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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.
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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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Jupiter Lander - Commodore 64

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Hugo: House of Horrors (1990)

Maybe not the first game that caught my interest, but definitely one of the first.

Hugo: House of Horrors

some commands I remember from this scene:

  • take pumpkin
  • open pumpkin
  • take key
  • open door
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The Game of Robot

I was totally addicted to this game and it was the first shareware game I bought a key for (while being 6 years old).

I still love the game and there's even a windows version out now :).

The Game of Robot

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Impossible Mission on C64 or CPC464

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Kye.

It got me hooked on fiendishly hard and overly complex puzzle games; also had a level editor so I learned a lot about level design.

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Tic Tac Toe. The user's moves were input by flipping switches on the front panel. There weren't enough switches so cell numbers from 0 to 8 had to be encoded in binary (4 switches for 4 bits). Then a printout on the typewriter showed both the user's move and the computer's next move.

Adventure came a loooong time later. Dungeon came after that.

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A Sub Hunt game that my instructor had written for our IMSAI 8080. Also, my brother did an amusing animation of a lunar lander landing on the moon in a crater, an the crater closed like a mouth and licked its lips with a tongue...all in ASCII, naturally.

Only got to play with that machine for about a month, but the next year we got a bunch of PET computers, upon which I proceeded to do nothing but write computer games. My first 3D graphics were done on a pet, from a BYTE magazine about 3D graphics. Couldn't draw a line, though, but I got points to rotate!

Nothing warms the heart like typing in a Conways LIFE game, in machine language, in hex, using POKE, over and over and over, with it never working. Never did damn thing. Them were the days.

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Grannys Garden - BBC Micro - 1983:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Granny%27s_Garden

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Aztec Challanger on Commodore64

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Taipan! Once we figured out you could break into the code and give yourself as much money as you wanted and also list the program? That was it, I was hooked.

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DUKE NUKE'EM 3D

"what are u waiting for...christmas?"

priceless!!

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MOZ PONG - i think it was called that on the Mac.

So addictive!

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Pyjamarama :)

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Rick Dangerous
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Zork

A word based adventure game on the Apple II computer

Can also still be played online today here :-)

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Quake

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I know this question asked for the first game, but honestly I don't remember which was first and they were all influencial

Mac LCIII

StickeyBear's Reading Room

Thinking Things

KidCutz and KidPix

Prince of Persia

Spell Dodger

Load Runner

PowerBook 9600c

SpinDoctor

Discovered AppleScript (not a game but it was fun)

PC

Stunts

4D Boxing

SkiFree

Wolfinstein

Doom

MindMaze (part of Encarta)

BioMenace

Commander Keen

Brix

Total Annihilation

Need For Speed II SE

SimCity

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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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maniac mansion & day of the tentacle. go lucasarts!

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Word Munchers

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ZZT by Tim Sweeney of Epic MegaGames released in 1991 when I was 11. The game practically begs it players to become rudimentary programmers. And it was "Object Oriented" programming. There is still a huge community developing mods to this game. Check out thelandofZZT and z2.

Title Screen.

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Monster Truck Madness

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Chuckie Egg on the BBC Micro.

Chuckie Egg Screenshot

Apparently I used to sit on my dads lap and watch him play when I was a very wee lad.

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Well for me it was Highway Encounter on Sinclair Spectrum (actually on a clone). A little silly, but it got me thinking "I wanna know how to do stuff like this".

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Bard's Tale

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I think I wasted half my childhood on this game.

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SWIV on C64.

SWIV

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I don't know that I could attribute my interest in programming to a game, per se, but for me it all started with the Commodore 64 I bought when I was about 14. A couple of games that did further my interest in computers in general would definitely be the old Zork series and a Settlers-style game (don't remember the name) on the business machines in my high school that ran the old CP/M OS. The were Commodore Business Machines, IIRC.

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Blue Max:

It rocked my world on the C64, loved it!

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Super Mario World (SNES). First game I really got, and it definitely set me on the path to programming.

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