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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There was one game that got me hooked. I think it was authored by the SA Education Department. It was a graphical adventure on 2x5.25" floppy disks for the C64. I was hooked after that. It's too bad the name escapes me. That said, I was hooked on the C64 at about 5 years old. As my reading got better so did my BASIC, until I graduated to assembly when BASIC wouldn't cut it anymore. Ahh fun times; being able to make the computer do my bidding was what hooked me, not necessarily games. |
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Conan: Hall of Volta for the Apple II waay back in 1984. The BBS door games that came shortly after were awesome too :) |
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Olympic Decathlon on the Apple IIe I can still remember having 6 of us around a single keyboard each trying to hit our two keys as fast as possible. Everybody shoulder to shoulder all squished together. None of this sitting across the world talking over a headset with no clue who your opponent was. |
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Duke Nukem Test Drive Pac-Man |
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The many games that were printed in the back of Compute! magazine that I typed into my Vic-20. Talk about a lesson in syntax. |
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Doom
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The Incredible Machine!!!! First game for me that it felt like the computer was thinking, not just spitting out pre-determined things. |
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Some of the first games i played were a game on amstrad 1640 called cameleon - you needed to type it in first into GEM before running, and outside of that there was jacaranda jim. also i loved the "write your own adventure" books i got from the library to do you own adventures like that. |
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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.
I would recommend my NetHack Assistant, but it's only half-done right now ;-) |
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I have to go with DONKEY KONG on the commodore C64 =)
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that would be Cholo
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A home Pong first game got my attention. A crappy backgammon on a TRS-80 in middle school made me realize that computers could be used to play games on. Then I got hooked after playing a pinball game called David's Midnight Magic on an Apple IIe. I immediately signed up for a BASIC programming class in my high school after that. |
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TI-99/4A (Circa., 1982) Munchman, Parsec, Hunt The Wumpus http://www.videogamehouse.net/munchman.html http://www.videogamehouse.net/parsec.html http://www.videogamehouse.net/huntwumpus.html Break Apple IIGS (Later in the 80's.... around '85 and '88) NumberMunchers, Oregon Trail http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Number_Munchers http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Oregon_Trail_(computer_game) |
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Asteroids on Atari 2600 |
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logo = )
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I had to answer this one, i couldn't resist. I really loved all of the classic Sierra games - Kings/Space/Police Quest, but my first true love has to be...
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Artillery on the Apple II |
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Dungeons of Daggorath on the TRS80. It's a 4k game. Got me into BASIC. From there, I was hooked. I also liked Castle Wolfenstein on the Apple 2. |
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"Adventure" on the PDP 11/44 basically the forerunner for all of the Zork and Infocom text games, which ultimately led to everything else :P |
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Martian Memorandum |
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The first time I really used a computer wasn't playing a game, but typing one in from a book. Long, ago, my friend and I laboriously slaved over a computer we barely knew how to use, typing in an enormous (to us) BASIC program that doubtlessly ultimately would create a shockingly mediocre game. It took us about 3 hours to type in, then another half hour to fix the typos (I, as the typer, had a tendency to type THAN instead of THEN), and then we didn't even get to play it because his mother had finished her meeting, and we had to go home. 3-4 hours "wasted". And every minute was awesome. As I was typing it all in, I could guess (it was BASIC, after all), what the commands would do, and I was trying to convince my friend that we should replace the strings reading "B-17 bomber" with "X Wing" and things like that. He was too scared, afraid it wouldn't work, but I knew it would. I was so giddy...I knew I could do anything I wanted! Now, I know a lot better about the "anything" part, but that, more than ever just playing a game, got me really knowing that this was something that I could do and enjoy. |
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The Apple II games, e.g. Karateka, Choplifter, Sabotage. See: a list of Apple II games.
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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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Jet Set Willy
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a bunch of MSX games, don't remember which was the first one, but here's a couple
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The 1994 classic Dreamweb got me hooked :)
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Frontier Elite 2 on the Amiga. Played lots of other games before that one, but it's the first one which really got me hooked on.
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UFO: Enemy Unknown, also known as X-COM: UFO Defense (and almost all sequels)
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