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Classic Games (Games) Games

Internet Archive Launches Arcade of Classic Games In the Browser 94

A reader tips news that the Internet Archive has launched the "Internet Arcade," a collection of over 900 arcade games from the '70s, '80s, and '90s that are free to play in an emulated, browser-based environment. The Arcade makes use of JavaScript Mess, which the crew at the Archive has been working on for several years. Obviously, a lot of people are going to migrate to games they recognize and ones that they may not have played in years. They'll do a few rounds, probably get their @$%^& kicked, smile, and go back to their news sites. A few more, I hope, will go towards games they've never heard of, with rules they have to suss out, and maybe more people will play some of these arcades in the coming months than the games ever saw in their "real" lifetimes. And my hope is that a handful, a probably tiny percentage, will begin plotting out ways to use this stuff in research, in writing, and remixing these old games into understanding their contexts.
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Internet Archive Launches Arcade of Classic Games In the Browser

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  • Sweet!! (Score:5, Funny)

    by rodrigoandrade ( 713371 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @06:20AM (#48308259)
    Goodbye productivity!!
    • Re:Sweet!! (Score:5, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @07:00AM (#48308353)

      Goodbye productivity!!

      You can really say this with a straight face while surfing slashdot?

    • i've made the mistake of playing Street Fighter 2. i had such fond memories of the game from childhood. some things are just better left as memories.

      i wonder how i'm going to perceive today's "realistic" 3d games in 10 years.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Re:Sweet!! (Score:5, Interesting)

        by mccalli ( 323026 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @08:41AM (#48308597) Homepage
        Although I agree the sentiment, I disagree specifically on Street Fighter 2 (well...on the Hyperfighting/Turbo edition anyway). Always found that one holds up because the characters are well balanced, the moves are easy'ish to remember so when playing people who are good it's less about remembering the framerate for the super-ultra-mega-30-button-combo-string and more about actual weighted tactics.

        I find it interesting that my kids, who are used to playing the newest and prettiest editions of the Tekken series, still go back to Street Fighter 2 Hyperfighting. They weren't even alive when it came out and have no nostalgic feelings towards it, so clearly the game has got something to it which stands the test of time.
        • Re:Sweet!! (Score:5, Funny)

          by ArcadeMan ( 2766669 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @11:04AM (#48309667)

          ...clearly the game has got something to it which stands the test of time.

          Of course it does. Her name is Chun-Li.

        • While there was plenty of crap some of the best ones really do stand the test of time.

          Personally I rather Like Street Fighter II Championship Edition. Good balance, special moves possible to master, etc. Robotron is another excellent one but requires a dual joystick. There's something about the control technique of that game (one stick to move, one to fire in the direction of your choice) which is incredibly absorbing.

        • As a gamer, game dev, and huge fan of Street Fighter II, I agree with your observations. It's an incredibly well-made and polished classic, and still stands as one of the best fighting games ever made. And Chun Li. Yata!
      • Re:Sweet!! (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Jason Levine ( 196982 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @09:18AM (#48308797) Homepage

        I felt the same way when I re-watched some episodes of Voltron on Netflix. I remembered an exciting, top notch animated show. I saw cheesy dialogue and plot holes that you could pilot a giant space robot through. There are somethings that you can relive the glory of - that stand the test of time - and other things that just are better left in your memory.

        • Re:Sweet!! (Score:4, Insightful)

          by oldmac31310 ( 1845668 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @11:26AM (#48309893) Homepage
          I watched it and other things like every Transformers episode EVAR with my son. Never saw this stuff growing up so it was all new to me. Really enjoyed watching it with my son though. See it from a five year old's perspective and it helps lower to bar - in a good way.
          • The same thing happened when my boys and I watched some 80's He-Man episodes. I began to cringe at how bad they were but my boys were just enjoying them too much. They didn't care that the animation was subpar or the dialog was cheesy. Their enjoyment tempered my reaction and made the entire experience more enjoyable.

        • Re:Sweet!! (Score:4, Funny)

          by Quirkz ( 1206400 ) <ross AT quirkz DOT com> on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @11:55AM (#48310181) Homepage

          Five manned aircraft inexplicably in the shape of cats that can unite into one giant sword-weilding robot somehow synchronously controlled by five people? I don't possibly see how you could be disillusioned by watching that show as an adult.

          • Interestingly, it wasn't the "manned lion robots form humanoid robot with sword" part. I'm willing to suspend disbelief for that component. It was bad dialog, character motivation that seemed to be "the plot needs us to do X so let's do X", and unexplained, story changing events (they break out of a prison on the enemy's planet and somehow wind back up on their own planet. How? Don't worry about that... they just did.). I didn't even get to the "Why don't they use the big sword as their first weapon si

            • by Quirkz ( 1206400 )

              Well, that was at least partly tongue-in-cheek. I had my own jump the shark moment with GI Joe, which I watched devotedly as a child. I caught an episode as a teenager and watched out of curiosity. "Fire at will," Zoltan said, and one of his flunkies responded, "Uh, which one's Will?" I tried to remember if the series was always that dumb, or if the new version had gotten worse (the rest of the episode just went downhill from there) but I decided I didn't really want to know.

              You had another post about He-Ma

      • Go try Alone in the Dark, or even worse, Hugo's House or Horrors. I remember spending countless hours playing those two games. Went back and played them a little while ago and they just don't hold up.Granted I never really thought of them as "realistic", but I remember them being a lot more fun than they are.
        • The Alone in the Dark remake on the Xbox 360 tries to recapture that same sense of "why the fuck am I still playing this" from the very start.

      • The 3D games become worst with age because of advances in technology.

        The 2D games, on the other hand, age much more gracefully since there's a limit to what you can do in 2D, apart from adding lighting and glowing effects. I can still look at Super Metroid and think it's fine, but Zelda on the Nintendo 64 looks like crap by comparison. And Zelda is newer than Super Metroid.

        • Well, consider that you're comparing the first generation of 3D games against the last generation (in their heyday, that is) of 2D games. It's not really a fair comparison. Personally, as I move away from the awful first generation of each, I reach a "good enough" threshold, where I'm no longer distracted by the bad graphics. Halo on the original Xbox still looks reasonably good. I've recently been playing Final Fantasy X in HD on the PS3, and it looks great for being two console generations behind.

          Besi

      • by arth1 ( 260657 )

        i've made the mistake of playing Street Fighter 2. i had such fond memories of the game from childhood. some things are just better left as memories.

        Most of the arcade games of yore don't translate well to a PC.
        The controllers are very different, and not stationary. This makes a huge difference.
        And for most ports, the input is also severely laggy compared to a console where the inputs were generally hardwired in and would be guaranteed[*] to be read once every fixed frequency cycle.

        [*] Apart from the second and cheaper version of Pac-Man consoles, which was horrible in its control lag, killing the tactic of standing still by moving the stick back and

    • I think I broke my keyboard playing Track and Field.

  • by MindPrison ( 864299 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @06:23AM (#48308269) Journal
    ...before the copyright holders come to collect?

    Roms are being deleted all the time on the internet, I know...because I've constantly tried to find the original Arcade Pac Man roms, but the copyrights are still in effect as various companies sell retrogames themselves, which they hold the license to.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      You just have to know where to look, you can always find what you want, if you look hard enough. I can think of three places where you can find what you want off hand. I believe there are most likely others too. One of those places is 10 years old too.
    • Did they even TRY to actually secure the rights to any of these games?

    • ...before the copyright holders come to collect?

      Roms are being deleted all the time on the internet, I know...because I've constantly tried to find the original Arcade Pac Man roms, but the copyrights are still in effect as various companies sell retrogames themselves, which they hold the license to.

      Get on the Usenet, there is a very active MAME newsgroup and request your needs; they will be met. -Not Google Groups they are text only.

      Myself I use Forte Agent (Windows) as an e-mailer and to access the UseNet. (1.93 as it's the best version, you need to run Stunnel for SSL, and place Agent as a DEP exception) versions after 1.93 you don't need to do those steps but have a folder setup that sucks, and will load html pages (I only do text).

  • I'm pretty sure I've played MAME emulated games online in the past ....
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by bspus ( 3656995 )

      I'm pretty sure I've played MAME emulated games online in the past ....

      Of course. MAME started out as MS-DOS FOSS back in 1997 The interesting part in this web arcade is that the emulation is done in javascript. Back in 97, javascript was little more than a toy language for making animations in websites.

      Oh, and its obviously legal to play them now.
      MAME requires dumps of the original arcade roms which can generally not be aquired legally.

      But sure, otherwise, anyone who wants old arcades has already known how to get them. Almost everything that matters has been pefectly

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by glenebob ( 414078 )

        Back in 97, javascript was little more than a toy language for making animations in websites

        Some things never change :p

      • Back in 97, javascript was little more than a toy language for making animations in websites.

        Whereas today it's a toy language for making "immersive content" websites more annoying.

        • Back in 97, javascript was little more than a toy language for making animations in websites.

          Whereas today it's a toy language for making "immersive content" websites more annoying.

          But on the upside with java you can play any MAME game on your cellphone. Bubble Bobble, Moon patrol, lots of fun. The MAME player is in the Google store, it's versions that keep changing that keep you busy.

      • by PhilHibbs ( 4537 )

        Oh, and its obviously legal to play them now.

        How come? Has the Internet Archive negotiated permission with all the copyright holders for all these games?

        • by bspus ( 3656995 )
          tbh I just assumed!
          I thought it would be too bold to do such a thing without permission, have so much publicity and not worry about going to jail!
    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      In Java and Flash? Yeah.

  • by TapeCutter ( 624760 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @09:11AM (#48308739) Journal
    First game I ever hacked, the question "Could Buck Rogers reach the domed city?" drove me nuts for weeks but it also taught me a fair bit about disassembly.
  • by jeffb (2.718) ( 1189693 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @09:54AM (#48309083)

    ...so no Battlezone. :( There was ONE GAME that I played obsessively and mastered, and it's not there.

    No, wait, there was one raster game I liked, but it didn't make much of a splash in the real world -- Reactor [wikipedia.org]. It's not there, either.

    900 games, 850 of which I've never heard of, and the two that I look for aren't there. I want a refund.

  • I've been working on getting a bunch of emulators (NES, SNES, GB, GBA, Master System, and GameGear) online as well, and set up to use on iPhones on my own website: https://pocketga.me/ [pocketga.me] I'm also doing online per-account game storage and state saving (not for all systems right now) which makes it pretty convenient to play around with on the go reply

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