this post was submitted on 26 Jun 2023
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Gaming

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I'll start:

I could never choose a single game, but some of my favorite games that I played as a child are Rollercoaster Tycoon 1 & 2, The Sims 1 & 2, Medal of Honor Allied Assault, Runescape 2 ("OSRS") and GTA San Andreas.

The RCT and Sims games gave me a lot of freedom, while making it hard to screw up. It was so cool that I could design my own house or amusement park. I loved spending hours doing just that. I also learned a lot about living life, managing people and things like economics.

Medal of Honor Allied Assault was my favorite shooter in that time. It very well might be my first proper FPS. The atmospheric story-driven campaign drew me in a lot. The music and missions gave some very intense moments and the online multiplayer was absolutely amazing. Rifle-only battles, freeze-tag or a regular (T)DM were a blast!

Runescape is one of those games that I never really get tired of. As a child I only played as a free user, while being impressed by every member I saw. I loved the atmosphere, the people that I met and the progression of my character. I went on adventures in the wilderness with classmates or went mining for hours to make some money.
I can still get drawn into this game and really feel like I'm on MY adventure, where anything might happen. There are not many games that have this effect on me, so intensely.
This game also learned me a LOT about life. I learned about having to work for getting a result, I learned about economics and how you can use markets to make some money (this was long before the Grand Exchange). I also learned to watch out for ill-intended people: I stopped playing for a long time when 11 year old me got scammed out of my gold-trimmed black armor that I had been saving up for for a long time.

Lastly GTA SA made me feel in love with the GTA series. I already loved previous games as I had played a lot of GTA 2 and a little bit of GTA 3. But San Andreas was on another level. The huge feeling map, the intriguing story and all the thing that I could do blew me away.
I loved learning about the lore/backstories of the characters and even joined a GTA-related forum which opened up even more to me. I stayed a big fan of GTA and Rockstar Games up untill GTA 4 and bought all theirs games, often multiple times on multiple platforms. GTA 5 was fun to me, but it never really got to me like the previous entries did. I think this is partly because I really enjoy the stories and characters of the previous games, and the (admittedly interesting) choice to use three switchable protagonist resulted in character development that wasn't as deep and refined as games like GTA SA or GTA IV. But San Andreas... Man, I love that game!

Now I'm curious about the games that you loved playing during your childhood! What made them so special to you?

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[–] Sestren 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Asheron's Call was probably the single most defining game of my childhood. The game itself doesn't really hold up to today's standards in most regards, but it had so many cool concepts, some of which have never really been explored since. I loved the way that "quests" were more organic. You didn't go up to someone with a mark over their head and add a task to your log. You would have to just pay attention to stuff that npcs talked about and infer from that what might be going on. The monthly updates and gm interaction were just a completely different experience from modern MMOs. It also had the advantage of being from a time before everything was mapped in detail on the internet. Maggie The Jackcat existed for some stuff, but it was more of a blog than a resource like wowhead or the like. The game just felt like an adventure, and that type of experience can't really be recreated today.

On the single player side, definitely Panzer Dragoon Saga. I played through it again a few years ago and the story still holds up pretty well. I loved the exploration, and the customization of the dragons. There was just so much to do, and it kept me busy for months.

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Mystical Ninjas Starring Goemon: I really enjoyed the weird humor of the game. It eventually pointed me to finding a lot of japanese games, in particular the Ganbare Goemon series (the Japanese title for Mystical Ninjas)...most of which wasn't localized, and translation patches only became available in recent years.

And it turns out the rest of the series had both the humor and some of the best gameplay on both the SNES and N64. The NES, GBA, and DS games are also pretty good too.

Gizmos & Gadgets. An Education game with surprisingly decent gameplay. The only serious issue being repetitiveness.

Space Quest 6. The humor was just great. I've had a love for the laid-back story-driven gameplay ever since

Warcraft II, pretty much the reason I was a Blizzard fan for many, many, many years. I miss the narrator VA....

And lastly callout to the original Warcraft III, where I spent most of my childhood and made my longest friends on.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Pokemon Red got me started drawing long ago. Imagining the starters getting a 4th evolution. Mostly putting a bunch of spikes on everything. But i havent stopped drawing since.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Red Faction Guerilla was absolutely kind blowing as a kid. The realistic building destruction was incredible.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I loved that game! I've never finished it. Most of my playtime is probably using the free demo on my ps3, just wrecking stuff.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Where to start…

Odyssey 2/Philips Videopac

  • Munchkin

PacMan Clone with a map editor. Spent far too much time on that game as a kid. Simple as hell but a decent clone.

**ZX Spectrum **

  • Arkanoid
  • R Type

Excellent Arcade ports on the lowly ZX Spectrum. Amazed me that I could play Arcade level titles in my living room.

Nintendo Gameboy

  • Tetris

One of the best ways to play Tetris. The gameplay, the sound, the console itself. Pinnacle of handheld gaming.

Sega 32X

  • Virtua Racing
  • Doom
  • StarWars Arcade

Both StarWars Arcade and Virtua Racing were excellent Arcade ports and Doom on the 32x was real special to me, after experiencing the SNES port of Doom, the 32x was leagues ahead.

Commodore Amiga

  • Lemmings
  • Worms
  • Cannon Fodder

I could list endless amounts of Amiga classics but Lemmings is one of my all time favourite games.
Worms was multiplayer perfection and cannon fodder shows me that rat has never been so much fun.

Sega Saturn

  • Duke Nukem 3D
  • Quake
  • Powerslave/Exhumed

All running of the same engine. Fantastic fits person showers on the weakest of the goth gen consoles.

I could go on all night but I must stop…

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Silver.

Pretty much made special by the simple fact that I played it as a kid. To be fair I think it has some objective values in the fighting system, the voice acting, the quirkiness of it all, but I'm not sure it's enough to suggest people to go and play it nowadays.

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I was a huge Sonic kid, only had a ps2 during 6th gen so my introduction was Sonic Heroes. When I got a Wii I went back and played the Adventure games. I have mixed feelings on them as an adult, I like pretty much every entry during 6th & 7th gen besides Shadow & 06 since I adored them so much as a kid but I can very easily see the cracks in them now and honestly I don't think I would care for any of them besides Colors & Generations if I didn't grow up with them.

Some games I loved as a kid that 100% hold up as an adult for me however would be Ape Escape 2 & 3, Mario Galaxy 1 & 2, Super Monkey Ball DX, Aqua Aqua, Klonoa 2 & Wii remake, Pac-Man World 2, ExciteBots Trick Racing, and my favorite game of all time which got me into JRPGs Xenoblade 1.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Baten Kaitos: Lost Wings and the Eternal Ocean. Excellent lore, fun gameplay, very cool and colorful. Card-based combat, and you could earn/create new cards by doing specific combos in battle and some cards would evolve/change in real time.

The Disciples and Heroes of Might and Magic games were also a lot of fun, but it kinda seems like they've gotten worse and worse in the last few iterations.

I spent a lot of time playing Morrowind, but I never actually did the main story as a kid cuz I could never find that damn puzzle box at the beginning. Working on that now.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Mega Man 3 which was , at the time, the only title I owned. I remember taking the Nintendo Power issue to a friends sleepover when it came out. I played that game over and over so many times.

Super Mario 64 was a snow day ritual for myself and a friend. I had finished it and helped him beat the game little by little when we didn’t have school.

Final Fantasy 7 is another. I was blown away by the FMV at the time and stayed up all night playing it which was not something I did regularly even that young. I also played through that game a half dozen times.

It’s cool how thinking of those games, or even playing them now, takes me back to exactly where I was at that point in time.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Video games did not exist when I was a child. They came much later, with text based games at first like moria, adventure etc.

Board games I remember are Risk, Monopoly and Business.

I played video games a lot in my early twenties, played a lot of Unreal Tournament and Quake when I worked on device drivers for sound cards... supporting... games! We had a modded UT with all sorts of custom maps and crazy taunts set up - hilarious as we played it at lunchtime on headphones.

"Respect my authority!" would ring out as someone got blasted, or "Meat! He He" etc.

After writing device drivers I went on to work for Codemasters on their racing games: DiRT, GRiD, F1 2011 and the ill fated BodyCount. I also fixed a bug in Just Cause.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

As a kid, the big twist in Hordes of the Underdark blew my mind.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

My absolute fave was Theme Park (the Bullfrog game, something like RCT's grandma). Looking back, it was a pretty dark game, at least if you went bankrupt!

A bit later on, I played Sim City (can't quite remember 2000 or 3000), and the Impressions city builders games: Emperor, Zeus, and especially Pharaoh. I adored those, and am now playing the Pharaoh remake.

I still play The Sims 2, btw. There's a small but active community over on Tumblr.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun. Don't know why it was so special to me but I played it A LOT. I was maybe 8-10 years old and when I was at my dads place he let me stay up late at night and all I did was play this game.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Wing Commander: Privateer.

I'll never forget when I went over to my friend's house and I couldn't understand how the pirates weren't attacking him. And then we loaded up my save (off a 3.5" floppy) and he couldn't understand how the militia weren't attacking me. It's the first time we were ever exposed to factions that responded to your actions.

I sank so much time in that game. Never paid too much attention to the storyline, but I did have the fastest ship with highest-end targeting computer and a full load-out of the best weapons.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Ocarina of time, SSB 64, and DK 64 are nostalgia bombs for me.

[–] kratoz29 1 points 1 year ago

Toy Story for PSX, I loved the gameplay and graphics and I swear the game hasn't aged that badly, I can re-play it nowadays without any issues.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Power Rangers The Movie, Sonic 2, Pokemon Red and Jedi Knight 2: Jedi Outkast were all games I spent a lot of time on. PR and Sonic 2 were practically two of the only games I owned for a long time, Pokemon Red was the first time I got truly addicted to an RPG and JK2 was the first online computer game I really ever played. Good times.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Sim Tower and Sim Ant, Escape Velocity, Age of Empires and later on Starcraft

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Sim Tower and Sim Ant, Escape Velocity, Age of Empires and later on Starcraft

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Pokemon Mystery Dungeon, Explorers of Sky. Still my favorite game today, I love it for both being able to play as a Pokemon and the heartfelt story in the game, especially in the Special Episodes.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Star tropics was pretty cool. A lot of NES games made you use the manual to solve puzzles and beat certain levels. I thought it was neat.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Some games used the manual as DRM, they asked stuff like input word 24 chapter 3 page 11 to run

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Some games used the manual as DRM,

I remember hating that as a kid, because I could never remember what was in the manual, so I'd spend hours trying to solve a puzzle that had an answer key already provided - if only I had remembered that the "minotaur's ciper" was just printed in the manual. I would always just assume that I had missed something in-game and keep looking, especially because so few games explicitly told you to go check the booklet.

The game being explicit to "check the manual and do X" would honestly have been preferable, but the games I was into always seemed to have like "pirate symbol translation guide" or similar, that could easily be dismissed as fun flavour inclusions and not the answer key to in-game puzzles.

At one point in time my dad threw away the box & manual for some game we'd bought, only to have to go borrow the booklet from a friend and photocopy the necessary pages, so that we could complete the game. Nowadays, watching Mostly Walking hit those games and one of the lads needs to find a sketchy .pdf of the manual for them to progress has been such a cathartic nostalgia trip.

[–] gerrya90 1 points 1 year ago

Age of Empire 2 It was one of the first games I ever played and I was completely transfixed. We didn’t have the game at my house but I remember going over to my cousins every chance I had to play. It was also around the time I saw Braveheart and playing the tutorial with William Wallace blew my mind, I was sold instantly.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Adventure of the Atari VCS, The Hobbit on an Oric-1, and Head Over Heels and Batman on an Amstrad 6128.

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