My first gaming memory is watching my mom play Wolfenstein 3D when I was four years old. I was scared of BJ's bloody face when her health got low, it took me a year before playing it for myself.
I'd forgotten about that game. My friends and I occasionally tried playing by setting the angle to 0 and just drilled through the buildings.ZodiacBraves said:
Basically the original(?) worms style game. You threw explosive bananas at each other after inputting your angle and velocity values.
I remember playing the Grade 2 version as well as the Typing version... The formal you could technically speedrun through in under 5 minutes, since there were certain sections you didn't have to go through if you knew where that damn rabbit was actually going to appear... And the latter was so broken, you could reach the game's end goal (which was to get that one dude out of that typing-sensitive cage, I think) just by holding down the space bar...Fijiman said:That would be playing the Jumpstart games. Looking back those games were really kind of cheesy, but they weren't bad. Hell, I wouldn't be opposed to playing one or two of them again now just for the hell of it.
We are dating ourselves here! I was in the USAF, playing this in the barracks. This was way before networking, and everyone would come to my room to take turns on it, particularly Ultima 3. Everyone had their opinion about what to do next.KorLeonis said:All hail the Commodore 64 playin' master race. My elementary school had 2 of these bad boys. I skipped recess ever chance I got to play it.Gorfias said:Fortress of the Witch King on the Commodore 64. Turn based RPG that you can start and finish in a single session, text based with some graphics. I was completely addicted.
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LOL, you looking at me?!?Ratty said:Every post in this thread should start with "I'm dating myself here but..." lol oh well I'll bite.
I remember being really impressed with the graphics for some Magic Schoolbus (I think) adventure game-type thing in 1st grade. But the first PC game I actually remember playing a lot was Doom and Doom 2.
Yeah, I think that the 3rd grade one was probably my favorite. It's mostly because, well, what's not to love about running around a giant mountain fortress/laboratory while trying to save history as we know it? Our version of the 4th grade disk was crap though as the audio was fucked for some of the minigames, making it very hard to actually do them. Unfortunately, I think my mom tossed out all of the Jumpstart games we had years ago.FPLOON said:I remember playing the Grade 2 version as well as the Typing version... The formal you could technically speedrun through in under 5 minutes, since there were certain sections you didn't have to go through if you knew where that damn rabbit was actually going to appear... And the latter was so broken, you could reach the game's end goal (which was to get that one dude out of that typing-sensitive cage, I think) just by holding down the space bar...Fijiman said:That would be playing the Jumpstart games. Looking back those games were really kind of cheesy, but they weren't bad. Hell, I wouldn't be opposed to playing one or two of them again now just for the hell of it.
Still, those games were still fun to play and, I think, I still have my old copy of the typing version in my CD-ROM case next to, possibly, Scrabble and Nicktoons Basketball...