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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Lemonade Stand for the Apple II.
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BASIC. You have to do a lot of customization work, but it's a very versatile gaming system. (More seriously, I wasn't drawn in by a game.) My wife was drawn in by Santa Paravia en Fiumaccio (sp?), and started making changes. |
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Surround - later to become Tron Light Cycles. My friend had his Atari 400 for a couple months and I just bought my Atari 800. Ostensibly to 'help with homework', but really to play games. My friend came over and wrote Surround while we were sitting there in Atari Basic. I was confused since variables are things you solve for in math. I was more confused when his 'guy' could wrap around the screen and mine would just crash into the wall on the edge. Something about that was magical and motivated me to start learning - to have that much control over what a device did. |
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You have been eaten by a grue. Can't believe nobody has mentioned Zork |
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Wizardry for the Apple II+ |
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Monkey Island, Space Quest and Day of the Tentacle got me hooked to a computer - but the first game that ever made me want to write a game mayself was actually from a SciAm article about a (bit more complex) "Game of Life"-like simulation. |
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Might and Magic Book One: The Secret of the Inner Sanctum on an Apple IIe.(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/index.html?curid=959060) It was a great RPG. It not only got me hooked on computers, but also got me hooked up on Role Playing Games, two of the passions I still carry today! |
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Not my first but Nethack deserves a mention |
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Can't believe no one mentioned this one yet: Wasteland! (on the C64)
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Quest for Glory by Sierra (Or Hero's Quest, depending on the version.) There are so many others, but that one title in particular really cemented my interest in computers and videogames. |
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Dune 2. First 'modern' RTS.
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Trinity, a text based game. I could never get far and was confused but it always intrigued me. |
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Wow. Thanks guys, you make me feel old, as mine would have to be Parsec on a TI99/4A |
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Mine was AppleTrek back in 1978 or 1979. My uncle had an Apple ][ that my brother and I would play AppleTrek on.
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Loderunner
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Dangerous Dave: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dangerous_Dave |
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commander keen, lesuire suit larry, civilization, price of persia, another world etc. who knows, what was the first. probably some from the 8-bits such as formula 1 or snoopy. |
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I got hooked on computers before I got hooked on games. My first computer was an Ohio Scientific C1P, a 6502-based microcomputer. The first game I really got hooked on was Adventure running under the MUSIC timeshare system. |
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Jedi Knight : Dark Forces II, circa 1997. The game had an open-ish framework that allowed you to mod/create .cog files (instructions in the game's programming language, COG) and manipulate the behavior of objects, force powers, etc. Of course this meant you would run into unstoppable enemies in online-play who were clever enough to mod .cogs that would reflect in network-play, giving them unfair advantages. But we didn't care, that game kicked ass! It is the reason I'm a developer/designer today. Modifying JK:DF2 got me interested in software, and graphic design. To remember my roots, I keep an original copy of the game on my shelf - in the plastic. |
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There are so many!
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First proper computer games was Monkey Island 2: Le Chuck's Revenge That got me hooked on puzzle based adventure games. Too bad that genre is all but dead now. |
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Game? I was hooked before I ever saw a computer game. |
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Wolfenstein3D, Doom, and Doom 2 a couple flight simulators also helped: gunship2000 and b17 flying fortress |
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Adventureland on the VIC-20 plus a similar "Pirates" adventure game written by one of my teachers (with basic graphics, ASCII-art) |
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King's Quest V, my dad and I played that for ages back in the day. |
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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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Operation Neptune |
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Last one for me...Legend of Zelda the original ones for the old nintendo. |
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Astrosmash for Intellivision was another great game for me...all the intellivision titles were a lot of fun to play |
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