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Anyone born in the 70s? Remember how good the 90s games were?

R/C cars, BB guns etc. So games werent as big a priority cause we had so many other things goin on.
Had a CD-i player with games, but yes I was also a lot outside with my RC cars, guns etc...
 
Had a CD-i player with games, but yes I was also a lot outside with my RC cars, guns etc...
Those damned BB guns are the reason why I have a broken front tooth since my elementary school years cause we were being stupid careless kids.:laugh: 'it was fixed a week later and it still holds, at least it wasn't my eye that got hit..'
But yea I've also spent most of my free/after school time outside biking around the town and whatnot 'doing dumb stuff really:oops:' with my classmate friends until the ~last year of elementary when I've got more into gaming. 'they sure did not like that cause I was starting to spend less time with them'
 
I wasn't born until just past the midway point of the decade after the one you're asking about, but I definitely remember games from that time-frame well. The earliest I remember are actually games from around when I was born since my family was not exactly well off so we were usually half a console cycle behind. I also can't speak as much for PC games of the time as I was entirely on consoles until basically the early 2000s.

I'd say those were some Golden years for gaming, although it's important to point out the effect of nostalgia. We place high fondness on our formative years.

That being said, I'm fairly confident in stating that the late 1990s and up to the early or mid 2000s are often considered some of gaming's best years (1998 and 2004 are two years I see a lot as some of the best) so it's not just a particular age group having nostalgia for their formative years that makes that time period good; it actually was good. Games weren't yet quite big enough to be beholden to shareholders and development team size, budgets, and time frames hadn't yet spiraled out of control (though Final Fantasy VII in particular was about to become what many call one of the earliest triple A titles, and in the years after, SquareSoft would hit financial trouble before The Spirits Within even failed). We didn't have games as a service and unfinished games in buggy states as often.

Were there bad points? Sure. Gaming wasn't yet as much online, patches were rare and took a long time, we didn't have digital distribution, and the entire online world was dealing with lower speeds and thus less media (though the internet was better in my mind before social media platforms became the primary focus; decentralized, individual forums were the best balance in my eyes).

Anyway, my favorite game comes from that time frame, my favorite console comes from that timeframe (second and third favorite come from before and after it), as do many other well loved games.

All that being said... (!)

I think gaming is pretty great today too. It has some obvious drawbacks. Certain monetization models are awful. Unfinished or unoptimized games on release are awful. And, it's subjective, but I think the games and many franchises best titles are long behind them and likely not coming back. But the indie scene is thriving. Many remakes are actually good (and they are targeting games from specifically that era). And hardware slowing down in advancement meant you can play a vast, vast library of games on modest hardware. Emulation is alive and well. Digital distribution exists, and Steam isn't as bad as the worst case monopoly could be. The internet, though it has its issues, gives us communities to reach out to. And while games are unfinished because it's a "release it today, fix it tomorrow... maybe..." world, game prices haven't risen with inflation but are actually cheaper, and many games exist at below "standard" pricing (either innately, or with sales).

Overall, those "Golden years" were great, maybe the best, but I think we've living in another, perhaps more muted but more varied, Golden age lately. There's an old saying that comes to mind. You never realize you're making tomorrow's memories until today becomes yesterday. We didn't realize we were living in a "Golden age" back then either. We took it for granted. Don't do the same today. Having a defeated attitude means you'll never enjoy today. We always forget the struggles of the past but remember the good times. So we tend to overestimate years gone by.
 
I was fortunate enough to experience the "Golden Age" of video arcades back when things like PacMan, Defender, Joust, Sinistar, Pole Position and others came out.
It was all too easy to blow through a roll of quarters in an hour (If it took that long) and that's where some parents would dump the kids (Like we were) so they could go do whatever and pick us up when they were done.

I know arcades are about gone now and if you find an original machine from back then, it can go for some real bucks these days.
However there's nothing like having the real thing in your home and no need to hunt a dollar changer (That wasn't out of change) for quarters to play.

Those days are long gone now but I do remember them well.

As for home consoles I still have a nice collection of those and I will not get rid of them, most of it I bought new myself with some titles worth a few bucks these days in the mix.

If I can find it (House ate it or something - It's around here somewhere) I have a copy of Xenosaga III (PS2 game) here that's about as pristine as you can ask for, I only opened it to test the discs and then put them away in it's case but never got around to actually playing it so my copy is basically unused.
English language copies like mine usually go for about $300+ with ease due to their rarity (Not many copies of it were sold here) vs the original Japanese language version that can be found like the plague if you look.
 
I used to go down the local pub near the Garrison I was serving in just to play Donkey Kong on the table top arcade they had there, 1982 I think ................ good times.
 
I played congo bongo in 82 or 83 at the local pizza joint. I remember turning 6 years old in 81 and telling my Mom that I am 6. I saw tootsie in the movies and ghostbusters in the early 80s while I was living in Brooklyn NY. I remember riding the L subway train with my dad. He would take me to hobby shops around Queens to buy model trains and tracks. Shit was magical back then. Plus the movies were great. We were wicked poor. Poor in poor peoples standards. But my parents tried. Then it all went to crap.

PC games and pc industry in the 90s was the best though in my opinion. I used to love reading PC magazine and gaming magazines from the 90s. I still watch youtube videos of gaming mag readings. Cool stuff.
 
I was born in '75 started playing games somewhere around '83 on a friend C64 then my parents get me ZX Spectrum 48k later I also had Amiga and after that PC 486....Yeah gaming was GREAT back then even now I love to play games on my ZX Spectrum heck I even made few "retro" games for original hardware a couple years ago.....There are so many awesome games during the '80s-'90s era I don't know even where to start and I know that I will forget to mention many great ones but here are the some of my favorite:Commando,R-Type,Target Renegade,Xevious,Cyclone,Cabal,The Lost Patrol,Uridium,Sim City,REX,Boulder Dash,Arkanoid,Cybernoid,Elite,JetPac,International Karate,Maziacs,Robocop,Batman,Milennium 2.2,Laser Squad,X Com,....etc
I see some people mention X-Com that I also really love and played so much but before X-Com for me it was the Laser Squad and Rebel Star this is actually the birth of the X com series.....

We didn't have a fancy graphics back then many times sound effect are lacking or even been non existent but some of those games are been good enough to wake up player imagination and I believe that this was and still is the main key for every successful game especially when we look where are we now when every game looks and sounds 10000000000x better and yet many of them feel soulless and empty compared to the some of the all time classics.......
 
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Was born in 87, one of first games that got me hooked into gaming was this. Spend half a day finishing this back then, so many losses but I did it in the end.


What got me hooked to PC gaming was Red Alert. A shame there's no longer a decent RTS these days, and C&C was now a mobile games thanks to EA :mad:


I use Pentium 166MHz non MMX till about early 2000 where I got Dell Optiplex GX100 with Celeron 600MHz and intel i810 graphics where I get the taste of 3D graphics. Terrible driver from Intel back then, and games turns with missing/white textures, not counting pathetic framerate. Dell does put 4MB VRAM with it where most of other manufacturer don't but it does little to improve performance.
 
Born in '57 and still play the first games I laid my eyes on - Tomb Raider I and II, even without remaster on a variety of machines.
My gaming career didn't start until Windows 95, tbh.
 
All I can seem to remember is the Amiga 500 had amazing sound and for x86 original Doom and Riven.
 
There is lots of nostalgia here, as someone that plays a LOT of emulators (have 2 handhelds specifically for that), a lot of older games are just not as good as modern ones. The problem with modern games is that because there is a LOT of handholding , the game becomes very very easy, and so they have to a add a ton of filler to make up for it (collectables on the map etc.). I recently played the original Links awakening GBC version (gameboy color) and then the recent remake. The games are basically identical, but the remake is just full of tips and guidance on where to go and what to do. So no sense of exploration, you can finish the game in a couple of hours (3-4 max). Try doing that on the original, it ain't happening. It will literally take you months if you don't look at guides (which didn't exist back then).

Also I replayed neverwinter night 2 and dragon age origins, 2 of my favorite RPGs, right after baldurs gate 3. Then I realized, the former 2 have nothing next to baldurs gate 3. I'd barely consider them average nowadays.
 
Back in the day there was no internet! You had to figure stuff out on yer own! Get off my lawn!
That's wrong. Back in the 710''ies and 80'ies there have been internet. It wasn't available to the broad mass. But it was available. I remember pretty well the time before AOL got onto the market. I was studying computer sciencee in a university of applied science to make my diploma. At the University we did develop at a mainframe using Pascal, Cobol, Fortran and also PL/1. We did need to know the ip address of the server we did want to visit as DNS was not there. But we had internet. We did visit Nic.Funet.fi using it's IP Adress to "mget" the needed files for the first versions of Linux. Shortly after we got the Fidonet BBS Systems where we discussed about all topics. But in difference to nowadays one had to use his brain to use the internet and forums. There was much less hate speech visible. Later we had acoustic couplers. We had to dial a telephone numbers to get our Computer connected. At that time the first hackers were also named Phone phreakers. They whistled into the phone to signal that they paid everything. Then the times of modems began where the computer dialed automatically. To give some impressions of that time using the internet one should watch the movie "War Games".
 
I used bbses back in 1993. My buddy used gopher. It was all dialup unless you were at college. What I really meant to say was to get info back then required a lot of brainpower...maybe not a lot if you were in the scene but you needed to know how to do things more than just open a browser and ask google or reddit.

I remember back in 1993 I dialed up to my buddies' modem in the town next to mine and I had to configure windows terminal and @ commands. It was awesome. We were iming each other in windows terminal long before any of that was big. But we had to figure out how to do it by reading books while sitting in front of the pc.
 
I got my first PC back in '74. At that time i learned how a Computer is working, a CPU (afaik Intel 8008) thinks and the Assembler/MNemonics language of that CPU. ;) In the beginning 90'ies i was at a university studying computer science and after that Communication electronics. I owned a Commodora Amiga 2000. I programmed that one also in assembler. C we didn't use as there was less control about the compiler. We had to read a lot of books then and there. Not only in front of a computer. We had blank papers and sticky notepads in front where we wrote down notes with important things we did want to memorize. Even nowadays i grab the Bibel of Donald E. Knuth (The Art of Computer Programming) to see what a perfect sort or search algorythm might be and how long such a search/sort might take. We have seen how M$ copied Amiga's Guru meditation message (Blue screen), the mouse (from Apple) etc. and made money with mthat stolen ideas. We knew the differenes of a Risc CPU against Intel. We knew that there have been better alternatives than Intel anyway. At that time i had "wet" dreams about workstations with advanced Motorola CPU's. I still own a HP49 calculator and a daily runner (Casio FX87). My mobile is still laying aside without a real need for usage, I still don't use Social Media. The world doesn't need to know anything of my private life. As i have my mobile at home even google don't know where i am.

All of that are things forgotten nowadays. All the idiots hunting for likes whilst posting what they are eating, where they are, etc. thinking that this will be free. Not realizing that they sell theirself.
 
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To be fair, most games/software back then came with very detailed documentation.

Boxed games came with a manual back then and sometimes tips then but not anything like a guide. Even logging on to a dial-up BBS and asking for help didn't usually work. Some games had a long distance phone number that you could call for help when stuck but it was expensive. $2 a minute iirc. The one and only time I did that I spent several minutes on the phone asking how to get through a level that I had been stuck on for weeks before realizing that the guy was just reading from a script of questions and had never even played the game. He couldn't help. Total waste of money.
 
Carmageddon 2
I loved that game. I remember in high school a friend of mine and I would would play it all night long laughing at how mangled we could get our cars while still being able to drive them. haha. good times.

To be fair, most games/software back then came with very detailed documentation.
I kind of miss that. I bought a printer the other day... and it came with no documentation. I mean I could figure it out. But could a granny? I guess it saves on paper which is a good thing. But lets be real - its done because it saves money.

Boxed games came with a manual back then and sometimes tips then but not anything like a guide. Even logging on to a dial-up BBS and asking for help didn't usually work. Some games had a long distance phone number that you could call for help when stuck but it was expensive. $2 a minute iirc. The one and only time I did that I spent several minutes on the phone asking how to get through a level that I had been stuck on for weeks before realizing that the guy was just reading from a script of questions and had never even played the game. He couldn't help. Total waste of money.
Secret of mana came with guide, for like half the game. It was crazy, I kept wondering, is it going to go to the end? It didn't - but it went pretty far.
 
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Old games remind me that immersion does not equate high refresh rates and higher resolutions.

An important lesson I had to learn in recent years, and am glad I did so, mainly thanks to Steam Deck reminding me how much I love older games, even at 30 fps.

That being said, I still like high refresh and higher resolutions for some games, everything has its place though. One is never better than the other, they just have their place.
 
Ah, the starter travelers log. Yeah we had that. Just didn't think of it as a guide. Still my favorite game ever!
Ah I see. Travellers log, like not in depth enough? Well either way it was very welcoming to a new player with no idea what to do with a game like this. And yeah it was good. I know a lot of people complain about it, how you can spam the bosses and something about the camera scrolling I never personally noticed, but it was my first snes rpg so I will always remember it fondly.
 
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