My first experience with a game that got me interested in computers (still programming):
Leisure Suit Larry
After "Ken sent me", I was hooked.

Leisure Suit Larry creator's site: Al Lowe
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Oregon Trail - This is OLD SCHOOL.
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Doom.
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Old school Where in the World is Carmen San Diego. I was literally playing that game when I was four years old and wish I still had it.
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Sim City (First Version) You can play this now online: http://simcity.ea.com/play/simcity_classic.php |
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I would probably have to say the game ADVENT, the original text based adventure game. |
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Boulder Dash for C64
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Commander Keen Though I was so terrible I made my dad play it for me as I watched. :)
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Doom. Played it on NeXT ages ago |
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Prince of Persia (1996) |
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Although their were a few before, what finally did it for me was Wolfenstein 3D. I remember I got my first soundblaster card and I was the only one of my friends that could actually hear what the Germans were yelling. |
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Paratrooper - http://www.dosgamesarchive.com/download/game/203 |
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This also coincidentally is what got me hooked into programming (well scripting at the time). Much to the annoyance of our teachers we installed Civilization on every computer we could find and played it constantly. One day I started a new game and was going through the annoying credits I knew by heart. But the credits were different (and quite profane). It immediately hit me that another student somehow altered the program and made it say what they wanted it to say. It took me about an hour but I eventually found the text files that civilization read from for the opening credits. I tested out my theory by making my own opening and they basked in the glory of it working. After that I was hooked on programming. Yes I know that wasn't actually programming. But for a complete computer novice it was still exciting. |
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Rastan. I was like 10 or 11 when my dad brought me my first computer. I'm amazed I still remember the name. |
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First and only game I have ever seen my father play. He introduced me. |
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I got hooked when I attended an IBM Open House event in the late 70's, when I was about ten years old. They had a green-screen TTY set up with a Lunar Lander game. The display looked something like this: You are 143.347 feet above the surface. Your downward speed is 10.832 feet per second. You have 323 pounds of fuel remaining. How much fuel do you want to burn for the next second? > _ You entered a number, then it would update everything and prompt again, until you landed safely or crashed. It was primitive, but I was hooked. I saw that there was this whole imaginary abstract universe that somebody had created, and I wanted to create some universes of my own. After that, it was Star Raiders and M.U.L.E. for the Atari 8-bits |
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Text-based Star Trek The game ran on a teletype (essentially a keyboard/printer that would send commands to a Vax computer and then type back the results). The "space" in which you played was a 10x10 (or 20x20) grid where each space had a period for empty space, an "E" the enterprise, a "K" for a Klingon ship, etc. You would make a move by typing a command such as jumping to another sector or firing a weapon with a numerical direction (e.g. "Photon +3 -2" or something like that). It would take about a minute for a command to be processed and a new game state to be printed back showing you how your move did. This was in the mid 1970s so we are talking really old school. |
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rampart, oregon trail, word/number muncher Played those in 2nd grade on our apple 2s |
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Monopoly. That is, in the primitive age before the IBM PC I wrote it myself in BASIC on a Tandberg computer at school, replacing the street names with the streets in my home town... I have continued to program since then, especially after the IBM PC came out. My interest in computer games have however faded away after the initial joy of playing "Kings Quest" and "Leasure Suit Larry". Maybe that is because I'm more of a "word" than "point-and-shoot" person... |
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At school we had 3 cp/m pc's with 5.25 floppies and amber screens. Two of them where put in the physics lab. But during lunch break, the geeks used them to play games. One of these games was an adventure game written in a Basic variant. You where in a 10x10x10 grid of rooms and in each room was a monster, a trap, a treasure, stairs to an other level, a vendor or also teleporters if I remember correctly. And of course one of them was the exit. I likede the game, but I got sick and tired of dying each time, so I started cheating (changing the source code) and I never stopped hacking since then. |
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MICRO SOFT PAINTBRUSH |
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For me it was Breakout. Not so much for playing it, but because it was used an a programming example in my Vic 20 manual (it came with a manual informing about how to program it, those were the days). The example didn't cover the full game, just a ball bouncing in a rectangle. It was about iterating the ball in a diagnoal direction, checking when it hit a wall and changing the direction. BASIC was the language. Later I bought an upgrade containing whooping 32 kb of memory (the computer had 3 kb when shipped). The upgrade card also sported an assembler editor so that I could start programming in assembler. I had all sorts of trick to slow my games down! Vic20 was an amazing computer. Almost as amazing as its successor, Commodore 64. |
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Defender of the crown (Commodore 64) |
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Day of the tentacle |
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