all the major genres.
Post
Tue May 30, 2017 2:29 pm
#11
Re: Classic Games Part 1: 1971 - 1991
Oh-ho!
I just saw a fascinating bit of news: with the approval of the original developer, Eric S. Raymond will make the 1995 C source code for the Crowther & Woods Colossal Cave Adventure available via GitHub.
So all you who never played this seminal game will, once ESR cleans up the code and adds it, have no excuse not to try it out.
Expect some frustration, if you play it like one of today's games. This was one of the earliest text parsers for a game (yes, simpler even than Zork's), so you have to figure out what it understands. (That used to be considered part of the fun.)
But the reward will be to really get the in-jokes that have persisted for four decades now: XYZZY, plugh, and getting lost in a maze of twisty passages, all alike....
I just saw a fascinating bit of news: with the approval of the original developer, Eric S. Raymond will make the 1995 C source code for the Crowther & Woods Colossal Cave Adventure available via GitHub.
So all you who never played this seminal game will, once ESR cleans up the code and adds it, have no excuse not to try it out.
Expect some frustration, if you play it like one of today's games. This was one of the earliest text parsers for a game (yes, simpler even than Zork's), so you have to figure out what it understands. (That used to be considered part of the fun.)
But the reward will be to really get the in-jokes that have persisted for four decades now: XYZZY, plugh, and getting lost in a maze of twisty passages, all alike....