Any Old School Gamers Here?

Started by packy120353, May 13, 2009, 07:43:57 PM

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packy120353

I mean post Intellivision and Atari. In my opinion the system that launched a universe. My Dad arrived from Jacksonville to visit last evening. As he is getting up there (85) he's starting to get rid of stuff. He has amassed a LOT of stuff. (A year ago he brought me up "an old guitar" one of his wives left when they split up...1968 Gibson B25...another story). This time he said he brought something for Clara (she's 7) He said he got it a long time ago and never could put it together so he put it away. Here are pics:



Yup. It's 1990 at my house now. I can't go to Wonderfest but I can play BOMBERMAN!!!!

BlackLagoon

That is HUUUUUUUUUUUGE! I love Nintendo!! All the Konami games were sick! Contra, Castle Vania, Gradius, Rush-N-Attack...man they were great, ...I actually still have my Nintendo in very playable shape and every once in awhile hit up the Tecmo Bowl or Blades Of Steel...

I also have a GREAT Atari 2600 that I got on ebay with Asteroids, Pac-Man, Phoenix, Yar's Revenge, Pitfall, Berzerk...which is one of the greatest games ever in my opinon. Actually from Nintendo on, Im pretty sure I have  every system in my attic.

Now, Im a Madden nut on 360 and I still have the Midway and NAMCO museum discs with all the great games...which are practice. Because if anyone wants to meet at an arcade for a "friendly" game of Galaga....just say the word :)

"I send my murdergram to all the monster kids, it comes right back to me, signed in their parents blood"

avenger

Wow ! I had that Nintendo set !   Those photos bring back great memories.
I could never beat Dracula in Castlevania,though.
Thanks for sharing.

Nicole

Absolutely! I was a gaming nut before I was even tall enough to reach the controls on an arcade: We had a Pac-Man arcade game at the grocery store, and I would stand on a milk crate to play it. I loved my NES and had a ton of games for it back in the day. Some of my favorites were Super Mario Bros. 3, Zelda, Kirby, Altered Beast, Castlevania, Ghosts 'n Goblins, and I was madly addicted to Destiny of an Emperor. I also really liked Zombies Ate My Neighbors, but that was on my Sega Genesis. Oh, those were the days.
"If you can't learn to do it well, learn to enjoy doing it badly." -Ashleigh Brilliant

hammett1

That looks just like mine.  Bought it and never hooked it up.  Still in the box unused.  I must be getting old.  David
hammett1

"In front of me stood a GORILLA in a hat"

preyer

my mom actually owns an original 'galaga' game. i had it in my store for about a year and a half, but the screen started acting up and i just needed the room. she still has it.

ah, the NES. wasted many, many hours on that sucker, lol. i don't even remember what i played on it. i had practically every game system, so they kinda blur together after so long.

let's see: i've got a couple atari 2600s around here somewhere in various states. if i remember correctly, the last time i counted i had 132 cartridges, most of them working, about 30 of those are duplicates. i keep a couple old televisions around in the basement just so there's something to play them on if i ever got in the mood. (yes, i was spoiled, but not *that* spoiled. i used to sell used toys, that's how i got so many games.) one game is copyrighted 1977 (for the sears system) that's, get this, *in black and white*, lol. if i could transfer all those hours i spent playing atari into something useful, i could have a phd in something by now. the BEST atari games were made by a company called supercharger. the supercharger itself was an oversized cartridge with a cord coming out of it that you plugged into a cassette player. the games themselves were loaded into the cartridge and came on cassettes. i can't tell you how much money i had wrapped up in crazy joysticks, from the ball-on-the-stick thing to contraptions with suction cups on the base.

i had an odyssey 2, a very underrated system and the first one with (very limited) voice capabilities.
the graphics (remember that term?) weren't exactly spectacular, but they made very playable games. the voice system was this monstrous add-on which, if you listened close enough, made human-ish words like you'd expect from an early 80's hunk of plastic. the voice modulator (making that name up, but it sounds good) was expensive, so i never had one. the most immediate thing you noticed about the O2 was it had a full keyboard. what this was really good for is beyond me, but supposedly you could programme your own games with a programming cartridge.

i never bothered with an intellivision. my friend had one and i hated it, though to be fair the aspect of it that just turned me off more than anything else was the joystick. correction, joy*pad*, sorry. what a random piece of.... some company made a little attachment to fit over the pad that had a short stick to it, but, yeah, it sucked maybe even more as more often than not you had to apply pressure to the pad to make the stick not fall off, thereby creating chaos with whatever you were playing.

post-atari and there's no competition, it was coleco's colecovision. unfortunately, while the games looked great, they didn't tend to have much replay value, and the funky controller with a built-in keypad and stubby joystick didn't help.

then the NES. 'nuff said. for some reason, i loathed the sega genesis i bought used.

then the nintendo64, another underrated system, imo. in one version, a pretty phenomenal 'star wars' game came with it. holy crap, you mean systems actually used to come with a free game?! yes, virginia, and sometimes even two! then apparently some beancounter figured out that you'd actually buy a game along with the system, so no more freebies. bastards.

my nephews had a dreamcast, and it looked pretty cool, but i passed on it. the dreamcast is, for some inexplicable reason, making a kind of comeback according to my yahoo! home page from a few daze ago. no new games, of course....

then followed the playstation (unmodified), xbox, PS2 and gamecube. all but the PS2 collect dust at the moment. last x-mas we weren't quite sure whether or not to get a PS3 or 360, but given past performance problems with the x-box and microsoft's runaround (and the fact that microsoft has umpteen gajillion class-action lawsuits against them for the 360), and it wasn't a hard decision, so we got the mid-level PS3 on sale.

i'd say i've definitely had my fair share of game systems. then again, i grew up playing 'pong,' which wouldn't surprise me if my dad still had. it probably still works, lol. i don't think i'm forgetting any i've owned. of the major systems i can think of off the top of my head, dreamcast and intellivision are the only two i didn't have. i don't count the commodore 64 as a game system, though their 'galaxian' version was pretty sweet, nor is the texas instruments (a code word for radio shack crap) TRS (?) a game system.

as a sidenote, my best friend's dad bought an apple II in the late 70's/early 80's (don't remember when), and we'd sit there for hours playing 'zork' and 'ultima.' man, *those* were the daze!

mike c

I'm sorry, I see 'old school' and I think of the first video games WE had: Pong, TV Arcade, with the screen layovers for shooting galleries... then Atari, Intellivision, Colecovision, etc.
And back then, 'gamer' meant you brought graph paper and a bag of many-sided dice.

Mike C.

poseablemonster

I had the pong, Atari, Nintendo, and Super Nintendo.  I was fine until The Legend of Zelda.  Then I got hooked.  I had a hard time getting off the Zelda.  It is the only game that I ever got obsessive about. 
Fast forward to earlier this week, and my brother gave me his SNES, nice and in the box...with Zelda.  Man, I love that game.  I had a hard time going to sleep last night...I have a problem. ;)

BaronLatos35

#8
Quote from: mike c on May 15, 2009, 03:51:38 AM
I'm sorry, I see 'old school' and I think of the first video games WE had: Pong, TV Arcade, with the screen layovers for shooting galleries... then Atari, Intellivision, Colecovision, etc.
And back then, 'gamer' meant you brought graph paper and a bag of many-sided dice.

Mike C.

I hear you Mike C., Our first games were from Atari: Combat, Adventure, Pac Man, Donkey Kong ect. Played a little bit but never got past those.

When I hear "Gamer" I think of someone who played/still plays (myself included) Avalon Hill/SPI wargames such as: The Russian Campaign, Panzer Leader, Panzer Armee Afrika, Onslaught, 1776, Third Reich, Panzer Blitz, ect.
"For one who has lived but a single lifetime, you are a wise man ...Van Helsing."
"I shall awaken memories of love and crime and death..."

Nicole

The classic games were more addictive than most of the stuff I find on the shelves today. The only thing that comes close for me nowadays is Halo 2. My friends know to run when I get the rocket launcher. ;)
"If you can't learn to do it well, learn to enjoy doing it badly." -Ashleigh Brilliant

Minion

Hey preyer, you forgot TurboGrafix and the Atari Jaguar.  :P

BlackLagoon

Quote from: Nicole on May 15, 2009, 08:07:22 AM
The classic games were more addictive than most of the stuff I find on the shelves today.

I agree with that! Nothing comes close to Galaga and Robotron 2024...also nothing comes close to the anxiety attacks I get due to Galaga, a game that right around Challenging Stage 20 starts to giggle at me a bit...also a game that I talk back to. You know its a good night for me when theres a beer next to me, Im slightly slouched, intensely watching the screen and you hear me say.."keep dropping down, Im just getting angrier..you little b!!hes!".....Hello my name is Jess and Im addicted to Galaga.
"I send my murdergram to all the monster kids, it comes right back to me, signed in their parents blood"

preyer

i did forget the SNES. *everyone* had one of those. in fact, in some box somewhere, i'm sure i still have one. and the controller in another box and the power cord in yet in another. at my mom's storage building. fortunately it's still within the same state.

anyone ever do this? put a bunch of like items in a box, such as power cords, from a dozen different sources and say to yourself, 'when i need one, i'll remember which one i need.' like in three years when you next see this junk you'll somehow just *know* which is the right adapter....

ah, the turbographix and jaguar. i guess you have to technically call them 'major systems,' but i've never known anyone who actually owned one. i forgot all about those puppies.

back in the day, you'd go to the dayton mall to the red baron arcade. you could play that football game with the big roller, skeeball, combatzone, air hockey, whole rows of pinball, and your choice of shoot-at-the-screen-with-a-big-light-emitting-gun style games. of course, space invaders. yeah, i'd say that if you played space invaders back when it was still new, you could be old school, lol.

today, i'm pretty much out of the loop arcade game-wise. i just don't have the time (and usually the money) to visit dave and busters much these daze.

i miss the old school arcades, dark rooms filled with glowing monitor light and shrill electronic sound. pull up a wobbly stool and waste a couple bucks in 'tron' or 'gorf.' if you wanted the latest and greatest in games, chuck e. cheese's was the place to go. no surprise, that, considering nolan bushnell owned them. yep, that's bushnell of atari fame.

now, if you want *truly* old school video arcade games, this is it, baby:

http://retrocrush.buzznet.com/archive2/computerspace/

best game ever? any shooting gallery or those quick draw games where you have to draw faster than the mannequin gunslinger five feet away. if you get outdrawn, you get to pull out your best oscar-calibre death scene for all to see. i have to admit, i always cheated at those arm wrestling games where your 'opponet' was always a masked mexican wrestler looking dude.

you'd not call it a game, but i distinctly remember one local restaurant (back when life was cool, before streamlining, frivolous lawsuits, political correctness was in full swing and good taste) what had antique nickleodeans that still worked and you had to crank the 'movie' yourself.

now if i could only turn back time, make myself a little younger, return to the 70's minus crippling recession and gas shortage (and while i was at it, have ford make a late 70's mustang convertible with real power (ford made no convertibles from '74-'83, as i recall), i'd be set. hey, i looove disco, and i'd have been the first in line to see ELO in concert! because if you ask me, albums are better than cd's, 76' t-birds are better than priouses, KISS is better than nickleback, platform shoes are better than crocs, beta is better than DVD, payphones are better than cellulars, and star wars is better than, well, star wars.

ah, now i'm feeling nostalgic....

atari rules, xbox drools!

Dr.Teufel Geist

up,up,down,down,left,right,left,right,A,B,Select,Start


It's amazing, that I still remember that.

Nicole

Quote from: Dr.Teufel Geist on May 20, 2009, 11:18:44 PM
up,up,down,down,left,right,left,right,A,B,Select,Start


It's amazing, that I still remember that.

Yeah, I still remember some of those too...

Down, Up, Left, Left, A, Right, Down. Extra gore mode in Mortal Kombat. :D
"If you can't learn to do it well, learn to enjoy doing it badly." -Ashleigh Brilliant