Gaming on a PC from 1983!

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  • čas přidán 27. 02. 2023
  • This is the first video in my new Retro Gaming PC series! Today we start with my very first gaming PC I ever owned... the Commodore 64!
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 8K

  • @Plague_GG
    @Plague_GG Před rokem +866

    This was such a fun video to watch Jay get so excited about reliving his childhood.

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Před rokem +4

      I bet you wish your computer made you more alive then ever before because you have a commodore 64🤣

    • @Thickcurves
      @Thickcurves Před rokem +4

      It was awesome, loved it.
      I bet the 80 dollar game he forgot at home was... The Bard's tale!!! OMG I didn't have that game or a commodore 64, but my friend did and we played the shit out of that game! So good.

    • @Celis.C
      @Celis.C Před rokem +8

      We don't stop playing because we grow old.
      We grow old because we stop playing.

    • @B0BBYGAMER
      @B0BBYGAMER Před rokem +1

      Got a bit nostalgic still have my commodore Amiga a500 couldn't get it running last attempt should sell it

    • @Phenorius
      @Phenorius Před rokem

      You know, when we'll get older, we'll be the same. Heck, I am 28 and I already miss some Playstation 1 games :P

  • @HoundDogMech
    @HoundDogMech Před rokem +10

    Way before you Bro. Mine were a Radio Shack TRS-80 model 1 with Expansion interface (64K 48 useable And 4 Floppies. No2 was an Apple II w/ 2 floppies 3rd a Commodore 64 & a single floppy. Gave them away. I still have every PC type computer, 7 in alland even a Sanyo Luggable (41 Lbs) with 2 floppys 9" CGA color screen, a SIX Pack and a Western Digital 10 KB Hard Card. I also have Hundreds of 5&1/4" floppies and 3&1/2" floppies

    • @IAmAnonymyz
      @IAmAnonymyz Před 5 měsíci

      🤣🤣🤣 I had a customer drop off an old TRS-1400 that a customer dropped off when I worked for RadioShack. Dropped it off at a repair shop I knew they owner of and never got it back lol

  • @SamMurphyHSV
    @SamMurphyHSV Před rokem +29

    This made me smile. I am 27 now and my first computer had NT 3.1 on it, then was upgraded to windows 98. To make me realize how easy I had it (because I would complain that it was too slow as a kid) my dad found his old commodore that my grandmother had boxed up in her attic and set it up and told me if I could get his copy of project firestart to run and actually play it, he would take me out to a restaurant of my choice. It took about 2 hours to figure it out but I got it running. That was a great memory I have of my dad and it definitely taught me to not complain about speed. Seeing you show your daughter where all the modern tech came from and what you grew up with brings back alot of good memories. Thank you for trip down memory lane.

    • @Ian-Omega
      @Ian-Omega Před rokem +2

      You were two years old in 1998.

  • @prawnmikus
    @prawnmikus Před rokem +60

    My favourite machine ever. I taught myself 6502 machine language, and didn't even have an assembler. All my games were created by me mapping out characters on graph paper then translating to binary. Going from BASIC to machine language was one of the most shocking events in my computer life.
    Still have my original, and about a dozen more, and even a PET 4032. My first machine was a ZX-80 that I built from a kit.
    You really had to be super efficient with your code back in those days. Every byte counted.

    • @cardinaldriver
      @cardinaldriver Před rokem +5

      Nice. I could barely grasp peeks and pokes so machine language was out of the question unless I entered it from a Compute! mag. I cut my HW and through-hole soldering teeth on a Heathkit Timex Sinclair with " 1KB RAM FREE". Talk about every byte counting! 😄

    • @akassebaum
      @akassebaum Před rokem +4

      I never programmed on Comodore 64. We use to have Atari ST and my brother and I would type in machine language code from Byte Magazine. We had no clue what we were doing. Just typing out the code to build a lie detector using a joystick and foil wrap.

    • @tedunguent156
      @tedunguent156 Před rokem +1

      My experience was very similar to yours. Ah, the good old days.

    • @prawnmikus
      @prawnmikus Před rokem +1

      @@tedunguent156 Those really were the best days of computing. The very birth of home computers, and a whole new paradigm.

    • @HepCatJack
      @HepCatJack Před 5 měsíci

      Jim Butterfield made a tool that let you input assembly code in specific areas of memory. Since I didn't use the tape deck I'd frequently use the tape buffer to write small machine language routines.

  • @ufukpolat3480
    @ufukpolat3480 Před rokem +185

    This man is a lucky dude, having his kid show interest in what he's interested in. Makes it all the more fun when you have people close to you sharing your passion.

    • @hartmutdietz1228
      @hartmutdietz1228 Před rokem +9

      It´s normal for children to be interested in video games and food, she seems to be very interested in both.

    • @DocBrewskie
      @DocBrewskie Před rokem +2

      God daaaaaaaaaanm

    • @big_narc
      @big_narc Před rokem

      @@hartmutdietz1228 How miserable of a person do you have to see such a wholesome video and comment on a teenage girls weight. Go fuck yourself buddy

    • @ufukpolat3480
      @ufukpolat3480 Před rokem +3

      @@hartmutdietz1228 in retro video games? No. Casually many children play video games, much like many adults watch sports on TV. Only some will know what the next basketball game is in the Phillipines local league or wake up early to watch Australian football. Being passionate about something is quite different than generally showing interest.

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Před rokem +3

      @@hartmutdietz1228 I think she's showing respect for her father firstly and discovering it's actually quite interesting.

  • @PaulLemars01
    @PaulLemars01 Před rokem +39

    This was so sweet. My computer memories actually predate the C64 but this machine holds a special place in my heart. Back in 86 my soon-to-be father-in-law had a small graphics shop where he would do magazine layups and design work for the local businesses. He had been sold this exact system (including the printer) because he wanted to do his job logging and billing on this 'wonder machine'. Well of course the fact there was no software tailored to his business was something of an impediment. I was engaged to his daughter and on our first trip over to the USA from the UK he told me of his problem. I've been a computer geek my entire life so this was the first time I got my hands on the C64. We were staying at the family home in LA for three weeks and in that time I wrote the system he needed. It was simple and stable and he used my C64 billing system for the next eight years. I've been married to his daughter for the past 35 years. I'm 67 and if you're the PC Grandpa then I'm the PC Methuselah. Love what you do Jay.
    I swear, I think I will pass away under a desk fixing someone's machine. I just finished my son's 13700 based audio production machine. It never leaves you, IT for life.
    BTW My first game was Zork transcribed out of Byte magazine onto a Wang 2200 I was a night op for. (yeah, those are some words)

    • @SighManP
      @SighManP Před rokem +3

      Those early days when anyone who had a computer was viewed as a wizard (aka resource to be plundered). I remember teaching my schools headmaster how to use his computer in the early 80s (the student became the master at early age back then)

  • @walleyehero8752
    @walleyehero8752 Před rokem +13

    What a great time to be a middle aged gamer! Old enough to appreciate all the retro systems as well as see the progression to modern gaming systems😁

  • @mecongberlin
    @mecongberlin Před 10 měsíci +1

    “Computers for the masses, not the classes” - was the Commodore mantra. Something companies could remember nowadays as well.

  • @brothernemiel6465
    @brothernemiel6465 Před rokem +78

    born '82 and grew up with a C64 me and my dad used to game on...beside him printing, in retrospect, pointless houshold lists on a needle printer of which the sound has permanently imprinted in my brain. Ah the good old childhood times. Highlights such as Giana Sisters, Bubble Bobble and all those Winter-, Summer and World Games give me instant nostalgia flashbacks from time to time.

    • @Nianfur
      @Nianfur Před rokem +8

      California Games was the best.

    • @grooom21
      @grooom21 Před rokem +2

      Me too, me too

    • @bhBlacky82
      @bhBlacky82 Před rokem +2

      oh shit yes... winter and sommer games collections, those were gold

    • @TheeGrandpoobah
      @TheeGrandpoobah Před rokem +4

      Broke a few joysticks playing Summer and world Game!!!! need to save my pocket money for a month(Ish) to my a new cheetah joystick

    • @Dalibor2007
      @Dalibor2007 Před rokem +3

      @@TheeGrandpoobah same here! I learned how to repair them after destroying 5 and parents said, that they are not going to pay for any more... 🙂

  • @jamesmcnally4087
    @jamesmcnally4087 Před rokem +77

    Brings back major memories. My first experience was with a Vic 20, and graduated to the C-64 a few years later. Spent hours upon hours with books filled with BASIC code, programming games and programs. Even talked my parents into getting a 64 for my little sister, which they kind of took over after we showed them BASIC programs to code into it. Spent many an hour debugging line after line and laughing our butts off when we made mistakes. ;)

    • @billgaudette5524
      @billgaudette5524 Před rokem +13

      Hours upon hours typing BASIC programs into memory from magazines...so much fun! I had a friend in data-entry that would type in the Assembly code programs because nobody else could stand it. Always fun to find out whether or not it would run, and if not, how the heck to debug it!

    • @antmax
      @antmax Před rokem +3

      My mate Tom was the first of us to get a computer. It was the Vic20. Played Scramble on that for hours. Then another friend got an Acorn Electron which was all Chuckie Egg and Twin Kingdom Valley plus Elite. I got a BBC model B for Christmas after that and a whole bunch of kids had the C64 and Spekky. Moved on to Atari ST and Amiga 500/1200's before the first Playstation destroyed everything and then PC's got Doom and started to become more affordable.
      Lots of great memories from growing up in the 80's :)

    • @JG-ti7id
      @JG-ti7id Před rokem +5

      oh my...
      echo "hello world"

    • @sofadhana1289
      @sofadhana1289 Před rokem +7

      BBC Micro for me. I remember getting SO frustrated when the programs didn't work due to a missed ; in line 438 that you had to find by reading line by line.

    • @RargoWingate1
      @RargoWingate1 Před rokem +2

      @@billgaudette5524 Did the same thing for days on end

  • @Zia_Ali.
    @Zia_Ali. Před rokem +5

    Such an excellent video!! Loved to see Jay so excited to relive his childhood gaming memories ♥

  • @manuelmontesdeoca9552
    @manuelmontesdeoca9552 Před rokem +4

    I love this video Jay. We all love our modern PC Gaming power at our fingertips but this flash to the past that shows us all where we came from is great!

  • @k9bob
    @k9bob Před rokem +54

    Adrian's Digital Basement might be able to help you with the sound issue. My first computer was as C64 and like Jay my second was a C128. My favorite game was called "Silent Service" a submarine game. Good memories and thanks for doing this video.

    • @DragonSlayerKyo
      @DragonSlayerKyo Před rokem +1

      most likely needs a sid replacement. These tend to fail pretty badly.

    • @isaiahsmith6599
      @isaiahsmith6599 Před rokem +4

      Adrian, Jan Beta, RMC, Mark fixes stuff, CRG are a few channels that come to mind. Nice part about Adrian is he is up in Oregon so he's not toooo far haha.

    • @deadhomer8468
      @deadhomer8468 Před rokem +3

      retro recipes, although that's more of a Hollywood style retro channel but he's also in Southern California

    • @BrettEPierce
      @BrettEPierce Před rokem +1

      Yeah Adrian fixes this stuff all the time, I'm sure he would love to get this one running properly.

    • @blackhash4064
      @blackhash4064 Před rokem

      Did you turn the lights off in your room and have this feeling like you were actually in a submarine like I did?

  • @crackedmagnet
    @crackedmagnet Před rokem +37

    Ahhh that takes me back. 10 years old, typing in c64 basic programs from a paper book or magazine, inevitably getting something wrong and having to work out where I screwed up. 30 years later those diagnostic skills have been very, very useful.

    • @triplebackspace3623
      @triplebackspace3623 Před rokem

      After Basic I then got to experience Machine Language.
      I've got to say finding your error in Basic was a lot easier than finding a error made when typing in the numerous numbers that was Machine Language.

    • @V3ntilator
      @V3ntilator Před rokem

      @@triplebackspace3623 I were sadly in the wrong gang back then, so i never learned machine code.

    • @thefinerthingsinlife4557
      @thefinerthingsinlife4557 Před rokem +1

      Peeks and Pokes!

    • @V3ntilator
      @V3ntilator Před rokem

      @@thefinerthingsinlife4557 Most pokes.

    • @gunderd
      @gunderd Před rokem

      Me too. In my case, most of the programs were in the back of Compute! and Compute!'s Gazette magazines. At some point they started adding checksums to the ML data which improved the probability of success. I found out recently that the mags are mostly all available online now..

  • @GarageRCR
    @GarageRCR Před rokem

    Yes!!! I just started collecting all my childhood games/equipment etc. great vid! Loved it

  • @steelyjace
    @steelyjace Před rokem +2

    My first computer was ZX Spectrum 48k back in 1982. Ahh my childhood memories 😊

  • @hansgettheflammenwerfer69420

    Mini Jay is growing up so quickly man!
    Must be awesome for Jay to have these memories on his channel to come back to.

    • @thefurrygamer1489
      @thefurrygamer1489 Před rokem +1

      I remember when he built her first computer. She was so much smaller back then. Can't believe how much she's grown since.

  • @damienthorn1340
    @damienthorn1340 Před rokem +22

    2 years later we got the Amiga, and nothing was ever the same again. The Commodore era was amazing. That was the true golden age of gaming. And the jump from 8 to 16bit was I think the single greatest technological leap I have witnessed.

    • @Racistobama
      @Racistobama Před rokem

      Have to agree. 32-bit didn't feel like nearly as great of an advancement, perhaps because it relied so heavily on having a lot of RAM and, at least on IBM-compatibles, knowing how to actually *access* that memory via startup files. If the name EMM386.EXE strikes fear into your heart, you are a grizzled veteran.

    • @hans-michaeldeml5922
      @hans-michaeldeml5922 Před rokem +1

      Yep - remember the Cinemaware titles? At the end it lost its appeal a bit without a HDD (“Please insert Disk 8”).

    • @mjkittredge
      @mjkittredge Před rokem

      The Amiga was amazing for it's time. I remember playing Faery Tale Adventure and Dragon Scape and PacMania

    • @xXTheoLinuxXx
      @xXTheoLinuxXx Před rokem

      It was 3 years later :) The C64 is from 1982 and the Amiga 1000 from 1985. The real changer was the Amiga 500 from 1987 (which was much cheaper than the Amiga 1000). In my opinion they were much more fun than the MS-DOS machines from that era.

    • @spavatch
      @spavatch Před rokem +1

      What actually made the Amiga such a potent platform was the foundation it was built upon - the custom chips. Even though 68000 CPU was 7,14 MHz and 16-bit it wasn't even 3 times as powerful in terms of raw computing performance compared to 1 MHz 8-bit 6510. The CPU was always considered Amiga's weakest link hardware-wise.
      To put it into perspective using more modern way of expressing computing efficiency let's use IPC: C64 does 0.43 instructions per clock. Amiga 500 does 0.175. 6510 was the champion of squeezing every bit of performance out of a single MHz and in fact it remained the champ until 68040 came to Amiga with 4000 model of 1992. It took PCs four more years to beat C64's IPC with 486 DX4.

  • @bront_catherder
    @bront_catherder Před 9 měsíci

    I grew up playing Summer Games, Summer Games II, and Winter Games. The Bards Tale was also so great. Smiled a lot watching this. Much appreciated.

  • @SteveRM1968
    @SteveRM1968 Před rokem

    You brought back so many memories, of me with my first TRS-80 and a cassette tape drive. I spent days writing BASIC programs. Thank you!!

  • @smartin23964
    @smartin23964 Před rokem +50

    Oh, the memories. Learning Basic, making my own programs, playing games. The disk drive manual was so detailed the I leaned about blocks, sectors, the whole 8 bits being a byte and so on. I want to say you spent about what it cost new back in the day for everything you got in total. Great video!

    • @telengardforever7783
      @telengardforever7783 Před rokem +3

      The Commodore 64 challenged you to learn about the computer itself. Everything about the computer was documented from the circuit board, to the chips and right up to programming tutorials. It was a computer Mr. Wizard would have been proud of.

  • @mysticsyche6163
    @mysticsyche6163 Před rokem +18

    The memories. I had a Commodore 64 growing up. My grandparents got one in 87. That where I learned to program in basic which led me to my degree in software engineering. You were able to use both sides of a floppy. All you had to do was cut a notch on the other side and then flip the disk over. It was so much fun. I also got the magazine "123 Contact" which would have games on the last few pages that you could write and save to a floppy to play.

    • @lucasRem-ku6eb
      @lucasRem-ku6eb Před rokem +1

      i kept it, it was trash, 1984 .....
      i did only tape, basic, needing a PC badly !!!!!
      You needed it as a cheap old gaming crap thing, low level games for free, damn cheap kids......

  • @stevenkinlin8271
    @stevenkinlin8271 Před rokem

    Love it!!! The Trs 80 from Radio Shack. This video so took me back to my childhood from my 50 years now on this planet. Thank you!!!

  • @mrothird
    @mrothird Před rokem

    This was awesome to watch Jay!!! Loved it!

  • @kellygrant4964
    @kellygrant4964 Před rokem +14

    I loved my c64. I have the newer styled one now with a disk drive. I did have a voice recognition cartridge/attachment for it back in the day. Some of my favorite games were Bruce Leer, Bards Tale, Wizardry and Microsoft Flight Sim to name a few. Going to C64 user groups was fantastic... it was just all about copying disks really. Oh the wonderful days.

  • @AlphaMensae1
    @AlphaMensae1 Před rokem +49

    Jay, the C64 (and Atari 8-bits; both were ahead of their time in that regard) has what is now called S-video output, i.e. separate luminance and chromiance signals. You can get a cable with the C64 DIN plug on one end and an S-video connector on the other, so any TV (including LCD ones) with an S-video input will work. I recently fired up my Atari 130XE and C64C, hooked up to a 15" LCD TV, and they work great!

    • @Aeduo
      @Aeduo Před rokem +4

      I'm guessing he was hearing the chroma signal. :p Which would just sound like 60hz hum like the frame rate.

    • @AlphaMensae1
      @AlphaMensae1 Před rokem

      @@Aeduo Makes sense, as I think with the C64, the yellow RCA connecter is not the composite video line; it's the red one on the cable I originally got for use with the Commodore 1802 monitor. Cables can vary of course, but that might be how the C64 (and Atari 800/XE) is set up.

    • @Aeduo
      @Aeduo Před rokem +1

      @@AlphaMensae1 yeah and we don't know what cable he got anyway.

    • @cardigansrule
      @cardigansrule Před rokem

      it definitely did not have S-video, which wasn't invented until 1987. it had RF and composite video.

    • @AlphaMensae1
      @AlphaMensae1 Před rokem +3

      @@cardigansrule Yes it did, but it was called separate luminance and chrominance. The Commodore 1702 and 1802 monitors had the RCA jacks for the cable you needed (2 for the video signals,1 for the audio., as well as having the single composite video input). I had the 1802, and my C64C and Atari 130XE (which also had separate chrominance and luminance output) looked great with it. Even the Atari magazines admitted that the best thing to make your Atari look great was to use the Commodore monitor. LOL

  • @karutao3655
    @karutao3655 Před rokem +1

    Awesome video! I grew up playing the Commodore 64 with my dad! A few of our favorites was Sid Meier’s pirates, mail order monsters, and bards tale! Absolutely loved the case and wheel with bards tale!

  • @locsipocsi1
    @locsipocsi1 Před rokem

    This is cool and fun to watch. Keep up with the retro and yes retro wall!!!

  • @Davethreshold
    @Davethreshold Před rokem +39

    Honestly, I was shocked to see how GOOD LOOKING the main computer is! It would go great with original Noctua external fans. Very heartfelt video there Jay, your daughter, and friends. ❤

  • @a5cent
    @a5cent Před rokem +38

    The C64 was also my first computer! My emotions were running high during this video, just like Jay's! Great stuff! Great time! My parents didn't buy me games, so I had to make my own, which is how I got into programming.

    • @fepethepenguin8287
      @fepethepenguin8287 Před rokem +1

      Ti 82 gaming

    • @Yulo2000Leyje
      @Yulo2000Leyje Před rokem +4

      Same with me. Hours of typing Hex-Code from paper into it and then seaching a week for the two or three wrong A or F or .. 🤣

  • @teldorinst4tic20
    @teldorinst4tic20 Před rokem

    29 yrs old and i remember my dad showing me this neon green, geometrical shaped tank game on the Commodore 64 that was so cool. I don't remember what it was called but your tanks and the terrain was made of square and triangle boxes. When you would go behind a triangle terrain piece, it would block your shots and visibility to other tanks trying to kill you. It was the coolest thing i remember from back then and always my fondest memory of gaming.

  • @JIM6167
    @JIM6167 Před rokem +1

    Great Video! I love the commodore 64! The old days were so much fun! Technology has advanced tremendously, but we were lucky to have grown up in the 80s!

  • @montystein8858
    @montystein8858 Před rokem +127

    OMG I love Jay freaking out as his daughter reaches for the keyboard after saying "I love how the keyboard sounds". I know exactly why but it's funny AF

    • @7828191
      @7828191 Před rokem +8

      I remember a friend of mine telling (in his early teens) me that one older relative thought his IBM model M PC keyboard was the computer and the 386DX PC tower case was a VERY large floppy drive hahaha. This happened round '93.

    • @bodevp
      @bodevp Před rokem +2

      since u know enlighten me please because i didn't get it

    • @kevinwhilden5394
      @kevinwhilden5394 Před rokem +2

      My favorite game was Wizardry on an Apple II+. In 1983.

    • @kasper_429
      @kasper_429 Před rokem +4

      @@bodevp I'm not 100% sure, but I think it's because the Commodore64 is a command line-based system, so if she were to just start touching/typing random keys it could really mess with or brick the computer. Just a guess from an early 90s kid that knows nothing about these, lmao.

    • @sundok1
      @sundok1 Před rokem +3

      the first thing i that came to my mind was indeed that particular sound of the keyboard. i remember those keys like having mechanical switches or something like it, that combined with the resonance of the plastic casing of the pc. If i close my eyes I can even still smell it i swear

  • @billwrinkle9662
    @billwrinkle9662 Před rokem +51

    Gorf was a great arcade game. The pizzeria in my hometown had that, and I probably dumped $200 into that game over a 2-year period. Each level had 5 games... Astro Battle, Laser Attack, Galaxians, Space Warp, and then Flagship, after which you went back to Astro Battle, but everything was just a bit faster, and you would go up in rank from Space Cannabis dependence through to Space Avenger, and a robot voice teases you when you die.

    • @FormulaFox
      @FormulaFox Před rokem +2

      I played so much Gorf at the local bowling alley as a kid. Nothing else for me to do there. The place closed down ages ago, but apparently the arcade machines were never pulled. We didn't find out until last year when the roof collapsed on the building. The world lost a Gorf, Track & Field, a Neo Geo, several pinball tables, and a Street fighter II that day.
      Had I known, I'd have broken in and stolen the damn thing to save it from its fate.

    • @Tigerhawk30
      @Tigerhawk30 Před rokem +2

      "Bad News, Space Cadet"

    • @kcmule
      @kcmule Před rokem +1

      @@Tigerhawk30 "ha ha ha"

    • @cskillers1
      @cskillers1 Před rokem

      @@FormulaFox good thing it closed down ages ago, would be horrible if it would keep operate for various purposes & then the roof would collapse on a bunch of peeps

    • @FormulaFox
      @FormulaFox Před rokem +2

      @@cskillers1 If it had been able to stay open I'm sure there would have been repairs done to prevent it before the collapse happened. The place had been closed and abandoned for over 15 years when the roof went.

  • @gregoryjames9863
    @gregoryjames9863 Před rokem

    Thanks for doing this video, it sure brings back a lot of memories.

  • @davidcarlson2481
    @davidcarlson2481 Před rokem +1

    Love this video Jay! Looks like a nice healthy bread bin you got, other than possibly a dead SID chip. Color looks good to me actually. Looks like mine. Your 1541 color matches the VIC-20 case so don’t be alarmed by the mismatch.
    Love to see you and your daughter with friends gaming like this. Such a great time captured here. Appreciate you sharing!

  • @lordcorgi6481
    @lordcorgi6481 Před rokem +3

    Bard's Tale on Commodore 64 was the first game I ever played and I loved it so much I haven't stopped since 😁

  • @leftypistolero5983
    @leftypistolero5983 Před rokem +46

    This was a fantastic episode, Jay. My Dad has also been restoring the many Amiga computers we had back in the 80s. He's amazingly good at what he does and it's been a trip to experience it all again.

  • @healergis7269
    @healergis7269 Před rokem

    Wow! I started with a Sinclair ZX-81 with 1K Ram back in 1983, moved on to ZX Spectrum 48K, Amstrad CPC 128 and finally to a IBM Pc. Thank you for all the good memories your video brought back!!!😊

  • @richardcollison9117
    @richardcollison9117 Před rokem

    My father worked overtime to buy me my commodore 64 system out of the classifieds from someone who passed away. It had the tape drive, monochrome monitor, over 100 floppy's, 2 drives, and 2 boxes of pc / commodore magazines that had all the programs you keyed in yourself. I remember when the C=128 came out I cut grass non stop to buy it from Nichol's Department store for $199.00. So proud when I bought that with my own money. I played Bard's Tales till I passed out :) Wow typed Bard's Tales before you even said it...... You can play Bard's Tales III on a emulator now and it is so fun when you have time to kill.

  • @wchettleburgh
    @wchettleburgh Před rokem +6

    Jay this was a truly brilliant trip down memory lane. As a 49 year old gamer from the U.K my very first console was the Atari VCS 2600. I spent hours on Pac Man, Asteroids, Space Invaders and my favourite game Pitfall. As for my first computer it was the Sinclair ZX81. It was monochrome, plugged into the TV, had basic sound, the 16k ram expansion module has to be held on by blu tak. It was a tiny little thing and I spent hours playing a flight simulator game. The graphics were just dots on a black screen but to me I was really flying a 747. You guys playing Top Gun reminded me of playing it on my Sinclair Spectrum 48k. Not sure if you had them in the State's but in Europe they were huge. Colour clash graphics, naff sound, a rubber keyboard and games loaded by cassette tape. A true nightmare but the hours of fun I had were truly fantastic and made my childhood. I did eventually get a C64 and then moved onto the Amiga 500 and Amiga 1200. Countless consoles like the Sega Master System, Megadrive, Sega Saturn, SNES, Amiga CD32. The list goes on. Thank you for a brilliant video which really took me down memory lane. Brilliant.

  • @fordesponja
    @fordesponja Před rokem +78

    As someone who is in retrogaming and follows channels dedicated to this, this video is so cute in how Jay doesn't really know how to properly proceed and is stepping on every stone on the way. Adrian Black would watch this like his son starts to walk.

    • @opticburn
      @opticburn Před rokem +14

      Hello everyone and welcome to Adrians Digital Basement, on today's episode we will be looking at JayzTwoCents Commodore 64 and and check to see if it has a broken SID chip...

    • @DerIchBinDa
      @DerIchBinDa Před rokem +5

      Adrian would approve this message! 😉

    • @CobraFat2000
      @CobraFat2000 Před rokem +2

      Yeah, next retrospective video should be a collaboration with David Murray or Adrian Black (also they'd probably lend a working set of hardware so it wouldn't break the bank to try an old game).

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 Před rokem +2

      @@opticburn I'm pretty sure the buzzing wasn't a SID problem. I'm guessing Jay is using an incorrect video hookup and was connecting the 64's chroma out to the TV's audio input.

    • @Maro-servant-of-god
      @Maro-servant-of-god Před rokem

      40 more years from now, the next generation will be looking the same way at our Ipads

  • @martech3596
    @martech3596 Před rokem

    My first ever system was the Atari 2600 (woodgrain) but my first PC was the Commodore 64. My memories of this machine know no bounds. Nothing but happy, happy memories. I sold my original to help pay for an Atari Lynx at the time, but have since bought another about 20 years ago and I’m not letting that one go. Best game memories on my C64 are The Sacred Armour of Antiriad, Raid on Bungeling Bay, Robin of the Wood, Pitstop 2, Ace 2, MASK, among a whole host of others. Best days.

  • @BrasilianZombie
    @BrasilianZombie Před rokem

    Finally real retro. I was torn back so many years... such a great video.
    Playing Oiltycoon with friends on i think it was a comodore but allready had 3.5 Floppy external drive is one of my first memories.

  • @thisismelsemail1217
    @thisismelsemail1217 Před rokem +20

    Gosh I really hope this video does well for Jay and the team. Would love to see a continuation of this type of content. I'm unfortunately just young enough "early 30's" to have lived through all this amazing computing/gaming tech.

  • @neutral-9734
    @neutral-9734 Před rokem +14

    My first was the VIC-20 with a cassette drive. I still have some of the cassette games like Scare City Motel. I never had a 64 but got a 128 instead which I still have all my old games still. Played some classics like Sid Meier's Pirates, which I still recommend to this very day, all the old Interplay RPGs, and DnD goldbox games. There were so many great games on the commodore and their legacy still lives on today.

    • @Briguy1027
      @Briguy1027 Před rokem +2

      I also had a super awesome VIC-20 with 8k of ram and a fancy cassette drive. We played the Avenger game off the cartridge and really trashed the joystick, LOL.

    • @errollleggo447
      @errollleggo447 Před rokem +1

      Pirates was amazing!

  • @TheWarzoneHackerIsBack

    The tablet was called the Kohala Pad and it was awesome. I had the 64C, with two 1541's, the monitor, the tape drive, the Curah Voice and everything. Still have it all - and it all still works. Complete with a showbox full of Bonus Disks of games and programs.

  • @kimasher
    @kimasher Před 11 měsíci

    Best video ever! I had a ZX Spectrum and loaded games with a cassette player. This was such a great trip down memory lane. I just finished building my latest gaming rig, with a 13900k and it was such as laugh to sit and remember the struggles with these old bits of kit. LMAO. Thank you.

  • @douglasgrillo
    @douglasgrillo Před rokem +11

    About the tablet, I had the Koala Pad and right there, these two pieces of hardware together (C64c and Koala Pad) made me what I'm today, a motion graphic designer with almost 30 years in the field. Video editing. computer graphics, video games and even computer hardware knowledge I got them for starting with the C64 and later jumping to the Amiga wagon. Nice video Jay!

  • @merc1180
    @merc1180 Před rokem +28

    As with everyone else , my first experience with computers was the Commodore 64. I do still have it and still works, in fact I fired it up every now and then and still play games on it. The family would, on weekends, get together and have gaming sessions. The game that was most popular with us was Epix Summer and Winter Olympics, two seperate programs. If you can find copies of them, get them as they are very competitive sessions with a group. Look forward to some of the future "Retro" videos.

    • @StephanWijering
      @StephanWijering Před rokem +3

      Summer and winterolypics (and Ughlimpics) where joystick killers, my favorite and i stil play it sometimes was Kennedy Approach.

    • @MephiticMiasma
      @MephiticMiasma Před rokem

      Mine was the TI 99/4A ... fun times.

    • @soundchazer2445
      @soundchazer2445 Před rokem

      I loved a lot of the EPYX games. Summer Games I and II, Winter Games, World Games, Impossible Mission I and II, The Movie Monster Game, Jumpman, California Games I and II, etc.

    • @emu071981
      @emu071981 Před rokem +1

      California Games was more fun in my opinion. Many fond memories of breaking my neck trying to do front flips in the BMX race lol

    • @henrythegreatamerican8136
      @henrythegreatamerican8136 Před rokem +1

      All my friends had Commodore and Nintendo systems. Me? I had a crappy Coleco my father bought at a discount when the company went out of business.....

  • @thevibingmonkey4151
    @thevibingmonkey4151 Před rokem

    That's hilarious about the gorf thing . I loved that you left that in this video. Good stuff!

  • @thurney4343
    @thurney4343 Před rokem +1

    My first computer was Tandy TRS 80. The Commodor 64 brings back a lot of good memories. Thanks Jay!

  • @Phyrfytr
    @Phyrfytr Před rokem +19

    I had a VIC 20 before the 64. My favorite game was Lunar Lander. It was on the 64 that I actually started learning how to program the machine. Very cool video Jay. Thank you for the trip back to my childhood!!!!

    • @Jay-uw2eb
      @Jay-uw2eb Před rokem +1

      same here wow I completely forgot about lunar lander that was the best. I skipped the C128 and got the Amiga 1000 which oddly enough came out before the A500

    • @gravidar
      @gravidar Před rokem

      VIC20 here too, but it had 3.5kb memory, you needed a cartridge to reach the max potential of 20k ! following that was a BBC model B and still have that.

    • @vandermitch5146
      @vandermitch5146 Před rokem +1

      i still have my big white(now yelloish) Lunar lander cartridge hehehe

    • @stopndrop4588
      @stopndrop4588 Před rokem +2

      Damn this crowd is old. Hahah all love.

  • @AdjutorMusic
    @AdjutorMusic Před rokem +30

    This was so incredibly wholesome and nostalgic. Loved this episode yall

  • @galactichazzard8932
    @galactichazzard8932 Před rokem

    Love this video Jay. I recall playing Bard's Tale and also Gunship on the C64. My friend and I spend entire nights playing Bard's Tale and mapping dongeons.. You brought back some good memories buddy.. Thanks again... Cheers

  • @AgneDei
    @AgneDei Před rokem +1

    Man, In Poland there was a boy scouts radio station that at specific time of the week was broadcasting over the FM radio a GAME for the C64 Tape drive, that you could record on the fly from the radio.
    Those were the times :)

  • @MrTurboFour
    @MrTurboFour Před rokem +25

    Man this brings back memories! It was an 80's Christmas and my parents got us a commodore 64! Before that we had a VIC20.

    • @anthonyjones5350
      @anthonyjones5350 Před rokem

      My first pc was a vic 20 , lots of my friends went for the Sinclair ZX64 if I remember

    • @gyorgybano2329
      @gyorgybano2329 Před rokem

      @@anthonyjones5350 ZX48, I think you are from EU if I recall Spectrum was not too popular - or even available - in the US. I had the C64, learned programming there.

    • @anthonyjones5350
      @anthonyjones5350 Před rokem +1

      @@gyorgybano2329 From South Africa, the Vic20 and then the C64 were more popular than the Spectrum over here; if I remember, the spectrum came with a thermal printer.

  • @--Zook--
    @--Zook-- Před rokem +17

    My dad recently surprised me with my old 64 and disk drive. Even has some of my old games and in original box. I couldn't believe he kept it all these years. I remember renting the games from a local video store and figuring out that I could just copy them. Good times.

    • @lilphucker4561
      @lilphucker4561 Před rokem +2

      I remember a friend and I used to rent games to copy, one had a three level spin wheel that you have to line up and then enter the code. My friend made a photo copy of every combination at work, Was close to 900 pages, haha.

  • @BrooksIngersoll
    @BrooksIngersoll Před rokem

    Thanks for making me feel really really old!! Awesome vid man. Love it.

    • @x-rayz8406
      @x-rayz8406 Před rokem

      I second that, but still love memories of my C64.

  • @TheLionheartcartoon
    @TheLionheartcartoon Před rokem

    Hi JTC! It was a great little video!
    My first PC, the one that I owned that was all mine (and not family system) was a P2 350 Mhz. I still have it, and it still works. It does both DOS games and has Win98 installed. It has a 3 1/2 and a 5 1/4 inch floppy drives, which also work.
    It has nothing to do with the 8088 10 mhz EGA my dad got in 1987 that then got replaced by a 386 SX in 1992 (had a VGA card and all that, got an AdLib installed for a while then a soundblaster pro, which I also STILL have around)
    Those systems are nothing compared to my current... aging.. system, but I have amazing memories from all of them :)

  • @wobedraggled
    @wobedraggled Před rokem +41

    The indie/commerical software scene is alive and well, so many new games that are simply amazing, Pig Quest and the port of Eye of the Beholder are so damn great.

    • @RaumZeitPresse
      @RaumZeitPresse Před rokem

      I like the Original: Dungeon Master. EOB was to infantile.

    • @RetroDawn
      @RetroDawn Před rokem

      @@RaumZeitPresse The game that made the Atari ST *the* gaming computer to have for about a year, until it was ported to the Amiga. One of my favs, as well.

  • @shyphirenflowerchild4631
    @shyphirenflowerchild4631 Před rokem +26

    Your excitement and joy is contagious. Excellent video!

  • @vizintini
    @vizintini Před 7 měsíci

    one of the most entertaining videos I have seen latetly !!!!!!! and this is 8 months old... and I've seen it just now :)

  • @ripp3rke
    @ripp3rke Před 10 měsíci

    My childhood was also graced with a C64 setup, connected to a big TV, this brings back so many good memories. I remember playing HOURS of Pirates, Boulder Dash, Outrun, Test Drive, Summer and Winter Games. Track and field, Ghosts and Goblins and SOOOOOO many more. Awesome to see the legacy still lives.

  • @eddie8900
    @eddie8900 Před rokem +7

    Jay, you are taking me right back to my Spectrum 48k and games like Jet Set Willy, Chuckie Egg, Sabre Wulf and Skool Daze. Loading games involved spending 5 minutes with the game cassette and tape deck, hoping it wouldn't crash. The loading noise is something I remember to this day.

    • @JayTeeStealth
      @JayTeeStealth Před rokem

      5 minutes? I used to have a game on C64 called The Last Ninja, that would take 30mins to load. Came in a twin cassette format.....lolz, those were the days.

    • @chrisjay6759
      @chrisjay6759 Před rokem +1

      @@JayTeeStealth The Last Ninja was awesome.

    • @LittleFellaDynamics
      @LittleFellaDynamics Před rokem +1

      Great game titles all those you listed good call 😎not played in decades (!) >> also there was Kokotoni Wilf, Match Point, Hyper Sports and the Thundercats cartoon on Saturday mornings >> good times 🥰

  • @brianmoebs8879
    @brianmoebs8879 Před rokem +19

    One of your greatest videos EVER!!!! I started off on a C-128 and this brought back such great memories. At 18:33 Jay hits the realization that our memories of the "good old days/games/experiences" aren't really as awesome as we remember they were. I recently bought Maniac Mansion off of Steam because I loved playing that game when I was a kid. I only played for a few minutes before I realized just how bad graphics were back then. Lmao

  • @flipperdk123
    @flipperdk123 Před 9 měsíci

    Loved this machine when I was a kid. Started out with a 1530 magnetic tape drive, and spent *alot* of my childhood calibrating it, before upgrading to floppy. After that it was Amiga 500 -> Amiga 1200 -> 80286 -> 386 -> 486(dx2) and so forth. Those of us old enough to have experienced personal computing in it's infancy and the evolution to now are the lucky bunch tbh. It's just easier to comprehend and appreciate what we have today with all the reference points we have since the 80s. :-)

  • @Blissterd1
    @Blissterd1 Před rokem

    Aces Over Pacific AND Aces Over Europe! I'm 63 and had an 8088, a Comm64 and printer then got an Apple IIe rig. I played most of the Infocom games, Zork, Planetfall, etc. The first PC I built was a 486 DX2 (with math co-processor at a whopping 66Mhz!) My fave retro game was Descent. Duke Nukem was a hoot. I can just hear the dot-matrix!

  • @RockSteddie77
    @RockSteddie77 Před rokem +27

    Wonderful video Jay, such a nostalgia trip thank you! I started out with a Commodore Vic 20 then upgraded to the 64 and it was a wonderful time. Being from the UK we didn't really have the floppy drive, we had to deal with a cassette tape drive and some games could take over 30 minutes just to load, such great memories lol

    • @Ianchaytor
      @Ianchaytor Před rokem +2

      Yep same here, I had a C64 with a tape deck. Remember some games were even double sided, you had to flip the tape. Waiting 20-30 mins to load a game was crazy and today we complain if its more than 10 seconds lol

    • @grahamross6397
      @grahamross6397 Před rokem +1

      Think it was Ghostbusters that took so long to load off tape that there was a game IN the loading screen. There were probably others but that's the one I remember.

    • @Ianchaytor
      @Ianchaytor Před rokem

      @@grahamross6397 Too long ago, I barely remember what I did last week, let alone 35 years ago lol

  • @karlfoxlow8771
    @karlfoxlow8771 Před rokem

    I'm 61 and my first computer was a Sinclair ZX81, it came with 1k memory which you could expanded to 16k! I later got myself an Amiga 500 v1.4 and I took it toa shop near Tower Bridge (London) and they installed v2 with a switch so I could flip between both versions, I still have it with plenty of floppies and a dot matrix printer in my attic!!

  • @cto1011
    @cto1011 Před rokem

    I remember my days with a Commodore 64 and it would take so long to load a game, you would get it started, go outside to play, and come back later to see the game loaded and ready.

  • @KingJerbear
    @KingJerbear Před rokem +14

    Nice to see your daughter make an appearance. It's cool to see young people interested in our old stuff, brings me back to those days of wonder as a kid

  • @Gorthaur82
    @Gorthaur82 Před rokem +19

    This was a great video! Please do continue with this series!
    As for my earliest and fondest PC memory, well it was back in 1992., and my friend and me decided to play "Dune". We got so hooked, writing down locations, names of NPCs, the hours flew by...but we never saved the game.
    So, when we inevitably died, the utter sadness and disbelief that we lost all our progression is still resonating with me, even after 31 years.

    • @danielharvison7510
      @danielharvison7510 Před rokem +1

      One of the best things to come out of modern computer tech is a better save system. Apart from all that, I have very mixed feelings about modern "advances" in games.

    • @LiamDilley
      @LiamDilley Před rokem

      You need to do a video of you trying that new Os some guy built for it

  • @stndngbr43
    @stndngbr43 Před rokem

    I went to school for computer repair we had to build a TRS 80 Heath kit as our final project to graduate the class. We had to solder all circuit resistor power supply. Good video!

  • @scamperly
    @scamperly Před rokem

    Yesss! More retro stuff!

  • @rickdarnbrough
    @rickdarnbrough Před rokem +11

    Summer and winter games on the C-64, then I graduated to the ColecoVision and spent so many hours playing Jumpman...Jay, thanks for the memories! Great vid and I'm looking forward to your next retro instalment.

  • @grzesiekhallomoto5920
    @grzesiekhallomoto5920 Před 8 měsíci

    That was literally my first PC there!!!! So fun! Thanks Jay

  • @breztech9435
    @breztech9435 Před rokem +3

    The music making with the SID chip is still a thing. You can get MIDI out with MIDI out carts along with CynthCart or with MSSIAH.

  • @apeters6
    @apeters6 Před rokem +4

    One of my favourite gaming memories was back in grade 1 playing the summer and Winter Olympics in the C64 during lunch with friends at the school. Years later my friend picked up a C64 at a yard sale and reignited my love of retro gaming.

  • @tpavan
    @tpavan Před rokem +10

    The 1541 drive uses the same 6510 CPU as the C64 and it costed even more than the C64! The one you have there was the same version but marketed for the VIC20 that's why it has a whiter color. VIC20 was my first computer! Thanks for th4e video, ir brought back memories!! Amiga for the next video! ;-)

    • @eavdmeer
      @eavdmeer Před rokem +1

      The 1541 uses the 6502,not the 6510,but it is clocked at 2 MHz, so twice as fast as the computer

    • @sheep83
      @sheep83 Před rokem

      Fun fact, developers used the 6502 on the drive to execute code enabling many methods of copy protection and fastloading. This is why you see a "True drive" option on many C64 emulators as it emulates this chip fully. It's slower, but many disk images fail to work without it enabled.

    • @tpavan
      @tpavan Před rokem

      @@eavdmeer Correct!! 6502, not 6510, thanks man!!

  • @theshocker_guy5966
    @theshocker_guy5966 Před rokem

    wow this brings back so many memories I had commodore 64 then moved up to a 128, while still having a Atari 2600. Pong was the start of it all. This is when video games were fun. Always like your videos keep up the great work.

  • @thejakel11225
    @thejakel11225 Před rokem

    I can't believe I missed this video when it was first released!!!! This is such a fun and cool video. More please!!!

  • @gsmeaden
    @gsmeaden Před rokem +12

    This brought back memories of my first computer I purchased in 1982. The Commodore VIC 20. My favourite game to play was Richthofen's Revenge. I had to type in the BASIC code by hand from a book of games all written in BASIC that was included . Then save it to the data cassette drive that was a separate peripheral made by Commodore. It was quite the challenge but a lot of fun.
    Great video Jay thanks

    • @irtheLeGiOn
      @irtheLeGiOn Před rokem

      I had a vic20. my favorite games was Poker and The Count.

    • @TheFrankd70
      @TheFrankd70 Před rokem +1

      Same here... Had stacks of the books.
      Best thing ever though was whenever you would accidentally drop a data cassette into your stereo/boombox!

    • @jasonriddell
      @jasonriddell Před rokem +1

      @@TheFrankd70 new meaning for "Electronic music"

    • @br3wsan
      @br3wsan Před rokem

      I had a VIC-20 too! With a data cassette (later replaced by a C64 and a 5.25" floppy drive) Favourite game? Hmm.. I remember liking Gorf (there were 4 different levels, basically different games after the space invaders level only the 1st), Radar Rat Race, and Omega Race are the ones I remember most..

  • @OnkelHucke
    @OnkelHucke Před rokem +23

    Makes me wonder if my old Atari 130XE or my C64 are still at my parents house or if they have thrown it away. And yes, this was a great episode. Fantastic trip down memory lane.

    • @Andrew_Johnson_2973
      @Andrew_Johnson_2973 Před rokem

      Its a great feeling of nostalgia when you know they still work. Ive listed mine on the above comment.

    • @brucethen
      @brucethen Před rokem +2

      I have an atari 800xl on top of my wardrobe, with some cartridges,it should still work

    • @goranandersson3544
      @goranandersson3544 Před rokem +3

      I have my Atari 130XE right here. I recently got a floppy/HD emulator that reads from a SD card. I wrote a cross assembler in C# so that I can write programs for it on my PC.

    • @Andrew_Johnson_2973
      @Andrew_Johnson_2973 Před rokem +1

      Ive got all my old computer out of the loft 2 years ago. Atari 400/800/800XL with 2 1050 disk drives 2 cassette player/ Atari 520STFM/ and a commodore AMIGA A1200 which has an 8mb ram upgrade and cf card for hard drive. Both of them run great. Ive had the A1200 recapped aswell. STs PSU been recapped to but havent fired that up yet.

  • @jimgom3337
    @jimgom3337 Před rokem +1

    Jay you are as always excellent tech reviewer and also great and cool daddy, very good idea to share tech with your daughter and introduce her the old generations tech :) The young generations will apreciate today's tech more if they learn about retro tech we used to have !

  • @Harley_Gauge
    @Harley_Gauge Před rokem

    Love this. I was a Spectrum kid with the 48k until we got the zx Spectrum 128k. And yes. I can still do a spot on impression of the cassette loading games. You all remember!

  • @Korrbzz
    @Korrbzz Před rokem +9

    I was super excited when ya whipped out the GORF cartridge! I played the heck outta that one! 😀 We had a C64, and also a VIC20 before that. My siblings and I used to fight over Radar Rat Race. Good times. Thanks for the awesome episode, Jay & crew. ❤️

    • @KartGuy76
      @KartGuy76 Před rokem +1

      My cousin had the VIC20 and I had the C64. Great times.

  • @Darkpendora
    @Darkpendora Před rokem +22

    My most memorable Commodore 64 games are Spy Hunter and Rolands Rat Race, this video instantly reminded me of those treasures. Please include Commodore Amiga in the wall of retro, those have had such a impact on gaming and music scene. Also, more of this please!!

    • @Dan-Simms
      @Dan-Simms Před rokem +3

      Spy hunter and Ghost Busters were some of my favs

    • @koza2
      @koza2 Před rokem

      NES Super Mario for console, and Commander Keen for PC were my first games I played that I remember.

    • @YouHaventSeenMeRight
      @YouHaventSeenMeRight Před rokem +3

      Nothing beat Impossible Mission. I still can hear "Another Visitor! Stay a while, staaaayyy foooorrreeevvveerr!"

    • @wellhungwarlord
      @wellhungwarlord Před rokem

      Do you mean Radar Rat Race? I remember that!

    • @x-rayz8406
      @x-rayz8406 Před rokem

      Loved the Amiga, used to have a 3D graphics business in the early 90's using Amiga 2000's and Video Toasters.

  • @Daggerow_Varkain
    @Daggerow_Varkain Před rokem

    Thank you Jay ❤ . That brings back so much memory. The C64 was my first one Gaming PC 😃

  • @Derringer2k8
    @Derringer2k8 Před rokem

    My dad always had a computer in the house. A Timex Sinclair, a Coleco ADAM, Commodore 128, then we moved to an 8088 and so on. I spent so much time on the ADAM as it had some fun games despite its cassette drives and limitations. I still have it sitting in my other room.

  • @TheRedOwl
    @TheRedOwl Před rokem +31

    Jay you should do more videos like this, it's fun and interesting path that might wake up nostalgia and memories in some and in others who are younger like me, we get to enjoy and appreciate the tech advancements we got and just to see how such little power was still able to produce gaming in one way or another. Gotta always appreciate tech no matter the age!

  • @fozzee6999
    @fozzee6999 Před rokem +12

    I loved my C64 back in the day. The sound chip was amazing for the time. I'm still remixing some of the old tunes and love doing so. Thanks for sharing this one Jay

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Před rokem +1

      I love how computers have devolved back to solid state memory like the commodore 64 has my that shows how ahead of it's time it was back then

  • @RothAnim
    @RothAnim Před rokem

    Dad won a VIC-20 in a raffle when we were kids (About 1981, I think?), so that was our first family computer. No floppy disk, just a datacassette tape. He ended up buying a Wico Command Control joystick, because he kept snapping the original ones. We used it much more as a game console like the Atari, but we did some BASIC programming lessons on it, which served us surprisingly well later in life.
    Dad would later buy a Mac Plus for his home office in 1986, along with an NEC laser printer. It's kind of amazing just how enormous a leap that was, from toy to productivity tool.

  • @Strykuspider
    @Strykuspider Před rokem

    I enjoyed playing on my dad's 286, 386 and the 486. We played a lot of different flight games. I remember him setting up two different computers linked with a cable so we could fly head-to-head dog fighting. Good times!

  • @YellaChickenOG
    @YellaChickenOG Před rokem +12

    Great video, really fun to watch Jay buzzing from his memories. My first machine was a Speccy (Sinclair Spectrum 48). My mum bought it second hand for me and I remember the first game I tried on it being Jet Pac and I was hooked. I'll never forget that signature screeching sound of Speccy tapes loading and waiting for ages watching all the coloured lines shifting up and down the screen.
    Great memories.

  • @diogoubermensch9255
    @diogoubermensch9255 Před rokem +12

    This video is pure gold. I was so happy for Jay when the C64 finally worked!

  • @willj5403
    @willj5403 Před rokem

    I had one too !!!! Before the Commondore 64k we had a Texas instrument PC that had like a landing strip for it game cartridges . This video brought back my childhood THANKS JAY !!!!! I need this !!!!

  • @realShadowKat
    @realShadowKat Před rokem +2

    I still have my C64 and whilst my original color monitor is long gone I still have an amber CRT I used later on. My cartridge slot was always populated with "FASTLOAD" which was some sort of booster which made loading much more quick in most cases, and a simple Shift-Run/Stop was the quick load. Additionally, you could do /* to load and (I think) ->filename to save. Pretty good piece of kit at the time.

  • @toufusoup
    @toufusoup Před rokem +4

    Childhood PCs.. man. Pentium CPU, GT220, and 80GB HDDs. A baby compared to the commodore, but it brings memories of Minecraft Alpha TNT Cannons and Stick Figure animations.

    • @toufusoup
      @toufusoup Před rokem

      @@username8644 it wasn’t a competition mate. I even said that it’s a “baby compared to the commodore.”

  • @allenhilburn8686
    @allenhilburn8686 Před rokem +10

    That was fun to watch. I got a C64 when it first came out and paid premium price for it. Later, when the price came down, I could have purchased 6 of them for what I had paid. The original version had orange function keys. Later, I moved up to a C129, then a C128D and then to an Amiga before finally selling out an going PC. Great memories... I actually still have all of this stuff, and now have the urge to dig it out and see if it still works. Great video!