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Celephais
05-28-2010, 11:20 AM
http://www.wired.com/geekdad/2010/05/top-10-eighties-computer-games-worth-playing-again-geekdad-wayback-machine/

Top 10 Eighties Computer Games Worth Playing (Again) – GeekDad Wayback Machine
By Matt Blum May 27, 2010 | 9:08 am | Categories: Electronic Geek
There was a time when even the best computer graphics available were lousy. In this ancient time, called “the Eighties,” graphics were cool for computer games to have, but really much less important than a good story and interesting puzzles to solve. Some games didn’t even have graphics at all, depending on the abilities of their creators to write and their players to read and imagine. Many games have aged poorly, and are best left in the anonymity that the twenty-odd years since has brought them. But some are just as much fun to play now as they were then — possibly more fun, in fact, since now you can actually have other programs running at the same time as the games without bringing your computer to its digital knees.

Now, unfortunately, not all games we’d like to mention are available online, abandonware though they may be. Here, then, are the top ten computer games from the 1980s that you can either play online or download for free or very little money. Introduce your kids to them, not with a “When I was your age, this is what I played,” but with a sincere “Look how cool this game is!”

(With each entry, we’ve noted the platform or platforms for which it’s available. There are many listed as Windows-only, but of course emulating Windows on a Mac or Linux is much easier than emulating a Mac on Windows.)

http://www.wired.com/geekdad/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/starflight-299x300.jpg
Image: Electronic Arts
10. King’s Quest III: To Heir is Human – The King’s Quest games were dopey, but a lot of fun. This one was difficult enough to be a real challenge, and fun enough to make you smile regularly while playing it. The link goes to a free VGA remake (Windows-only) of the game with a point-and-click interface, so no typing is required and the graphics are much, much better. The remake also removes some of the frustration from the original version, in that you don’t have to slavishly follow the spell recipes step by step.

9. NetHack – One of the most brilliant, deceptively simple games ever devised. It’s a classic “roguelike” game, in that the player goes around gathering weapons, armor, and magic items, and killing monsters. But there’s so much more to it than that: little intricacies that make it seriously involving and entertaining. What other game would have you write spells with a magic marker (get it?) or allow you to remove the alcohol from a “potion of booze” by dipping an amethyst in it, because “amethyst” could be read as “a-methyst,” which sounds like removing methyl alcohol … sort of? It can be very frustrating, since when you die you have to start over, and there are lots of little things that can kill you instantly, especially early on. But you will feel a certain exhilaration the first time you ascend a character, trust me. (Multi-platform)

8. Seven Cities of Gold – By Dani Bunten, famed developer of M.U.L.E., this was a strategy game designed around the historical search for gold in the New World. The player takes the role of the captain of a Spanish fleet, and proceeds to explore, move goods around, and, of course, fight native peoples. It was a very involving game that even had genuine educational value, but don’t let that stop you. It’s just a heck of a lot of fun. (Windows-only, with Flopper emulator)

7. StarFlight – A graphics-intensive game, but while the graphics were good for the time, they were not at all the focus of the game. The player is a simple ship captain — not a fleet commander, just an explorer, going on mining, diplomatic, and occasional military missions. Eventually a plot develops in a way you will never expect if you’ve never played the game or heard spoilers, and it works really well even if it does get a bit space opera-y. It was really an amazing game that influenced many games that followed it. (Windows-only)

6. Wasteland – Possibly the best computer RPG ever, and that can be said without hyperbole. It had one of the best and most innovative character development systems ever built, one that you may find yourself wishing more games imitated. Despite graphics that are decidedly primitive by today’s standards, it managed to immerse players in its post-apocalyptic world brilliantly well. It has its annoying moments, but it’s still a game any lover of RPGs owes it to him or herself to play. (Windows-only)

5. Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade - Available on Steam for $4.99 (Windows-only). This was one of the few movie adaptations that actually lived up to its promise. It pulled you into the movie’s storyline but with some great puzzles and fun sequences along the way. I must have played this game at least a dozen times before I got tired of it. The awesome Fate of Atlantis sequel is also available on Steam, but came out in 1992, so can’t get its own listing here.


http://www.wired.com/geekdad/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/ultima_iv_box-210x300.jpg
Image: Origin Systems
4. Ultima IV: Quest of the Avatar – This was the game that really changed computer RPGs from pure hack-and-slash into games with real stories that you could really be interested in. It may or may not be the best of the legendary Ultima series, depending upon whom you ask, but many consider it one of the best games ever made. It’s still highly playable, and still an easy world to immerse yourself in. (Windows-only)

3. StarFlight 2 – Yes, the sequel really is good enough to deserve its own place on the list. The game designers kept the pieces of the first game that worked best, changed some of the pieces that didn’t work as well, and added whole levels of complexity to the game. They created a plot easily as interesting as that in the original game, and added a great deal more humor to boot. (Windows-only)

2. The Fool’s Errand – An absolutely brilliant puzzle game, it was an instant classic when it appeared in 1987. Some puzzles were incredibly difficult, and some were ridiculously easy — once you figured out the trick, that is. Download it and play it now, in preparation for its forthcoming sequel, The Fool and His Money. (Windows, Mac, and Amiga — no, really!)

1. Infocom Games – These were some of the very best games of the decade, despite having virtually no graphics at all. The later Infocom games had some, but it was only as an afterthought. Some of the writing on the games is genuinely great, particularly in the two Douglas Adams worked on, the exceptionally difficult Bureaucracy and the legendary adaptation of his The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. The set linked to is of Java applet versions of the games, playable online (even with save and restore capability) in any browser with a JRE plugin. Warning: Playing these games can quickly become a huge time-sink.



Read More http://www.wired.com/geekdad/2010/05/top-10-eighties-computer-games-worth-playing-again-geekdad-wayback-machine/#ixzz0pEo9XZAE

phantasm
05-28-2010, 11:52 AM
They forgot Gemstone III, what the fuck.

Loyrl
05-28-2010, 11:54 AM
Damn was gonna say Might and Magic III but that was 91.

Ryvicke
05-28-2010, 11:57 AM
I just want to play XCOM: UFO Defense all day and night. Was that 80's?

peam
05-28-2010, 12:05 PM
Love me some Nethack

Celephais
05-28-2010, 12:33 PM
I just want to play XCOM: UFO Defense all day and night. Was that 80's?

God I played so much XCOM ... it was probably 90s.

Apotheosis
05-28-2010, 12:48 PM
FYI - With DOSBOX and Abandonia (or some other Abandonware website), you can download all X-Com's... also can try and find them on Torrent.. but they're def. fun to play..

Ryvicke
05-28-2010, 01:03 PM
God I played so much XCOM ... it was probably 90s.

I guess it was 90's. I think I used to listen to a lot of 311 while aliens pwned me from the dark dark of their spaceships.

LMingrone
05-28-2010, 03:02 PM
Love me some Nethack

Damn you Peam!!! Just had to download it and some of the other graphical add-ons again. This game is such a pain in the ass. I always end up getting stuck somewhere. Has anyone every beaten this before?

Asrial
05-28-2010, 04:04 PM
Screw all of you that had computers in the 80's :P

My list from the 90's...

Wizardry 7 (and 8 though that was much later).

StarControl II (there's a thread here about the fan kept UQM version that is very current PC friendly).

X-Wing and Tie Fighter (all their expansions are worth getting).

Dune 2 (the original DOS version), Command and Conquer, and Red Alert. Red Alert 2 is definitely worth getting. Command and Conquer 2 is really good but the 'feel' is very different.

UltraBots (this was actually a fun game though it's very simple once you have things figured out).

Bobmuhthol
05-28-2010, 04:11 PM
Is Ultrabots anything like One Must Fall (2097?)? I loved that shit.

Loyrl
05-28-2010, 04:24 PM
X-Wing & Tie Figher rocks, lands of lore 1 is also another good one, but never beat it. M&M3 - dark side of xeen = goood, they ruined it after that imo.

Jayvn
05-28-2010, 05:00 PM
Dungeons of Daggorath for the Tandy was FUCKING BAD ASS...

Drew
05-28-2010, 05:02 PM
1990: Wing Commander.

caelric
05-28-2010, 05:06 PM
The Bard's Tale on C64, along with TBT II and TBT III.

The recent remake sucked.

Asrial
05-28-2010, 05:44 PM
Is Ultrabots anything like One Must Fall (2097?)? I loved that shit.No, completely different genre.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultrabots

However, in looking up yours I remembered this one (though it's for the Genesis)...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyborg_Justice

Your typical side-scroller beat em up but you could rip components off the enemy and use them as your own.

Asrial
05-28-2010, 05:51 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curse_of_the_Azure_Bonds

The game itself toggled between super easy and f'ing hard but I think what I loved most about it was playing it so much to figure out the glitches (like inventory copying).

It didn't hurt that the chick was super hot (though she's only in one area of the game, lol).

caelric
05-28-2010, 05:58 PM
The whole gold box series rocks, from Pool of Radiance, on through Pools of Darkness

Gan
05-28-2010, 06:16 PM
The Bard's Tale on C64, along with TBT II and TBT III.

The recent remake sucked.


Fuck yea!

Bards Tale and Wizardry (First ed.) on a green screen apple IIe+.
Circa 1985 I believe, maybe it was 86. Whatever year in highschool I had Pascal...

Delias
05-29-2010, 01:57 AM
Dungeons of Daggorath for the Tandy was FUCKING BAD ASS...

This is the game that made me incapable of hoping for success or victory ever again in my entire life. It was that scarring. Pretty sure this is the game I was constantly getting caught up in this cycle...

Get torch.
Light torch.
What do you want to light it with?
Fire.
What?
Light torch with fire.
What?

And so forth, so I just wandered around in the dark until I died.

Kuyuk
05-29-2010, 07:10 AM
loved the kings quest series, and I actually have played them all within the past 5ish years too :)

milesalpha
05-30-2010, 04:10 PM
Dungeonmaster, the first 3d RPG, Played on my old Atari ST, we use to hook up to my bigscreen, get really stoned and the sound effects just scared the hell out of us.

Warriorbird
05-30-2010, 04:59 PM
Damn you Peam!!! Just had to download it and some of the other graphical add-ons again. This game is such a pain in the ass. I always end up getting stuck somewhere. Has anyone every beaten this before?

Yes.

80's RPGs... 'Below the Root'

80's computer game worth playing 'Hardball'