What Was Your First Gaming Experience? 718
Stephen Totilo, at the MTV Multiplayer blog, recently put up a piece that asked a number of notable games industry folks all about their first time gaming. Several had some unique answers, with Peter Molyneux (Black and White, Fable) probably taking the cake: "It would have to be the original Pong. I can clearly remember seeing it in a shop window on Guildford High Street and being utterly transfixed - I had never wanted anything so much - in fact I stole money from my grandmother's purse to buy it. I got it home, took it apart, and never got it to work again - but from that moment on I was hooked on all things to do with computer games." What was your first experience with gaming? d20s on a kitchen table? A Nintendo Entertainment System under the Christmas tree?
I was 14 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I was 14 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I was 14 (Score:5, Funny)
Gaming experience, not gay men experience (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I was 14 (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Pong (Score:3, Funny)
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Zork (Score:3, Interesting)
Colossal Cave Adventures (Score:3, Informative)
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That brings back the memories -- when I was in 10th grade, our High School had an account on the Lehigh University mainframe. After we finished loading our programming assignments (we typed them on paper tape offline, then loaded them online after the Teacher logged on), we would play Star Trek. I don't remember all of the commands now, but basically one would move from sector to sector. After each turn, a text-based grid map would be printed showing starbases, planets, Klingons, etc. Imagine waiting fo
A HOLLOW VOICE SAYS 'PLUGH' (Score:4, Insightful)
I still remember sitting in that cold room, the tall menhirs of flashing lights and whirring tapes behind me. When I was done running my programs, he said, "try this." He typed
ADVENT
and my fate was sealed. I work on computers to this day. The first game I wrote myself for my TRS-80 model 1 (4K of memory!) was a simple text adventure.
Willy Wonka had it all wrong. It's computers that are worlds of pure imagination.
Re:A HOLLOW VOICE SAYS 'PLUGH' (Score:4, Interesting)
ADVENT
and my fate was sealed. I work on computers to this day.
My first experience (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
My introduction to gaming was through my dad, at age three, as well. Our neighbors went on a multi-week vacation, and my parents were asked to look after their house - water the plants, get the mail, and so on. They had an Atari and Space Invaders, so my dad and I would go over there to "water the plants" and stay for hours playing Space Invaders.
Three or four years later we bought a used Atari at a garage sale, although I think the trivial interest in video games had worn off for him by then, so it was pr
Board Stiff (Score:2)
Queen Frostine was the bee's knees.
Re:Board Stiff (Score:5, Funny)
Not only that, but it was a multiplayer game (2nd player, generally an adult, was required to complete the first level).
IIgs (Score:2)
Re:IIgs (Score:5, Funny)
Mine was galacta (Score:2)
Nintendo (Score:2)
Donkey Kong (Score:3, Interesting)
Almost 30 years ago... (Score:2)
As for video games, I would think Atarti 2600 probably. I remember switching the RF switch box and firing it up while listening to whatever tapes I recorded off the radio! [I am sure someone will tell me thats nothing, they stuck tran
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Err, I was just at target and saw a box of crossbows and catapults. It was rebranded a bit and was in the clearance isle. I think people need to stop tossing the term 'nanny state' its getting annoying.
Re:Almost 30 years ago... (Score:5, Funny)
at a stall in Italy. The bolt had an iron tip that would embed about 1/2 inch
into solid oak. Everyone was a bit upset when I fired it at my older brother
causing an 8 inch bleeding scar where it grazed across his back. In my book
its getting towards a nanny state when you're not supposed to buy lethal medieval weaponry
for 4th graders but I guess people have their own standards.
C64 (Score:3, Interesting)
Vic-20 (Score:3, Interesting)
My first commercial game was probably Tooth Invaders. You were a toothbrush, running around on a set of 2-D teeth, removing plague. Germs would wander around depositing plague and could kill you. If enough plague accumulated, you'd get a cavity and lose. Graphics quality put Strong Bad
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IBM 360 - 1968 - Hangman (Score:5, Interesting)
Adventure on PDP-11; Lunar Lander on PDP-8 (Score:4, Interesting)
However, the first *real* game I played was Adventur (truncated to 8 characters due to filesystem limitations) on a PDP-11/V03 running RT-11. This was in 1978. Mind you the game was already old at that point because it had, I believe, been originally written on a US Navy Burroughs. [You have to drop the magazines in Witt's End to get the final 350th point.]
Re:IBM 360 - 1968 - Hangman (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.osti.gov/accomplishments/videogame.html [osti.gov]
Not that old, but still (Score:3, Interesting)
1)Online gaming: MUDs
2)TTRPG: AD&D at a friends house playing a psyonic Dwarf... Badly...
Atari 2600 (Score:2)
Then there was the disappointment with ET. Not only was it bad it was pretty damn hard for a 8 year old.
Then there was the disappointment with the Atari 5200. I think they had 5 games for it. The controllers fell apart too.
Then the big move to Apple
My high tech calculator watch.... (Score:2)
This was back in probably 1985-87ish.
Wolf 3D (Score:2)
Ahhh, a simpler time.
And early start in video games (Score:2)
I think I drove my parents insane with that square-wave theme song when I was 4.
Atari 2600 (Score:2)
Atari (Score:2)
Still waiting . . . (Score:3, Funny)
Odyssey 2000 (Score:3, Interesting)
PONG! (Score:2)
Pong then Space Invaders, Atari2600, Leisure Suite Larry in CGA graphics.
We didn't worry about frames per seconds.
Amiga cartoon classics pack (Score:2)
Soon after that someone gave me a pirate copy of monkey island. Arrrggg
TRS-80 Model 100 - I had to type it in (Score:2)
Also my first experience with programming.
Pong (Score:2)
First PC game: probably ASCII D&D in the late 80s on my brother-in-law's old (I believe) 80186. (late bloomer on computers obviously). We used to make cheesey little BASIC programs like Party Quest (modeled after some freeware quest game he had) where you had to find the we
Cards (Score:2)
I played Rack-o and that was the first game that I owned that I was careful about collecting cards and making sure it was all back in place before putting the game away.
Battle ship, monopoly, chess.
The
Re: (Score:2)
Two firsts at once! (Score:4, Funny)
I got laid for the first time while waiting for the fucking tape drive to load the game. Less Joyful, more Silent.
Re:Two firsts at once! (Score:4, Funny)
Star Trek using TSO (Score:2, Informative)
Apple Trek and Little Brick Out (Score:2)
Tag, I think. (Score:2)
Seriously, we had some console that basically had variations on pong, plus a pistol/rifle attachment that you could do clay pigeon shooting with. I don't remember the name.
We than had an Atari 2600. Must see about getting an emulator, I'd love to play Adventure [wikipedia.org] again and kill that sodding bat!
Gaming Experience - Arcade (Score:2)
When I was 13 my parents bought me a full set of AD&D manuals.
How did they know the perfect gift, when I didn't know myself?
Startrek (Score:3, Interesting)
Proabably Outdraw (Score:2)
First game system was Atari Pinball. It was so cool it had pinball and breakout and was a lot cheaper then the Atari 2600.
From there I got an Atari 2600, then a C64, ColecoVision, and an Amiga.
Now I have an N64, Dreamcast, XBox, PS2, Wii, Gamecube, and an atari retro arcade system.
On my PC I play with Fliight Simulator. Like I did on my C64, and my Amiga.
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Oh wow
- Roach
dude, there's a gun shop down there (Score:2)
no dude, really. guns. down the hole. you
Not Pong! (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Wars [wikipedia.org]
For the life of me I can't recall where. A pizza parlor or something.
I remember the best strategy was "tap the buttons at random". It kept the enemy confused.
I feel sorry for a lot of you (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I feel sorry for a lot of you (Score:5, Funny)
Actually, we may have gotten the short end of the stick here.
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Veritible PONG (Score:2)
However, after my father brought home the Commodore Pet/CPM with a whopping 64K of RAM my interest turned toward "Dungeon Of Death" or, simply, "Dungeon".
*That* game got me interested in not only gaming but programming and changed my life, in a positive way, forever.
Atari 2600 (Score:2)
As for PC gaming, my dad let me play casino gmaes on an Apple IIe. I liked watching the ANSI (dunno what else to call it) horses run.
Atari 2600 (Score:2)
1 - Star Raiders. A 3D space simulator back in the days of blocky blobs representing people. You would plan your route on a map, guide your spaceship through hyperspace, fight enemy warships, and defend and refuel at space stations (sometimes blowing them up for fun
Skee Ball (Score:2)
Magnavox Odyssey 500 (Score:2)
The next morning I ripped open my presents. None of the packages looked big enough to hold a TV, which was kind of surprising. But I did get this weird black box with knobs [gameasylum.us] that looked cool. When I asked where was the TV for my room
I guess my age shows now (Score:5, Interesting)
Oregon Trail, Civil War, PLATO Empire (Score:2)
For my first video game experience I was extremely lucky as a kid to get to spend a day playing Empire on PLATO. Holy crap, I still can't believe
PONG on an Odyessy system, with light gun! (Score:2)
After a time, got a VCS, play it to this day. (Yeah, baby! KABOOM! is always good for a quick run or two to wake a person up!)
First game (Score:2)
Though I was playing monopoly and cards and whatnot before that, so it may not count.
First experiences with the PCjr. (Score:2)
I remember the computer came with some sort of hangman game. My father got a Pacman clone shortly after we got the compuwe. We had a 300 baud modem and now I can't recall now how I figured out how to log onto a BBS, but I downloaded a Space Invaders clone called Space Commanders.
At about that time we got our first commercial game, King's Quest. That was a grea
Atari Stunt Cycle (Score:2)
http://www.atarimuseum.com/videogames/dedicated/stuntcycle.html [atarimuseum.com]
It came out in 1977. It was a single-game console where you jumped a motorcycle over some buses. Over and over. And over.
Apple II's (Score:2)
The memory of my first intense gaming experience is playing Ultima IV at school after hours. It was the first computer thing I actually OWNED. By owning, I meant that I bought some floppies from a store, punched the side to make them double sided, and the
Depends on what gaming (Score:2)
First owned video game - family got an Atari 2600 that year
First RPG - D&D Jan 1978 as a freshman in college
First game like chess - well, I have a photo of me playing chess with my Dad from 1964, but I was probably playing it before that.
First computer? IBM 360, followed by a DEC PDP 8/e/ IBM Pcs were not available until AFTER I graduated from college.
Boy do I feel old now.
Commodore PET, ASCII Space Invaders (Score:3, Interesting)
Links included for reminiscing goodness at the expense of first post karma.
A list of the developers of various old-skool game (Score:2)
http://www.ifarchive.org/if-archive/info/classic-game-programmers.list [ifarchive.org]
Poker program (Score:2)
What a fantastic program! I used it until the 486 era when the internal math co-processor caused it to not run on PCs (I believe that this is the case). For fifteen years I could only run it on a very old, barely working 386 laptop. Then I found DOS BOX program that simulat
Arcades (Score:2)
Several had some unique answers (Score:5, Interesting)
Unique? I guess I'm a "Dino" or whatever. I still remember the day my father brought home PONG. He was all excited and talking about electronics and stuff I didn't understand at the time. He was an engineer working Top Secret stuff for the government and was all into this. He was going on about miniaturization and that this would have taken a computer with "tubes" the size of a building before... All I wanted to do was was play it.
You had to "hard wire" it to the antenna screws on the back of the TV and change the channel to 3. It was a box about half the size of a VCR player with two hard wired joy stick knobs. It had two slide switches one for 1-2 players and another 3 or 4 position switch for the game(s). Regular pong, advanced (small paddles), I think maybe a "break out" kind of version.
The "ball" just went "boink" and returned after hitting something. You could put "spin" on it by turning the paddle at the same time the ball hit and it escalated in speed the longer you played. That was it. But it sure was fun! Especially the "boink" irritating my mother to the point of yelling at us to "turn than damn thing off and go outside and play" (back in the days that was still safe). Isn't sending your kid out to play now considered child abuse? [sarcasm] Ahhh... the good 'ol days
Moon Patrol (Score:2)
Qualify "game"... (Score:2)
The first game (of any sort) I remember playing - War (the card game).
The first video game, A Qix variant played on an Emerson Arcadia (or Odyssey 2? Not 100% sure about which, what with it 25+ years ago).
My first PC game, A cheesy text-based poker game. My first real PC game, Might & Magic (the original one).
My first online game, a pre-Circle-3 variant, of which I no longer remember the site name.
Pong (Score:2)
After that, I played some Atari 2600 games, but didn't really pay much attention to games until Star Control 2 and Dune 2 many years later.
Apple II games (Score:2)
Now I'm deeply into Tabula Rasa, but had the normal run of games between then and now. I remember how excited I was when I got my Atari 2600, playing around on a friend's C64 (my Dad bought a z80 based Toshiba computer forcing me at age 12 into my programming career as it was almost immediate discontinued), another friend's Atari 5200, and of course the TRS-80. All had some neat games, and we spent countless hours typin
space invaders,and not much has changed since (Score:2)
Got bored with it and all it's variations after a few years haven't felt the need to get back into it since
Space Invaders (Score:2)
Adventure (Score:2)
In any event, I was hooked. I wonder if he ever realized what an effect this would have on me, the first time I used a computer (I think, anyways) and he was probably just looking for a way to get me ou
Mac (Score:2)
Pong (Score:3, Interesting)
Some mainframe game (Score:2)
Spacewar (Score:3, Interesting)
Number munchers (Score:2)
WHAT??? (Score:5, Funny)
I was a beta tester for dirt. They never did get all the bugs out.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Dude, if you're old enough to remember the slide rule, you're old enough to remember Martin Gardner's column in Scientific American. There are lots of games there where the slide rule comes in handy.
Apart from John Horton Conway's famous game, My Dad Has More Money Than Your Dad (scientific notation edition), you can use your slide rule to work out the winning strategy for Nim. I'm pretty sure that's the only slide rule game with decent AI, though.
Not my first gaming experience... (Score:5, Interesting)
I guess the guy we got the 2600 from was some sort of electrical engineer or something. One of the games we got was pinball, and this guy had modded one controller to have left and right momentary on button switches. I soon figured out that these buttons were basically just hardwired into the left and right switches on the joystick. It didn't take long to use them for other games. Once, while playing Pac-man, I hit both of them at once. (This, in effect, was the same as moving the joystick to the left and the right simultaneously, something that's impossible with just the joystick.)
All of a sudden, Pac-man went left, through all the walls, and then got stuck in one of them. all the dots disappeared, and I moved to the next level. That led to me challenging my sister to games of Pac-man, as long as I got the pinball modded joystick.
The First "Best" Game (Score:5, Interesting)
I remember thinking at the time that this was the future of games. Not the one choice per second, or the limits, but the sound, the pictures, and the immersion that Dragon's Lair offered. No longer was I simply pushing giant colored pixels around a screen, I was a real character, as real as any Saturday Morning Cartoon, on a real adventure facing off against fully realized environments and traps. Sure, they were the same every time, and there was very little "game" there. That didn't matter. It was the experience, the sheer emotional rush, that really got to me.
There were games I'd played before Dragon's Lair, but that was the first "game experience" that produced a real response, and it's something I'll never forget.
Well... pong... but experience? Zork. (Score:3, Interesting)
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Then it was Pac Man (some weird version where you could hit your moves in advance. Man, did that ever ruin me for the normal ones) and, IIRC, Avoid the Noid on a Tandy at home.
Re:IBM PC (Score:4, Informative)
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Not to be a "get off my lawn" guy, but it did offer a bit more to the game when you were setting up your init strings and loading ipx drivers, so that when you did actually get doom up and a going you really got the wow factor. Now you just plug your xbox into the LAN and off you go.