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My first experience with a game that got me interested in computers (still programming):
Leisure Suit Larry
After "Ken sent me", I was hooked.
alt text
Leisure Suit Larry creator's site: Al Lowe

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Sorry, but adding "as a programmer" doesn't make this programming related. – Jason Baker Jan 10 '09 at 18:09
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as a programmer, what did you eat last night? – Juan Manuel Jan 19 '09 at 22:35
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FFS Enough with the as a programmer OT bullshit. – Ctrl Alt D-1337 Feb 8 at 22:51
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God, I'm sick of the bastions of question police around here. Asking this question "as a programmer" to a group of other programmers DOES differentiate it from asking it in a different or unspecified context. Maybe the question could have been expounded upon (i.e. what interested you about it? What language did it cause you to pursue and why? etc...), but I think this is perfectly reasonable, and there are clearly a lot of people ready and willing to discuss this. Ignore it if you don't like it. – Evan Hanson May 1 at 16:51
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Will the OLD LADIES CITIZEN'S ACTION COMMITTEE (The OLCAC), please be quiet and stop complaining? There are obviously quite a few people here who find this worthwhile, and there is nothing wrong with a bit of fun in between hard-core code questions. If you don't like the question, please feel free to ignore it and not participate. As in, by not commenting... – Eli Aug 5 at 17:29
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262 Answers

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vote up 21 vote down

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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Xenon 2

Xenon 2

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cool soundtrack too – James L Apr 10 at 15:11
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Although not the first game that got me, I really miss

Fallout

Fallout cover art

Interplay, 1997

in this list.

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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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Test Drive

The original Test Drive, 1987.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yU8b8atj80

I taught myself BASIC on a Commodore Vic-20, circa 1983. Years later, this game caused me fail my first actual programming class. Every day I would finish the assignment in 10 minutes, then spend the remainder of class playing Test Drive. Although I aced every assignment, the teacher failed me for "being disruptive". Apparently the idiots near me had also taken to playing Test Drive, without having done their assignments.

Good times.

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Defender of the crown (Commodore 64)

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Pong

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The Apple II games, e.g. Karateka, Choplifter, Sabotage. See: a list of Apple II games.

alt text

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Diablo got me hooked on games AND programming. True story.

Diablo 1

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Sopwith

First and only game I have ever seen my father play. He introduced me.

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Text-based MUDs!

In most of them after you reached a certain level you could go on adventuring or you could become a wizard-administrator and code your own areas. Definately the first code I ever wrote was my own game area in a MUD, complete with triggers, events, items, etc.

In fact, I still occasionally log onto VikingMud and chat it up or play for a couple hours.

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Deus Ex. It's also the thing that got me into video game development.

Looking at the other answers, I feel young, hehe.

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Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

The answer is 42.

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Descent 1/2

First time I ever chose a PC game for my birthday present intsead of Lego

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Elite, for the BBC micro. 3d space sim in 32k of RAM. The wire frame graphics were way cooler than the solid versions for other platforms:-)

alt text

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NetHack, when I was six (playing on SuSE Linux 8-point-something). I still haven't won (without using debug mode or editing the source) after more than six years.
For new players:

  • Use ASCII full screen
  • Read the guidebook
  • Stick to it - you might find it too hard, or boring at first, but after a few tries, you'll like it.
  • Don't copy the save file. Please...
  • Go to Wikihack

I would recommend my NetHack Assistant, but it's only half-done right now ;-)

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I would probably have to say the game ADVENT, the original text based adventure game.

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I guess it was Chuckie Egg for me. I had to wait for for five minutes for it to load from a magnetic tape. I had a Didactic M wired to a b/w TV and a tape recorder and it made these funny old-modem sounds while it loaded (played) the tape. The game was GREAT! Although I never could get past the first five levels or so...

It was amazing to see/hear how the screeching sounds turned into a game!

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A few years later, on a PC, I got seriously hooked on The Lost Vikings. Spent years trying to get through all of the levels... alt text

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MICRO SOFT PAINTBRUSH

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Starcraft

I was around 7 or 8 when it came out

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Lucasfilm adventure games: mainly Maniac Mansion, Zak McKracken and the Alien Mindbenders and the Indiana Jones games.

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Alright, how could one leave off this list:

M.U.L.E.

Mule screenshot

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Monkey Island, Day of the Tentacle and other classic LucasArts point-and-click games simply urge you to revive the concept of point-and-click adventure and apply it to nowadays' techniques. It would be great to have a P & C adventure game engine like ScummVM!

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Can't believe no one mentioned this one yet: Wasteland! (on the C64)

alt text

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Quake

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nibbles.bas and gorillas.bas. Of course with the code being right there I felt compelled to jump in and see how they did that.

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D U N E

"Developed by Cryo Interactive, is the first of the Dune computer games. Dune blended adventure with economic and military strategy, and is considered by many the most immersive Dune computer game"

(Wikipedia)

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Blue Max:

It rocked my world on the C64, loved it!

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