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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The game that got me interested in computers was a very simple BASIC game for the ZX-81, called "Meteorids". It looked like that:
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The first PC game I really remember and liked was the The Settlers 2...that little strategy game just got me hooked up even until today.
Also, while I was playing Albion, I suddenly snapped and said "I wanna become a programmer". :) Bobby |
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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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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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Dune II :) |
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Tunnels of Doom on the TI 99/4A. Many years later, Wizardry encouraged many attempts at an RPG. |
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The game that got me hooked on computers was 'Roller Coaster tycoon 2' (not so old skool, but I'm young so I guess that's okay). The game that made me have like programming was Garrys mod (which is a mod for half life 2) you can write add-ons for it in lua, which I did. |
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Prince of Persia (the very first one) |
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Pirate Adventure, a text-based game that I had on a cartridge for my Vic-20. The first thing I can remember pogramming was a text-based adventure game in Commodore BASIC that involved something about running about my neighborhhod :) |
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Temple of Apshai ... oh the memories ...
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I had a whole bunch of things on my Apple II. What really got me hooked was that when a lot of them crashed, you'd end up in the BASIC prompt. That's how I first learned about programming. |
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Building on Uri's response. There were quite a few factors that interested me in programing.... but as for a game I would have to say in 6th grade when I broke into BASIC when I was playing Lemonade Stand and started tweaking things. This helped further my interest :) |
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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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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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Wolfenstein3D, Doom, and Doom 2 a couple flight simulators also helped: gunship2000 and b17 flying fortress |
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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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Trinity, a text based game. I could never get far and was confused but it always intrigued me. |
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Not my first but Nethack deserves a mention |
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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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Wizardry for the Apple II+ |
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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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The first game that had me hooked was Space Invaders on the Commodore PET computer. After that it was customizing games like Doom and Quake. In those days you could learn a lot about computers by just trying to get those games to run (manually going through autoexec.bat and config.sys anyone?) |
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Duke Nukem Test Drive Pac-Man |
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Asteroids on Atari 2600 |
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The one "game" of sorts wasn't really a game at all, just packaged as a game of sorts. "Learn to Program Visual Basic" was the program name, though after moving to real visual basic (at the time, VB6), I learned just how proprietary it was. Got me hooked though, and I've never looked back :) |
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I have to go with the following:
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Warbreeds or Starcraft |
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Digger on Amstrad PPC512. |
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Star Raiders. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Raiders And I got the highest score on it. You needed to have shields off the whole game to do it! Remember the Byte magazine article on it? |
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Hungry Horace on the zx spectrum:
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