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Emulation (Games) Classic Games (Games) Entertainment Games

History Of Gaming Featured In New Media Book/CD-ROM 10

nickmontfort writes "The New Media Reader is out now from MIT Press. The book tries to shed light on how people have used computers to create and communicate. Also included is a cross-platform CD with original programs from the past four decades, some documented, some running in emulation." With a book and CD including vintage articles and classic titles like Spacewar!, Hunt The Wumpus, Yar's Revenge, and Karateka, this is an interesting, if quite theory-skewed look at computer interactivity - check out excerpts at the official website.
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History Of Gaming Featured In New Media Book/CD-ROM

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  • by lightspawn ( 155347 ) on Wednesday April 30, 2003 @07:37PM (#5848943) Homepage
    (please post opinions if you've read them)

    Supercade: A Visual History of the Videogame Age 1971-1984 [amazon.com]

    The Ultimate History of Video Games [amazon.com]

    Arcade fever [amazon.com]

    High Score! The Illustrated History of Electronic Games [amazon.com]

    I only own the first one, and it's visually striking; as much an art book as a history book.
    • I've got the first three, and am going to order the fourth.

      Overall, I like all the books, as each of them is good in a different way:

      "Supercade" has some a wide amount of pictures, however, sometimes the quality isn't too happening. It features pictures of arcade games, as well as home consoles: Odyssey, Pong, Channel F, Home PCs.

      "The Ultimate History" is aptly named; it is mostly text, and covers the history of the video game industry. I enjoyed reading about the history of Atari, Nintendo, etc. Good
  • so it can't talk about tetris, doom, civilization, simcity,
    or compare with console games (nintendo came out when, 1986?).

    so when it discusses violence, think violent like pac-man.
  • I have High Score! and it's a visually striking book, there's a photo of the original Space War machine - cool! However there is alot of material to cover in the history of gaming and it glosses over quite alot in an attempt to cover everything.

    What I'd really love to see is a book detailing the history of gaming on the Commodore line of computers. Specifically the 64, 128 and the Amiga. Does such a thing exist?

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