Right, so I am starting this thread because I am looking for a game I was completely addicted to but cannot remember its name...
Basically, it was sort of like this:
There was a grid of tiles with balls moving about, and you had to remove some percentage of the total area of tiles to go to the next level. It started with one ball and then level 2 had 2 balls and so on.
It was not the best game game ever but I really got addicted to it! I'll send a lollipop to the person who tells me its name first
While we are at it, what was/were your favourite games in the 80s - 90s?
Here are the ones I was most playing at, as far as I remember:
- Prince of Persia
- Arkanoid
- Pipedreams
- Indiana Jones
- Lemmings
- Hover (I thought that one was really cool as it was in "3D" and I had the feeling I was driving the machines )
poi: no, the balls were actually moving around and you had to clear the surface while avoiding the balls to hit the clearing surface... Hard to describe, but it is similar to the mobile game Erix
Also called Xonix I believe. At least, that is, if I'm thinking of the right game: you move around the border and can venture into the central space trailing a line, but must not allow the bouncing balls (or monsters) to strike you or your incomplete line. Once you rejoin a completed line or the border, the area enclosed within the fresh line is captured (cut-out or filled-in). You level-up once you have captured an area of a specific percentage. Each level, more balls/monsters are added, including, in some versions, enemies that track along your lines after you.
If you hadn't still offered me the lollipop, I would have been quite ready to argue (quite inaccurately, I suppose) that Jezzball was a Qix clone! I remember now that the mode of play was actually quite different - and far more addictive than Qix. Can't remember if I ever completed it.
I had Jezzball on my first IBM-compatible PC; a 25MHz(!) 386 with a 60MB hard-drive and 2MB RAM... wow, I thought my PC was the dogs' danglies at the time. Nowadays, my mobile phone holds 16.6 times as much data as that old hard-drive!
I can't remember the specs of my computer then but it must have been pretty much similar. I thought that game was one of the best game EVA!
Anyway, I am now looking for the name of YET ANOTHER game! I used to play it on my cousin's Amiga; it was an adventure [medieval] game featuring a hero who was walking across grounds and water. Every so often he had to fight ghosts and skeletons and you knew when they were coming up because the music changed all of a sudden. I used to find that music hypnotic, frightening and exciting at the same time
Hmm.
On the PC: Prince of Persia, yep, played that. And Blockout, Retalliator, Warlords, Civ, Colonize, most of the LucasArts games, some text adventures (zork et al), Beneath a Steel Sky, Worms, X-COM, Master of Orion...
...well the list could be extended way longer, but I think I'll stop there.
Well late 70' actually. But my favorite was my first. Oregon Trail - hosted on the mainframe at the UofM. We were allowed access from our grade school for about 30min at a time on a old teletype machine. No monitor just the paper tape. Not the greatest game play but cool at the time, but hey it was the 70's a digital watchs were amazing.
Luner Lander on the Vic 20, Hitch Hikers Guide to the Gallaxy, and Neuromancer on my old c64
From: Happy Hunting Grounds... Insane since: Mar 2001
posted 11-30-2006 20:25
quote:Anyway, I am now looking for the name of YET ANOTHER game! I used to play it on my cousin's Amiga; it was an adventure [medieval] game featuring a hero who was walking across grounds and water. Every so often he had to fight ghosts and skeletons and you knew when they were coming up because the music changed all of a sudden. I used to find that music hypnotic, frightening and exciting at the same time
Ghosts n Goblins?
WebShaman | The keenest sorrow (and greatest truth) is to recognize ourselves as the sole cause of all our adversities.
- Sophocles
From: there...no..there..... Insane since: May 2001
posted 11-30-2006 21:23
quote: kimson said:
Anyway, I am now looking for the name of YET ANOTHER game! I used to play it on my cousin's Amiga; it was an adventure [medieval] game featuring a hero who was walking across grounds and water. Every so often he had to fight ghosts and skeletons and you knew when they were coming up because the music changed all of a sudden.
Could it have been Gauntlet? Actually, after further reading of that article, the Amiga version was called Garrison
Kinda funny, I got MAME going here just a week ago so i could play Bubble Bobble! I remember playing it for ages on my friend's Commodore 64.
Also the sequels Rainbow Island and The New Zealand story are pretty good.
Bubble Bobble is not Puzzle Bobble btw, Puzzle Bobble is crap but more people should remember it.
romnation.net if anyone is interested in the best game in the world. Check out the techno-ho-down music
A game I've been looking for is Invader for the green and black Amstrad that took weird disks :P
I loved point-and-click adventures on my trusty old 386. Beneath a Steel Sky was good, but Sam'n'Max Hit the Road was hilarious. Of course, I didn't have sound at the time - PC speaker only...
You just reminded me, Hugh, that I have three CDs full of ROMs for MAME - I'll have to fish them out now.
I used to have an old Atari console (1200, I think) - the really old one, when they used real wood for the case before they faked it in plastic. Probably my favorite game of all time on that was Demon Attack. The first 'computer' I got was a cast-off C-16 at the age of seven. I played a game on it called Mr. Puniverse; I couldn't beat it, so I learned how to alter the BASIC code it was written in, and cheated.
- C64
Manic Miner, The Epyx Games (Winter/World/Summer Games), Boulder Dash, Skate or Die, Snookie, The Great Escape, Thing on a Spring, Rambo, Iridium, Wizard o Wor, IK+, Last Ninja, Racing Destructions Set.. I could go on and on.. (throw in a few adventures as well.. zork anyone?)
- Amiga
Xenon II Megablast, Lotus Challenge II, Test Drive, BoulderDash, Gauntlet II, Lemmings, Stunt Drive, Moonstone
- Early PC
Leisure Suit Larry, Day of the Tentacle, Goblins II, Syndicate, X-Com
Early PC:
Day of the Tentacle
Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis
Wing Commander I & II
X-Wing & TIE Fighter
X-COM
Master of Orion (I & II)
Stonekeep
Full Throttle
~~~
Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. - Albert Einstein
quote: Hugh said:
[some site] if anyone is interested in the best game in the world.
said site hosts roms illegally. I really don't mind people posting such sites (I am as pirate as the guy next door), but the webspace provider might be concerned about such things, and I don't want the asylum be in trouble because of it.
My fav old games would have to be:
pong
pac man
bubble bobble
dangerous dave
freecell
etc
That's quite true, they would. I'll wait for confirmation from one of the other Mad Scis about this, but I think the URL should go, even if it isn't linked.
It's too old to edit myself, I should have just written google romnation or rom for that matter. I doubt the asylum is gonna become the next portal for piracy, theres hundreds of forums that break copyright laws directly and with software people still care about protecting.
They're legal for backup reasons, but i think you can play them for 24 hours or something without breaking the law, I'm no where near certain on this, also how long does the copyright last on computer games? I'd imagine its less than the 50 years for books. Eitherway that site stays up by complying with the IDSA, they remove titles on demand as not to get in trouble.
ROM programs are proprietary and it is illegal for you to download them unless you already own a copy of the ROM. Sites like that get away with it because they say they are providing backups for anyone who owns the ROM and needs a backup copy. However, if you download and use a ROM program for a ROM you don't already own, you are breaking the law.
And as for being illegal the amstrad games were released into the public domain a long time ago, but to be sure make sure you read all the readme's and terms of use etc.
Apple IIgs: Leisure Suit Larry and the Land of the Lounge Lizards, Gold Rush, Police Quest, Space Quest, (You can tell I was a Sierra games fan huh?) Mah jhong.
Mac G3/G4: Unreal Tournament and Duke Nukem.
Nintendo (the first one...): Super Mario Bros, Mike Tysons Punch Out, and Ninja Gaiden.
(Gods, and I feel old.... I am only 28!)
'Hey, take it easy and enjoy life.... or in your case, death.' -- Yoh Asakura, 'Shaman King'
I know it's hardly retro, but it was arguably formative - I thought Unreal was amazing when it first came about. I could even play it on a slow 486 with an 8MB Rage card.
I was soooo disappointed when they finally got around to releasing Unreal 2. I was tempted to demand my money back for that one.