Sujet : Re: When Is A Game Old?
De : spallshurgenson (at) *nospam* gmail.com (Spalls Hurgenson)
Groupes : comp.sys.ibm.pc.games.actionDate : 08. Apr 2024, 22:09:57
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <1km81j9m2b3oncq0ac9ab1ktoi1gplg9u6@4ax.com>
References : 1 2 3
User-Agent : Forte Agent 2.0/32.652
On Mon, 8 Apr 2024 09:27:05 +0200, Kyonshi <
gmkeros@gmail.com> wrote:
On a related note: what's the oldest media (tape, floppy, cd-rom,
cartridge) you still have for a game?
I still have a 5.25" floppy disk for Infocom's "Hitchhiker's Guide to
the Galaxy" for the Apple II lying around somewhere. I've no idea if
it still works, though. According to Mobygames, that dates it to as
far back as 1984 (although, honestly, I can't remember how 'new' the
game was when I purchased it).
On PC, that honor probably goes to "Ultima VI" (1990). I imaged (and
then discarded) most of my floppy disks years ago in order to make
space and only kept the disks for a handful of favorites. The Ultima
games definitely fall into that last category.
But I think the oldest video game 'media' I still have are the faded
pages ripped from some magazine that listed the Basic code that made
up a really primitive 'Star Trek' game. I dutifully typed it out into
my 8-bit and was immediately disappointed by the results. The disk I
saved the code to is long gone, but for some reason I hung onto the
magazine pages. It's yellowed and crinkly and probably missing a page
or three, but it's still buried in the closet somewhere...