101 MS DOS GAMES (1978-1997)

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  • čas přidán 12. 11. 2017
  • I've rounded up 101 nostalgic DOS games I could find that I actually played myself. From Space Invaders to Imperium Galactica. These are 101 MS DOS games I played.
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    Find out about my gaming in the 80s:
    ► www.lightwaveal.com/my-gaming...
    0:00 1978 Space Invaders
    0:12 1982 Olympic Decathlon
    0:24 1982 Paratrooper
    0:37 1983 Digger
    0:50 1984 Alley Cat
    1:02 1984 Kings Quest
    1:15 1984 Sopwith (fp.exe)
    1:28 1986 Arctic Fox
    1:40 1986 Arkanoid
    1:53 1986 Chessmaster 2000
    2:07 1987 Leisure Suit Larry
    2:18 1988 Battle Chess
    2:34 1988 F-19 Stealth Fighter
    2:46 1988 Jetfighter
    3:00 1988 Silpheed
    3:12 1989 Budokan: The Martial Spirit
    3:23 1989 Golden Axe
    3:36 1989 Risk: The World Conquest Game
    3:48 1989 SimCity
    4:00 1989 Super Off Road
    4:13 1989 Xenon 2
    4:26 1990 Dyna Blaster
    4:38 1990 Hugo's House of Horrors
    4:51 1990 Mario Brothers VGA
    5:04 1990 Red Baron
    5:16 1990 Rick Dangerous 2
    5:29 1990 Ski or Die
    5:41 1990 Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe
    5:52 1990 Stunts
    6:04 1990 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
    6:16 1990 The Secret of Monkey Island
    6:28 1991 Crystal Caves
    6:40 1991 Gods
    6:52 1991 Gorillas
    7:05 1991 Home Alone
    7:18 1991 Jimmy White's Whirlwind Snooker
    7:30 1991 Lemmings
    7:41 1991 Monkey Island 2: Le Chuck's Revenge
    7:54 1991 Nibbles
    8:06 1991 Populous II
    8:18 1991 Scorched Earth
    8:30 1991 Sid Meier's Civilization
    8:43 1992 Castles
    8:55 1992 Dune II
    9:07 1992 Flashback
    9:19 1992 Formula One Grand Prix
    9:32 1992 Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis
    9:43 1992 Jill of the Jungle
    9:55 1992 Links 386 Pro
    10:08 1992 Monopoly Deluxe
    10:20 1992 Prince of Persia (SORRY - 1989! 😱)
    10:33 1992 Wolfenstein 3D
    10:47 1992 Zool
    10:57 1993 Cannon Fodder
    11:09 1993 Day of the Tentacle
    11:21 1993 Doom
    11:34 1993 Freddy Pharkas Frontier Pharmacist
    11:46 1993 IndyCar Racing
    11:58 1993 Master of Orion
    12:11 1993 Premier Manager 2
    12:23 1993 SimCity 2000
    12:36 1993 Slicks n Slide
    12:48 1993 Star Wars: X-Wing
    13:01 1993 Syndicate
    13:13 1993 The Incredible Machine
    13:25 1994 Cool Spot
    13:37 1994 Doom II
    13:50 1994 Heretic
    14:01 1994 Magic Carpet
    14:14 1994 Quarantine
    14:27 1994 Sid Meier's Colonization
    14:39 1994 Star Wars: TIE Fighter
    14:52 1994 The Settlers
    15:04 1994 Theme Park
    15:17 1994 UFO: Enemy Unknown
    15:29 1995 Command and Conquer
    15:42 1995 Descent
    15:54 1995 Destruction Derby
    16:06 1995 Flight Simulator 5.1
    16:18 1995 Hexen: Beyond Heretic
    16:30 1995 MechWarrior 2: 31st Century Combat
    16:41 1995 Need for Speed
    16:54 1995 Rise of the Triad
    17:06 1995 Screamer
    17:19 1995 Slipstream 5000
    17:32 1995 Star Trek: The Next Generation - A Final Unity
    17:44 1995 Star Wars: Dark Forces
    17:58 1995 Worms
    18:10 1995 Hi-Octane
    18:21 1996 Abuse
    18:33 1996 Big Red Racing
    18:45 1996 Death Rally
    18:57 1996 Descent II
    19:09 1996 Duke Nukem 3D
    19:22 1996 F-22 Lightning II
    19:35 1996 Master of Orion 2: Battle at Antares
    19:47 1996 Quake
    20:00 1996 Sid Meier's Civilization II
    20:12 1996 The Settlers II
    20:24 1996 Tomb Raider
    20:37 1997 Carmageddon
    20:49 1997 Imperium Galactica
    ► Check out my blog: www.lightwaveal.com
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    #DOS #DOSgaming #DOSgames
  • Hry

Komentáře • 2,2K

  • @viktorderka6348
    @viktorderka6348 Před 3 lety +423

    I just watched my childhood in 20 minutes... I'm crying. Want to go back :D

    • @Foozefighter
      @Foozefighter Před 3 lety +12

      im 34 im crying with you xD btw i still play these

    • @sandeepkumar35
      @sandeepkumar35 Před 3 lety +3

      Were you not in your childhood for 1 minute 20 seconds?

    • @thewr0ngchild
      @thewr0ngchild Před 3 lety +6

      Me too! I just want to go and spend a day sitting in front of my win 95 machine lol. I learned how to use MS DOS at like age 9 lol. As in I fully understood how it worked etc.

    • @thomasshelbyy5260
      @thomasshelbyy5260 Před 3 lety +5

      me too and finally find one game i search sbout years Rick dangerous omg

    • @R4GNAR0G
      @R4GNAR0G Před 3 lety +3

      You can go back.
      Just install the emulator and download all the game and have fun.

  • @rschmidt9495
    @rschmidt9495 Před 3 lety +212

    The mid to late 90s was the golden age of gaming. If you played games during this time consider yourself blessed.

    • @fixedcross
      @fixedcross Před rokem +5

      once in fifteen billion years time window

    • @Stopinvadingmyhardware
      @Stopinvadingmyhardware Před rokem +1

      No, you mean video games. Then, it’s a no you’re out of your mind.

    • @kensukadventures628
      @kensukadventures628 Před rokem +2

      @@RazaXML Aye, nothing beats walking into an arcade, or even a sandwich shop and seeing an arcade machine you had not seen before. In an age where virtually no one had computers, then the only ones people had were terrible - arcade machines and even early pong consoles had a magic to them that is just not present on any game now. Also the games had gameplay, modern games now have very little addicitve game play its morel like directing a movie now.

    • @Populous3Tutorials
      @Populous3Tutorials Před rokem +12

      the golden age of gaming is whatever time you gamed when you were young
      it changes for every person :)

    • @Metalwrath2
      @Metalwrath2 Před rokem

      lol no

  • @timetraveler2518
    @timetraveler2518 Před rokem +10

    I remembered them all. My favorite DOS game of all time was Sid Meier's Civilization. I played Civilization for 17 straight hours without a rest except quick toilet break.

  • @NickHoddinott
    @NickHoddinott Před 2 lety +58

    This brought back sooo many happy memories. Thanks you.
    What really stands out is how much Doom then Quake were a leap forward. It was mainly incremental gains then Doom blew everything else away. Many games then built off the Doom engine, and Quake comes along and blows them away.
    It was a great time to grow up in.

    • @Coats2112
      @Coats2112 Před rokem +7

      Most people forget that Wolfenstein 3D, was the game changer. Doom and Quake were just more popular clones.

    • @Zellonous
      @Zellonous Před rokem +2

      @@Coats2112 but since the same team made all three it's not a big deal. Nature of progression

    • @kensukadventures628
      @kensukadventures628 Před rokem

      Doom was always just an upgrade to 3dmonster maze for me.

    • @dgmt1
      @dgmt1 Před rokem

      @@Zellonous Ultima Underworld came out before both Wolfenstein and Doom and was a huge influence on the development of first person perspective games. The ID games are only remembered more nowadays because they found a wider mainstream audience.

    • @dgmt1
      @dgmt1 Před rokem +1

      Ultima Underworld came out 19 months before doom and even wolfenstein 3d while having a more advanced 3D engine. John Romero was a big fan of Origin and Ultima Underworld almost certainly influenced the development of Doom. While underworld itself built off earlier tile based exploration RPGs such as dungeon master, UU went on to establish the genre of open exploration FPS games which in turn nowadays are represented by huge titles like Skryim and Minecraft. Doom played an incredibly important role in making PC gaming mainstream but engine and gameplay-wise it was evolutionary and not revolutionary.

  • @henrygpk
    @henrygpk Před 4 lety +752

    The days when installing a game in DOS, when you were 12 years old, felt like a game victory in itself

    • @atlante4368
      @atlante4368 Před 4 lety +6

      @Why So Serious Way too expensive for those of us in the third world

    • @LightwaveAl
      @LightwaveAl  Před 4 lety +7

      GLQuake?

    • @LMTR14
      @LMTR14 Před 4 lety

      no that is not a correct sentence, try again IDIOT

    • @TheJosep70
      @TheJosep70 Před 4 lety +38

      I hated autoexec.bat and config.sys

    • @biglungsprod5617
      @biglungsprod5617 Před 4 lety +1

      oh yes thats how it was

  • @MrKreamous
    @MrKreamous Před 3 lety +19

    Who didn't choose quickly "Port 220, DMA 1, IRQ 5" thinking he was an IT expert ? nostalgia over 9000

    • @oolmfoxz8170
      @oolmfoxz8170 Před 3 lety +2

      soundblaster ! my first job consist to config strap of lot hardware...

    • @waytothewill
      @waytothewill Před 4 měsíci

      IRQ 5 or IRQ 7, that is the question.
      (always been an IRQ 6 guy myself).

    • @Sam-wz6ns
      @Sam-wz6ns Před 3 měsíci

      ... I even did a library in assembler for quickbasic for the sound blaster pro lol hardware from that era was really fun!! Now i would need to read a 1000 pages opcodes list and it wouldnt work lol

  • @davidbedard6824
    @davidbedard6824 Před 2 lety +27

    The Sierra games were so much fun. Kings Quest, Space Quest, Police Quest, Gold Rush. We had the Apple II GS system. My older brother and I used to get up early on Saturday morning and play those ones for hours. Was always a treat when our dad took us to the computer store near our house to check out all the new Sierra games.

    • @janetharmon1242
      @janetharmon1242 Před rokem +1

      David Bedard, I was a computer science major who graduated in 1983. My best friend got a job with Sierra and programmed one of the Quest games. I lost touch with her but have at least 1 Quest game!

    • @Fighter4Street
      @Fighter4Street Před 4 měsíci

      I remember playing those Quest games on my families computers back when I was around 10-12 years old. They were lots of fun and you had to figure everything out yourself, no looking up tips anywhere.
      I remember getting to a new screen or area in these games was a huge accomplishment.

    • @bdleo300
      @bdleo300 Před 2 měsíci

      Quest for Glory - the best Sierra games

  • @cc1912
    @cc1912 Před 2 lety +35

    Man, I remember being 5 or 6 years old, my pops teaching me DOS commands, playing through tons of iconic and sometimes obscure shareware; the formative years. Games have come a long way...it's fascinating to see the evolution over a few decades.
    Glad they're still playable and being ported to newer platforms so younger generations can experience these gems.

    • @sinki19841984
      @sinki19841984 Před rokem +1

      I was learning them on my own at 6 years old. Less than a year later I was formatting and reinstalling MS-DOS (Don't forget to create a bootdisk first!) and ripping the thing apart.
      It's a miracle I dont work in IT...

    • @red-winged_blackbird
      @red-winged_blackbird Před rokem

      YES! emulators are a gift for those who don't own the platforms or know DOS coding.

    • @Slickz0r
      @Slickz0r Před 10 měsíci

      same story here man, amazing times... looking for this one game though, a horiztonal platformer which progressed from earth (i think) to space on the final levels. Any clue ? :D

  • @aussieson
    @aussieson Před rokem +8

    It’s amazing how many games I remembered playing. Awesome blast from the past

  • @mimimambo
    @mimimambo Před 4 lety +15

    seeing that dos command line for the directory path and exe file totally hits the spot. bless you for uploading this man!

  • @Shuyin781
    @Shuyin781 Před 3 lety +33

    I remember spending hours on many of these DOS games and more when I was a kid.
    Thank you for the nostalgia mate :)

  • @marcusdumitru
    @marcusdumitru Před rokem +8

    WOW! I played at least half of these titles! Best time of life! Countless hours on these games. Each new release was the ultimate. Graphics advanced so fast! I enjoyed each one.

  • @MrTom-Songwriter-Composer
    @MrTom-Songwriter-Composer Před 4 lety +182

    (I corrected my old post, I was referring to AT form factor) One of my most favorite computer gaming memories back then is taking a small vacation, staying home and playing Doom on a 486 DX66 - AT form factor during winter time. I remember one day it was snowing outside, and I was happy and warm inside playing doom. Those are great memories. :-)

    • @starmc26
      @starmc26 Před 3 lety +3

      What's a 486 AT?.. All i know of is SX and DX.

    • @wallyprichard7451
      @wallyprichard7451 Před 3 lety +9

      I remember when the 486 DX 33 Mhz was lightning fast. My first computer was the 286 12 Mhz.

    • @lordhung7013
      @lordhung7013 Před 3 lety +5

      I had a 486 dx4 100, I was king of the nerds for awhile at work!🤩 What a great processor it was.

    • @burntyper
      @burntyper Před 3 lety

      @@starmc26 don't know either

    • @Mange070
      @Mange070 Před 2 lety +1

      @@starmc26 Maybe he meant that it was inside a AT-chassi,,,not ATX.....just a guess

  • @MichaelHarto
    @MichaelHarto Před 4 lety +31

    Man, alley cat brings back my childhood memories

    • @Radii_DC
      @Radii_DC Před 3 lety +2

      Absolutely. I was very proficient at it. Also the Digger. I miss so much those times.

    • @MichaelHarto
      @MichaelHarto Před 3 lety +1

      @@Radii_DC hahaha yeaaa! The digger! Man the theme song instantly plays in my head.
      There's also burger man, and that one game who slings beer glass.

    • @oolmfoxz8170
      @oolmfoxz8170 Před 3 lety

      something I remember the music...

    • @Nimbus1951
      @Nimbus1951 Před 3 lety

      That game was sooo magical to me... I must have been around 8 or 9.

  • @ayudatengopiedrasenlosrino3786

    0:00: 1. Space Invaders (1978)
    0:11: 2. Olympic Decalthlon (1982)
    0:25: 3. Paratrooper (1982)
    0:38: 4. Digger (1983)
    0:49: 5. Alley Cat (1984)
    1:03: 6. King's Quest (1984)
    1:17: 7. Sopwith (1984)
    1:28: 8. Arctic Fox (1986)
    1:40: 9. Arkanoid (1986)
    1:54: 10. Chessmaster 2000 (1986)
    2:06: 11. Leisure Suit Larry (1987)
    2:18: 12. Battle Chess (1988)
    2:34: 13. F-19 Stealth Fighter (1988)
    2:45: 14. Jetfighter (1988)
    2:59: 15. Silpheed (1988)
    3:13: 16. Budokan: The Martial Spirit (1989)
    3:24: 17. Golden Axe (1989)
    3:36: 18. Risk: The World Conquest Game (1989)
    3:49: 19. SimCity (1989)
    4:00: 20. Super Off Road (1989)
    4:13: 21. Xenon 2 (1989)
    4:26: 22. Dyna Blaster (1990)
    4:38: 23. Hugo's House of Horrors (1990)
    4:52: 24. Mario Brothers VGA (1990)
    5:04: 25. Red Baron (1990)
    5:17: 26. Rick Dangerous 2 (1990)
    5:30: 27. Ski or Die (1990)
    5:40: 28. Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe (1990)
    5:52: 29. Stunts (1990)
    6:05: 30. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990)
    6:17: 31. The Secret of Monkey Island (1990)
    6:29: 32. Crystal Caves (1991)
    6:40: 33. Gods (1991)
    6:53: 34. Gorillas (1991)
    7:06: 35. Home Alone (1991)
    7:19: 36. Jimmy White's Whirlwind Snooker (1991)
    7:29: 37. Lemmings (1991)
    7:41: 38. Monkey Island 2: Le Chuck's Revenge (1991)
    7:54: 39. Nibbles (1991)
    8:07: 40. Populous II (1991)
    8:19: 41. Scorched Earth (1991)
    8:31: 42. Sid Meier's Civilization (1991)
    8:43: 43. Castles (1992)
    8:56: 44. Dune II (1992)
    9:07: 45. Flashback (1992)
    9:19: 46. Formula One Grand Prix (1992)
    9:33: 47. Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis (1992)
    9:43: 48. Jill of the Jungle (1992)
    9:52: 49. Links 386 Pro (1992)
    10:08: 50. Monopoly Deluxe (1992)
    10:21: 51. Prince of Persia (1992)
    10:34: 52. Wolfenstein 3D (1992)
    10:46: 53. Zool (1992)
    10:58: 54. Cannon Fodder (1993)
    11:08: 55. Day of the Tentacle (1993)
    11:21: 56. DOOM (1993)
    11:35: 57. Freddy Pharkas Frontier Pharmacist (1993)
    11:46: 58. IndyCar Racing (1993)
    11:58: 59. Master of Orion (1993)
    12:12: 60. Frontier Manager 2 (1993)
    12:24: 61. SimCity 2000 (1993)
    12:37: 62. Sticks n Slide (1993)
    12:43: 63. Star Wars: X-Wing (1993)
    13:02: 64. Syndicate (1993)
    13:14: 65. The Incredible Machine (1993)
    13:26: 66. Cool Spot (1994)
    13:34: 67. DOOM II (1994)
    13:51: 68. Heretic (1994)
    14:01: 69. Magic Carpet (1994)
    14:14: 70. Quarantine (1994)
    14:28: 71. Sid Meier's Colonization (1994)
    14:41: 72. Star Wars: TIE Fighter (1994)
    14:53: 73. The Settlers (1994)
    15:06: 74. Theme Park (1994)
    15:17: 75. UFO: Enemy Unknown (1994)
    15:29: 76. Command & Conquer (1995)
    15:42: 77. Descent (1995)
    15:54: 78. Destruction Derby (1995)
    16:07: 79. Flight Simulator 5.1 (1995)
    16:17: 80. Hexen: Beyond Heretic (1995)
    16:29: 81. MechWarrior 2: 31st Century Combat (1995)
    16:41: 82. Need for Speed (1995)
    16:54: 83. Rise of the Triad (1995)
    17:07: 84. Screamer (1995)
    17:20: 85. Slipstream 5000 (1995)
    17:33: 86. Star Trek: A Next Generation - A Final Unity (1995)
    17:45: 87. Star Wars: Dark Forces (1995)
    17:58: 88. Worms (1995)
    18:08: 89. Hi-Octane (1995)
    18:21: 90. Abuse (1996)
    18:35: 91. Big Red Racing (1996)
    18:47: 92. Death Rally (1996)
    18:58: 93. Descent II (1996)
    19:11: 94. Duke Nukem 3D (1996)
    19:23: 95. F-22 Lightning II (1996)
    19:36: 96. Master of Orion 2: Battle at Autares (1996)
    19:49: 97. Quake (1996)
    20:01: 98. Sid Meier's Civilization II (1996)
    20:13: 99. The Settlers II (1996)
    20:24: 100. Tomb Raider (1996)
    20:37: 101. Carmageddon (1997)
    20:48: 102. Imperium Galactica (1997)

    • @ischolten9021
      @ischolten9021 Před rokem

      Can you help me find a game? It's very old, prob ms dos. Can you choose 1 knights, one is brown and has thicker armor, the other one is white but kills easier. The game has alot of stairs and bats flying around who can hurt you. There's a final boss that is some sort of skeleton throwing bones. The rest I can't really remember. Pls help

    • @ayudatengopiedrasenlosrino3786
      @ayudatengopiedrasenlosrino3786 Před rokem

      @@ischolten9021 I'm 14 years old, so I don't know much about DOS games, so I'm sorry, I have no idea what you're talking about.

    • @asifahmed6568
      @asifahmed6568 Před 9 měsíci

      Thanks mate

    • @frequenco5545
      @frequenco5545 Před 7 měsíci

      Only 10 upvotes? Your work is underappreciated, my good sir! Have an upvote!

    • @LightwaveAl
      @LightwaveAl  Před 7 měsíci

      Have another one from me too, although I did already put all the timestamps in the description when I uploaded the video. My subsequent DOS Games videos also have all the timestamps in the descriptions 👍🏼👍🏼

  • @daflipflop
    @daflipflop Před 3 lety +11

    What a nice medley of video game nostalgia, certainly brings back memories! Some favorites I personally would add to his list, Commando (1985), Operation Wolf(1987), Test Drive(1987) and Street Rod (1989).

  • @bgates275
    @bgates275 Před 4 lety +32

    Anyone remember when you tried to run a game in MSDOS, I'm thinking Sierra specifically, and you'd often get a message saying you didn't have enough expanded memory? If you were lucky, the install file of the game contained an option to create a boot disk, and you'd have to boot up with the boot disk every time you wanted to run the game and it worked. If you were unlucky, you'd have to edit the autoexec.bat and config.sys files yourself and play around with it until it did.

    • @runningkees9125
      @runningkees9125 Před 3 lety +1

      HAHAH THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT I DID!

    • @barry3602
      @barry3602 Před 3 lety

      Yes but you could extend it with EMS.

    • @oolmfoxz8170
      @oolmfoxz8170 Před 3 lety +1

      QEMM !!!

    • @MXB2001
      @MXB2001 Před 2 lety

      Oh I have several boot up options for DOS to maximize either extended, expanded or conventional RAM. Aces of the Pacific is a monster that needs 611,xxx free bytes. Barely enough room for DOS itself, everything else had to be stripped such as mouse drivers (not needed there).

    • @rrwholloway
      @rrwholloway Před rokem +1

      And that is how as a ten year old I learned basic dos commands. Still comes in useful to this day.

  • @konstantinzhukov4025
    @konstantinzhukov4025 Před 4 lety +283

    Wow. All of my entire life in 21 mins
    PS: never regret it

    • @ScorpiusZA.
      @ScorpiusZA. Před 4 lety +5

      Yup - I am amazed at how many of those games I played. There are a few I didn't, but quite a few I did.
      I was actually this list would include a game I have been trying to remember the name of for ages. I remember how it plays, but the name has eluded me - Sadly not on the list.

    • @malvinapushkova2386
      @malvinapushkova2386 Před 4 lety +10

      I can only envy you. This is childhood that I dream to have (but all my childhood I had to work in the village garden and take care of the old grandmother). Someday, when I can afford myself to have a lot of free time, I will get old PC and will play all these games!

    • @LightwaveAl
      @LightwaveAl  Před 4 lety +3

      That’s a good aspiration to have 👍🏼

    • @terr4byte
      @terr4byte Před 4 lety +1

      word :D

    • @terr4byte
      @terr4byte Před 4 lety

      @@malvinapushkova2386 be careful if you buy the first big box dos-game from your childhood on ebay youre addicted... XD

  • @Silks
    @Silks Před 4 lety +6

    Seeing Digger warms my heart

  • @blackhill8286
    @blackhill8286 Před rokem +2

    Golden age of gaming. Love and miss this time.
    Thanks for the great video.

  • @Stratelier
    @Stratelier Před 4 lety +22

    My parents were interested in the Sierra adventure games of the day, so we grew up with a lot of King's Quest and Space Quest.

    • @markb8556
      @markb8556 Před 4 lety +1

      Most of the Sierra games I played were by Al Lowe

    • @Alex_Eicher
      @Alex_Eicher Před 4 lety

      Kings Quest 7 the princeless bride and Space Quest 6 Roger Wilco

    •  Před 4 lety

      For me there was Heros Quest, later known as the Quest for Glory series

    • @walterjeffreys40
      @walterjeffreys40 Před 4 lety

      I grew up with KQ1-4, Leisure Suit, and Police Quest 1 & 2

    • @dystopia_lp
      @dystopia_lp Před 3 lety +1

      I actually learned English playing Police Quest II. Bains, I got you

  • @johnvaldez8830
    @johnvaldez8830 Před 3 lety +6

    I didn't see Starflight...which by in large took many hours of my time for some of the most immersive game play and discovery. So many great games though that I did see, play and enjoy. What a great time in gaming history!

  • @reevesc1986
    @reevesc1986 Před 4 měsíci +1

    How fitting is the music to this video. Good choice! Long live MS DOS gaming. We salute you!

  • @jandro_ra
    @jandro_ra Před 4 lety +5

    Alley Cat, Stunts, Monkey Island, Prince of Persia, Theme Park, UFO, Worms... I love that days

  • @stormykeep9213
    @stormykeep9213 Před 4 lety +58

    Spent my teen years in the DOS era...that was a very special time, trips to Babbage's just browsing the big box games, even when I couldn't buy any was better than reading a book :) Heck, my younger co-workers bug me when they start talking about the latest Playstation/Xbox games, as I always bring up DOS and they give you that weird look...I feel bad for them..they missed out. Thanks for the vid!

    • @oolmfoxz8170
      @oolmfoxz8170 Před 3 lety +1

      int 21....

    • @godaistudios
      @godaistudios Před 2 lety +1

      Funny that. Born in '76 myself, so I got used to both, though I really was more about console gaming. Still, I had always wanted a computer and spent plenty of time playing on a commodore 64 in a public school. When my parents finally bought a computer in the early 90's, I learned DOS inside and out as much as I could. It proved useful for me as I would later wind up in tech support. Had plenty of games to play with lots of shareware floppy disks. One of the first games that comes to mind was Zeliard. I remember lots of other games published by Sierra.
      That said, I still enjoy gaming, be it PC or console, so be it a throwback game or the "latest and greatest" entry, I have plenty to pick from.

  • @InnerHacking
    @InnerHacking Před rokem +4

    95,96,97 were definitely the golden era. I used to read all magazines I could get my hands on about games and the new technological advancements like sound blaster sound cards and voodoo graphic cards. These games were so much entertaining and addictive than modern games of today with their 100gb downloads that most people now just play for a couple days and discard as fast as baby diapers. Oh my sweet little 13 year old me.... Good times!

  • @mmmikeyL
    @mmmikeyL Před 4 lety +21

    Alley Cat was my jam. I still hear the sound of that dog coming for me...

  • @wleon4068
    @wleon4068 Před rokem +5

    There was a certain excitement we had when loading up these games. There are many on here that I became addicted too. I've not seen the whole video clip - as yet - but one game that should be mentioned is I.S.S JANE SEYMORE! The depth to that was astonishing, Then there was Jimmy White's Whirlwind Snooker [a classic], Speedball [1 and 2], Dungeon Master, I.K karate, Stunt Car Racer, Damocles, Buggy Boy, Gods, Populus, Kick Off and Kick Off 2, Spy v Spy, Gauntlet, Sensible Soccer, Formula One Grand Prix, Arakanoid: Revenge of Doh, and many others. All absolutely addictive. Just think, there were no microtransactions [ as we would get now.}.
    No paying for extra levels, and all of that. We received the whole package. More often than not the games came with beautiful instructions { more like 'books'}, and wonderful packaging too. We really did get our money's worth. Now, in this age of digital gaming? It's simply not the same anymore. We will never get those days back again when we played DOS games. It really was a golden era of home gaming.

  • @redbeard19833
    @redbeard19833 Před 4 lety +13

    Magic Carpet blew my mind when I was a kid (9).

  • @daze507
    @daze507 Před 4 lety +17

    Ah Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis, that was an hell of an adventure game.

  • @kpax7897
    @kpax7897 Před 3 lety +11

    scorched earth was amazing - 99% of these titles were amazing but a game with such poor graphics compared to what was on the market the gameplay was unreal !! best game to play against friends.

  • @williamdiffin28
    @williamdiffin28 Před 3 lety +2

    _And_ you provided a link to the music; that is superfly cool of you bro
    I played these:
    Space Invaders - coin-op
    Chessmaster 2000 - 520STFM
    F-19 Stealth Fighter - 520STFM
    SimCity - 520STFM
    Red Baron - 486DX66
    Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe - 520STFM
    Lemmings - 520STFM
    Formula One Grand Prix - 520STFM
    Cannon Fodder - 520STFM
    Doom - PS1
    Doom II - PS1
    Heretic - DOSBox
    Sid Meier's Civilization II - Steem
    Tomb Raider - PS1

  • @perwestermark8920
    @perwestermark8920 Před 4 lety +7

    I counted to 40 that I played. Probably a few more I have forgotten I played. And a number of favourites missing from this collection. But great video - was nice to relive old times.

  • @scorpiongamer2555
    @scorpiongamer2555 Před 4 lety +5

    Never got bored with those games..I still want to play some of them

  • @Nimbus1951
    @Nimbus1951 Před 3 lety +7

    Oooh the memories... so many good times, such an incredible world it was.

  • @chrisjlocke
    @chrisjlocke Před 3 lety +16

    7:02 - Gorillas was written in QBasic (came with DOS). You could press [Ctrl] and [C] to break the code and amend things. This was intentional (both that you could break into it and that it was written in QBasic) - It was actually included in DOS 5 as a demonstration of that programming language.

    • @nissimtrifonov5314
      @nissimtrifonov5314 Před rokem +1

      @Giuliano Matrix I was convinced that learning more qbasic commands would enable me to write cool programs... So I went though the help for hours, and read the documentation on each function and subroutine. As I was teaching myself at that point, I did not know that I was supposed to learn basics like loops, and writing functions.. But, later on, I did manage to write some cool programs after all

  • @bakmeivancouver
    @bakmeivancouver Před 4 lety +36

    So much nostalgia. Loved every minute of this. There were some epic Origin games I wish you got in here like Wing Commander, Wing Commander 2, and the Ultima series. And Star Control. :)

    • @s7ai
      @s7ai Před 3 lety +2

      I was just thinking the same 😌 Wing Commander: Privateer and especially Ultima Underworld / System Shock were exceptional games

  • @flurng
    @flurng Před 4 lety +7

    So cool that you included QBasic Gorillas & Nibbles! Those games are the very thing that got me into programming so many years ago! Spent hours modding the game, so that whenever my brother would enter his name, the screen would read "Asshole", etc.... great fun!

  • @theBeags
    @theBeags Před 2 lety +1

    I'm so glad I clicked this thumbnail. Thank you for sharing this!

  • @joegen4577
    @joegen4577 Před rokem

    Thanks for compiling this.. remembered the times staying up late at night playing and figuring out how to solve those adventure games without any walkthrough.... and the feeling of accomplishment finishing a game...

  • @brawlkarter
    @brawlkarter Před 4 lety +6

    This was amazing. There were a few games missing IMO, especially Terminal Velocity. Even still, loved the video!!

    • @LightwaveAl
      @LightwaveAl  Před 4 lety

      (Read the description) 😉
      But thanks a lot! 🙌🏼

  • @sebastiannobile758
    @sebastiannobile758 Před 4 lety +15

    Great watching it. Played some of them as a child from the mid 80s on.

  • @marugg78
    @marugg78 Před rokem +1

    This brought up some long forgotten memories. Half the video had me saying "oh yeah, I remember that one". Lol

  • @deebugger
    @deebugger Před 2 měsíci +1

    80s kid here - from digger (I'm still waiting for the movie..) and alleycat (amazing soundtrack) to Larry trying to buy condoms at the local pharmacy (PERVERT!).
    One game I didn't see here was the incredible and expansive Star Control 2 - so many hours spent on that wonderful game.

  • @InnerHacking
    @InnerHacking Před rokem +3

    Screamer and Slipstream 5000 right next to it were for me the best games in the genre back then. How awesome you've put them together!

  • @BradiKal61
    @BradiKal61 Před 4 lety +3

    Stealth Fighter, Scorched Earth, Descent, Descent 2, Hexen.... all games that I loved

  • @CristianVasquez
    @CristianVasquez Před rokem +1

    Thank you man. At the time I sold these, and they were magical. I missed only 'castles'

  • @blademontane
    @blademontane Před rokem +1

    I'm glad I watched this. For years there was a racing game I could never find again, but it came up in this. Big red racing. Tons of memories in that game.

  • @runningcommentary1231
    @runningcommentary1231 Před 4 lety +10

    Descent 2 was one of my favourites. Good soundtrack too... would liked to have seen Blood in there. Strangers in the night, exchanging glances.....

  • @InfernoAge
    @InfernoAge Před 2 lety +5

    то чувство, когда dos-игры круче современных. с большим смыслом и харизмой)

  • @sddingo6538
    @sddingo6538 Před 2 lety +2

    What a wild generation we are. We were around for the genesis of the internet and gaming yet we still had the roots of the “stay outside till it’s dark” kids. Bridged a strange generational gap, we did.

  • @willemkilian9563
    @willemkilian9563 Před 2 lety +1

    Oh wow, I saw games here that I have forgotten I played! Thanks for bringing back memories!

  • @TheJosep70
    @TheJosep70 Před 4 lety +3

    I remember when they added a color strip to the Space Invaders screen in arcades and we were blown away. I feel old.

  • @tytusmastah
    @tytusmastah Před 4 lety +3

    Settlers II - I love tuning transportation system to speed up construction. That's why I run this game under Dosbox even now.

    • @Foozefighter
      @Foozefighter Před 3 lety

      i have not played 2 yet, still busy finishing 1 because i did not understand it as a kid lol

  • @pedrosolfa
    @pedrosolfa Před 2 lety +2

    Amazing video. Very nostalgic. Thank you very much.

  • @robintst
    @robintst Před 2 lety +1

    Wow, I had so many of these for the Amiga back in the day.

  • @rubenhayk5514
    @rubenhayk5514 Před 3 lety +4

    some things in these games was so frustrating,like controls or bugs or just cruel game mechanics that punished hard for mistake

  • @EverPaintP
    @EverPaintP Před rokem +3

    1983 - digger is my all time favourite, thank you for this compilation

    • @Osprey850
      @Osprey850 Před rokem +1

      I had no idea that it was that old. I was playing it into the 90s. I really dug that game.

    • @LightwaveAl
      @LightwaveAl  Před rokem

      I’ll be honest, it was one of my favourites too

  • @nevinleiby
    @nevinleiby Před 21 dnem +1

    Oh yeah, F19, Chessmaster 200 and Battle Chess. And omg, Golden Axe! Simcity, Super Off Road, Red Baron, TMNT (the non-arcade one), Wolfenstein, Cannon Fodder, Doom, C&C, Descent, Mech Warrior 2. Rise of the Triad?!? Duke and Quake

  • @keblakev
    @keblakev Před rokem +1

    Thank you so much for making this video. I have been looking for that game for years. "Descent II".

    • @LightwaveAl
      @LightwaveAl  Před rokem

      It was great fun! Really good in multiplayer 😃

  • @rghose1885
    @rghose1885 Před 4 lety +10

    Great compilation out of so many titles to choose between. Really great to remember all these games I played throughout all the years. Thank you :-)

    • @oolmfoxz8170
      @oolmfoxz8170 Před 3 lety +1

      someone miss : wing commander, atrain, populous, pirate(non dos)...

  • @LeiskaDaKilla
    @LeiskaDaKilla Před 4 lety +5

    Wow! There was maybe 30 games that are not just great, but LEGENDARY! \o/

  • @j0kaM0oksville
    @j0kaM0oksville Před 9 měsíci

    This made me travel to when I was 10 years old. I had forgotten about 3 of this games! Thank you 😊

  • @stesilaus1688
    @stesilaus1688 Před rokem

    This presents an excellent and comprehensive selection. Well done!

  • @mk4345
    @mk4345 Před 4 lety +14

    Nostalgia! So many awesome childhood memories :)

  • @intuneknight9681
    @intuneknight9681 Před 3 lety +3

    I played 90% of all those game, man what a feeling, Another World and Impossible mission are missing.

    • @waltersobchak7275
      @waltersobchak7275 Před 3 lety +2

      He’s got two more videos on these games

    • @LightwaveAl
      @LightwaveAl  Před 3 lety +1

      And maybe there could be a fourth 🤔

    • @waltersobchak7275
      @waltersobchak7275 Před 3 lety

      @@LightwaveAl sounds like a plan to me. I got the three on loop and put them on to stare at. It works like a Valium. Thanks bro

  • @quangletrong2890
    @quangletrong2890 Před 3 lety +1

    This video brings back my childhood memory alot. Thanks!

  • @filthylucreonyoutube
    @filthylucreonyoutube Před 4 lety +2

    Sopwith! Spent so many happy hours on my dual floppy IBM XT compatible with that 640 K of Ram and CGA monitor. Sopwith and Chopper Command, amazing creativity!

  • @thohangst
    @thohangst Před 4 lety +4

    Ah, Scorched Earth, definitely one of the all-time greats! You can edit the remarks files for extra fun. Altough the stock remarks are pretty great.

  • @stjerneskruetraekker
    @stjerneskruetraekker Před 4 lety +3

    Loved it! All those games played as a kid

  • @jasoncraig136
    @jasoncraig136 Před 2 lety +1

    That was an awesome recap of my entire childhood.

  • @Sirkento
    @Sirkento Před 3 lety

    Started watching this to figure out what game I wanted to watch next, this was really good

  • @sedgwicks9109
    @sedgwicks9109 Před 4 lety +7

    I remember playing digger, paratrooper, alley cat and decathalon. Having to put the ms dos disc in first and having to type dir. Crazy how far gaming has come

    • @LightwaveAl
      @LightwaveAl  Před 4 lety +3

      It’s pretty amazing. Those oldest games were really good in a fun, simple, accessible way.
      Well, accessible except that you had to know how to operate DOS 😉

    • @nurburgringkid
      @nurburgringkid Před 3 lety +1

      dir /w and enter cd foldername

    • @LightwaveAl
      @LightwaveAl  Před 3 lety +1

      That assuming you got the game on your computer in the first place. That you understood drives, creating directories, directory path structures, copying, 8.3 file names etc. There’s a lot to do before you get to “cd game” and run the game.

    • @sedgwicks9109
      @sedgwicks9109 Před 3 lety +1

      I was referring to the old floppy disk

    • @nurburgringkid
      @nurburgringkid Před 3 lety +1

      @@sedgwicks9109 ah i see. yup dir and type digger. i remembered i, my father and my uncle were competing for highest scores but my uncle won. great old days...

  • @ruardor
    @ruardor Před 4 lety +7

    Prince of Persia is a game of 1989. In 1992 the second part came out.

  • @sugeknightdiss
    @sugeknightdiss Před 4 měsíci +1

    I find Big Red racing, game of my childhood thanks to you

  • @vladanlausevic1733
    @vladanlausevic1733 Před 3 lety +1

    Awesome video. I remember several games from my childhood. One of my absolute favourites was Sim City

  • @thnderleg
    @thnderleg Před 4 lety +5

    I thought I might recognize a few. Only after watching this did I realise how many different games I played as a kid.

    • @fonkbadonk2957
      @fonkbadonk2957 Před 3 lety

      I mean, really! I went in expecting like ~40% at least heared of, but came out 3/4 actually played - wtf? Either the market was really tiny back then, or we all ended up with roughly the same top 50 games although few had access to anything resembling the internet to "hype" certain titles like today.
      And I was even only born in '82. Goes to show how long 15 years can be when you're young, but also how long a game's life time was. I've played many of these games at roughly the same times, while their release was many more years apart than I'd have thought back then.
      Also: Dude! Quake! I'd have sworn this was a post millenium title! Man, time's a flyin'.

  • @InspirationHouseNetwork
    @InspirationHouseNetwork Před 3 lety +20

    “My, how far we’ve come in just a few decades! (Descent 1 seems to really have been ‘ground breaking’!)” (-James)

    • @LightwaveAl
      @LightwaveAl  Před 3 lety +5

      It was. I played that with a Logitech Wingman Extreme joystick and dominated, being able to use the hat to fly around someone and continue aiming at them. Loved it, and it was very different to other FPS of the time ❤️

  • @japerelectronics2568
    @japerelectronics2568 Před 2 lety +1

    A fun jog through memory lane. I got my first Packard Bell 486SX 20MHz PC 20MB HDD when I was in middle school in 1990. At the time all my parents friends and relatives said how stupid it was to buy a 12 year old a $2000 PC (nearly $3000 today). I didn't know how to use a computer so I read through the manual and decided to run the first command I found which was format c:. I learned a lot trying to get that computer working again pre youtube especially since the computer didn't come with the DOS or Windows 3.1 disks. I finally found a friends Dad that had them and I was back in business months later. I remember the happiness of getting 2MB of RAM, adding a sound card, and a CD drive. I got to put all those in myself as a teenager.
    I had many of these games from 1990 on with the favorites being Wolfenstein, Dracula unleashed, Where in the world is Carmen Sandiego, and that dots game (surprised you showed that one). I remember the games you showed around 96 started to run really slow on that machine. By the time I started college in 97 all I could do on that PC dial in to check email because technology had progressed so fast. Today going from 2GB of RAM to 3GB of RAM, or from 2TB to 3TB isn't that big of a deal. Back then going from 20MHz to 100MHz was as the computer was now 5x faster. I wish I would have kept it.
    A few takeaways, for me, is how impressive it was the original programmers got so much out of so little of hardware they had to work with. Even the slowest of todays microcontrollers have more horsepower than that original computer I had in 1990. I think you could probably get every one of these games to run on an STM32 micro.
    Now I feel super old and feel I should go out and buy a sports car.

  • @UltraVibeProductions
    @UltraVibeProductions Před rokem +1

    PC gaming peaked in 1995. Descent, MechWarrior 2 and the original Need For Speed were my personal favourites that still hold up to this very day. Throw in Dark Forces, Worms and Duke Nukem 3D and it's a fully fledged nostalgia meltdown. Giddy up!

  • @oosha2000
    @oosha2000 Před 3 lety +6

    Though I couldn't get the chance to try the majority of DOS games, I remember playing some of them as a child on my windows xp pc
    - Prince of Persia (1st part only)
    - Dangerous Dave (original and ammo)
    - Skyroads
    - Doom
    - Wolfenstein 3d
    - Rover Rescue (whatever the name was but you had to save the dog and get to the exit)
    - Mickey Mouse
    - Donald Duck
    - Others as long as I can remember but that's all. There are some games you forgot to mention even if it's difficult to remember more than 100 games.

  • @sverduijn1
    @sverduijn1 Před 4 lety +82

    If I studied instead of playing these games i'd be a professor right now

    • @shamarif7679
      @shamarif7679 Před 3 lety

      Now ..you become what ?

    • @deimos2k6
      @deimos2k6 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, I'm glad I also didn't study, otherwise I wouldn't have played tons and tons of beautiful videogames in my lifetime lol

  • @vanderslagmulders
    @vanderslagmulders Před 3 lety +1

    Ahhh, I've been searching for Sopwith but couldn't find it. I only knew it as Solo, loved the game. Same for Gods, forgot the name, so impossible to find anything about it. Very nostalgic, loved many of these games. Thanks, great upload.

  • @danielkarlsson258
    @danielkarlsson258 Před 3 lety

    Wow! This was amazing!!! Thanks!

  • @Konsker
    @Konsker Před 5 lety +6

    love all classic games in the video

  • @AgeofReason
    @AgeofReason Před 4 lety +3

    Wow, excellent games in here for dos. I use a modified XBOX with DosXBox on it, and these would play really well on it. Thanks for putting these clips together.

  • @dorderre
    @dorderre Před rokem +1

    Omg I remember Stunts, Crystal Caves, Gorillas, Lemmings *-*, Nibbles, the original Civilization, Dune II, Formula One GP, Prince of Persia, Wolfenstein 3D, Sim City 2000, Star Wars: X-Wing
    What a time to be a kid ^^

  • @DrWho2008t101
    @DrWho2008t101 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the video. This brings back memories. I remembered this as if it was yesterday.

  • @roygriffith8255
    @roygriffith8255 Před 4 lety +37

    The Millenials are never going to understand the thrill of loading 'Prince of Persia' from a Floppy drive and getting it running successfully on a DOS PC. In my part of the world desktops were introduced in the early 90's.

    • @tungster24
      @tungster24 Před 4 lety +2

      And?

    • @SoyLevelMaxLive
      @SoyLevelMaxLive Před 4 lety +7

      Ummm.... Centenialls* I born in 1985 (Millennial) and i understand all these MSDOS games and also I play most and a lot more... sorry not sorry mister Generation X

    • @michaelvincent3377
      @michaelvincent3377 Před 4 lety

      Played level 1 many times to get past the lettered potion section.

    • @daveb6904
      @daveb6904 Před 4 lety

      Or loading "f15 strike eagle" the game came with like 12 hard disks but damn getting it working. flying threw the 90's virtual skies or taking out polygon buildings with sidewinder missles those were some of the best times I had as a kid gaming😊

    • @daveb6904
      @daveb6904 Před 4 lety +1

      @@SoyLevelMaxLive lighten up man holy fuck were all happy your included in the games us centanllliailia....whatever were fucking called got to meet you millipedes half way in 90's gaming

  • @zdenekcerny8690
    @zdenekcerny8690 Před 4 lety +4

    This brings back so many memories... sniff...

  • @alexanderglassgames4170
    @alexanderglassgames4170 Před 3 lety +1

    Great video, great music, great memories

  • @StephanDallaPria
    @StephanDallaPria Před 3 lety

    This is beautiful, thank you.

  • @yosoyelsupremo
    @yosoyelsupremo Před 4 lety +17

    2019 and I still play some of these games 🕹️🎮

  • @retrom8442
    @retrom8442 Před 4 lety +3

    Great video, I really enjoyed it. Please make more video's like this. Thanks.

  • @BlackDynomight
    @BlackDynomight Před 4 lety

    Descent, scorched earth, wolfenstein 3d, masters of Orion 2, battlechess and simcity! The beginnings of gaming for me, great video!

  • @willk7184
    @willk7184 Před 4 lety +4

    Scorched Earth! That game was so basic but so fun.

  • @omgalad1789
    @omgalad1789 Před 4 lety +5

    Oh my god. So many memories.
    In the early 90s, I was a student and my first PC was an 80286 with 40MB of hard drive and 1 MB of ram. I was so proud when I installed 4 MB...
    The second was an 80486, with a Creative Sound Blaster sound card.
    Today's machines are powerful and connected, but it's amazing to realize that all the concepts were invented at that time.
    Is exist any emulator that we cas use today ?

  • @gc8972b
    @gc8972b Před 3 lety

    Loved the captions. Good job

  • @lauralaura8539
    @lauralaura8539 Před 3 lety +1

    love the music. thank you for this

  • @skilz8098
    @skilz8098 Před 4 lety +101

    I don't feel pity for those who had to install these games for DOS, I feel pity for those who had to make these games! This newer generation of people relied on DirectX or OpenGL to do all of the graphics via API calls. In the DOS days, there was no such thing... all of those graphics had to be drawn to the screen directly via native VGA controller calls, reading in sprites from graphics images, knowing all of the different platforms or ISAs such as x86, MIPS, ... etc. The timing of when to draw everything and how to draw it, when to access data from ram or the hard drive, etc. was a technological marvel in those days, especially considering the limited amount of RAM, ROM, and the CPUs specs.
    Most people didn't even have computers and the average few who did, might not have even had a Video or a Sound Card. The programmers had to take all of the major Video and Sound Cards into consideration when writing their already compact and limited code in such a way to support various hardware. They had to know the internal workings of the drivers for each of those devices. It wasn't until Windows 95 and later when Direct Draw, Direct 2D, Direct 3D, Direct Sound came out to make things easier for the developers. In later versions, these APIs were simplified into one common API which became Direct X.
    These spoiled Millenials today who were practically born with a Smart Phone in hand... have no idea how complicated it was to make these Retro Games! When they don't see all of the shiny graphics and realism that is shown today they tend to think the games are horrible. Back in the early to mid-90s if you had DOOM you were one of the fortunate ones; that's if you even had a computer, to begin with. Then if you were able to run a game in 800x^600 because you happen to have an SVGA, not a VGA that was 15 or 17 inches you were really lucky! Yet today they carry around 7-9 inch screens in their pockets running in 1080p and some even in 4k...
    Yeah, the game developers of the 70s and 80s were true engineers, for they didn't have all of the hand-holding that these modern APIs give you, the GUI of Windows versus shell or terminal commands, and they had many more limitations to deal with! All of the games on this list, even the worst of them, should be in a category all by themselves as being a modern technological marvel for the genius of the engineering that went into making them! These are the games that drove the push for bigger, better and faster hardware that we see today! If it wasn't for these games, we'd still probably be using terminals and wouldn't have portable smartphones! These games are what pushed the limits of computing while advancing technology!

    • @skilz8098
      @skilz8098 Před 4 lety +8

      @᪶ ᪶ It's a rhetorical statement that was meant to illustrate the point that this younger generation was born into a world with technology and devices that are commonplace today compared to when my generation grew up in the 70s and 80s.
      I was born in 1980 so by the time I was about 4-5 years old and understood how to use modern electronic devices of that era such as Telephones, Television's, VCRs, gaming consoles such as Atari (NES didn't come out until about then but I didn't get it until around 1990 when the SNES was being released). Phones had cords connected to an outlet and some were push buttons while others were rotary, long-distance calls were charged by the minute and some lines or carries had party lines, other people from other places might have been on the same line at the same time... Many TVs didn't even have remote controls yet as that was an added expensive accessory, and even in the early 80s Color TVs were starting to take over becoming commonplace, but many still had black and white TVs with Rabbit Ears and tuning dials, Cable was in its infancy, most had Antennas where very few had Satellite and those Satellites were huge (about 4-8 feet) in diameter and very expensive. There was no high definition, very few people had computers at home and the internet was around but most didn't have it as it was very expensive.
      This is what I was referring to, I wasn't trying to put anyone down! I used the word spoiled in referring to the fact that this younger generation takes for granted these modern devices such as Smart Phones that are more powerful than supercomputers of the 40s and 50s... The gaming consoles today are very impressive, but in my time we had 8 and then 16-bit consoles... Today they are 64-bits with dedicated video and sound cards built into them in full HD anywhere from 720p to 4K... Most of them don't understand the luxury that it is to have these modern devices at a very affordable cost.
      Consider buying a brand new IBM in 1980 the year I was born before the home personal desktop PC era boomed... It might have had a 16-bit architecture or an 8-bit depending on the model, it might have had a hard drive of about 20 - 40 MB with about 128 - 256k of ram if you spent an extra $500 for the increased bandwidth... This computer would have cost the average person in 1980 about $2-3K which would be about $8-9K in today's currency market. Yet, if you buy the most expensive smartphone out there probably an iPhone it might cost between $1-2k which would have been about $300 - 500 back then. And that smartphone can do about 10k times the amount of computations. So this is what I was referring to about being spoiled... I'm referring to the entire generation as a whole, not just an individual!

    • @iamkeystroke
      @iamkeystroke Před 4 lety +1

      @@skilz8098 Millennials were born from 1981 to 1996. The first millennials graduated in 2000 hence the name. Generation Z came after
      . This is according to Strauss and Howe who coined the term.

    • @skilz8098
      @skilz8098 Před 4 lety +4

      @@iamkeystroke Okay a bit of misconception there, I shouldn't have been using the "Millenials". It should have been the "Snowflake" generation!

    • @blazeflamestrike
      @blazeflamestrike Před 4 lety +4

      Just remember that every generation is going to take things for granted that are around when they were born. Think about those born before electricity in the home was a thing. It would be like an eternal power outage or blackout for today’s people. The younger generation that now can’t stand the thought of not having internet, smart phones and being able to talk to people 24/7 etc. don’t appreciate the older games and the effort that went into creating them because the older generation made it easier for them. Every generation is making things easier for the next, of which the next generation just accepts it as the norm and takes it for granted.

    • @gillesp782
      @gillesp782 Před 4 lety +2

      I agree with that, having started basic programming on TI99/4A, TRS-80, ZX-81, Apple II, Goupil 1 & 2, ... and making sometimes my own "little" games (specially on TI-99/4A on which I was mastering the Extended Basic ; ) And thanks to Hebdogiciel, a weekly newspaper with tons of listings for every computer of the early 80's, from which I learn a lot !!!