Best DOS game before 1990 that ran from floppy
Best DOS game before 1990 that ran from floppy
What were the best classic games from before 1990 that ran from floppies (no HD installs allowed).
I have 3 drives on the HX, 2 built in 720k 3.5" and the external 5.25 360k drive. I wanted the external for the original games I have on that media (2 LSL and 3 ultima's), the games I get from the net will be dumped on 3.5" drives so I will probably get away without swapping too many floppies (most pre 1990 games should fit on just 1 or 2 disks). Any of the games that use VGA wont be running on that machine anyway (have a 386 dx/40 for that).
I have to say that ultima looks really nice on a high quality CGA monitor with crisp graphics and vibrant colors (Tandy graphics not the lame 4 color CGA crap)
I have to say that ultima looks really nice on a high quality CGA monitor with crisp graphics and vibrant colors (Tandy graphics not the lame 4 color CGA crap)
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I agree that a dedicated PC with low-D drives is a good idea. My old 180-360-720k floppies aren't reading too well on 1.2-1.44mb drives. I learned loooonnnnggg ago NEVER to write to low-D media on a high-D drive. (Better to copy the data to hard drive and hide the originals in a vault if you value them.)
I spent a year playing an early ver of Star Trek on a huge Z80 machine with dual 8" floppies (gawd, what a racket they made). That's the edition where you had to enter the X-Y move co-ords to move and fire on the tac screen, and the warp speed and direction on the strat map. I recall the frustration of getting lost off map and trying to guess my way back with no refs on a blank screen before ship's energy ran out. Something "modern" PC's don't have anymore. How I wish I had that beast now!!
I spent a year playing an early ver of Star Trek on a huge Z80 machine with dual 8" floppies (gawd, what a racket they made). That's the edition where you had to enter the X-Y move co-ords to move and fire on the tac screen, and the warp speed and direction on the strat map. I recall the frustration of getting lost off map and trying to guess my way back with no refs on a blank screen before ship's energy ran out. Something "modern" PC's don't have anymore. How I wish I had that beast now!!
Sig: "The Universe is change... but it is not exact change." -Fusco Bros.
Try eBayjohpower wrote:I agree that a dedicated PC with low-D drives is a good idea. My old 180-360-720k floppies aren't reading too well on 1.2-1.44mb drives. I learned loooonnnnggg ago NEVER to write to low-D media on a high-D drive. (Better to copy the data to hard drive and hide the originals in a vault if you value them.)
I spent a year playing an early ver of Star Trek on a huge Z80 machine with dual 8" floppies (gawd, what a racket they made). That's the edition where you had to enter the X-Y move co-ords to move and fire on the tac screen, and the warp speed and direction on the strat map. I recall the frustration of getting lost off map and trying to guess my way back with no refs on a blank screen before ship's energy ran out. Something "modern" PC's don't have anymore. How I wish I had that beast now!!
The old games rock on vintage hardware
I was born in 1968 so I was around in the 80's also. Some of the best games of the 80's were also on the C64 and Amiga. The PC didnt get popular for games until 1990 and later (but there were a few gems in the 80's).**Yoshi** wrote:I was around in the 80's, and most of the good games were on Sega and Nintendo, and if you didn't have one of those you had an Atari!!
Most of the games you kiddies are actually mentioning came out in the 90's.
Computers were rare before 1990, and to find a decent game before 1990 was and is like finding a needle in a haystack. The ones people know from the 80's are games such as Space Invaders, NetHack etc etc...but they are now way past their used-by-date, and to my opinion aren't worth downloading or even purchasing unless you have an ancient x86 - 386 computer on hand that is still in an excellent working condition which to my knowledge, if it fucks up or dies, then you will have a hard time finding someone who fixes those old pieces of scrap metal as they are not servicable anymores because most technicians won't touch them with a forty foot pole.
I know one of you is gonna say you can get an emulator?
I have no problems with emulators, they are handy to a point but I believe all things should fade with time...ie let the old rest in peace and be replaced by something more entertaining.
I know one of you is gonna say you can get an emulator?
I have no problems with emulators, they are handy to a point but I believe all things should fade with time...ie let the old rest in peace and be replaced by something more entertaining.
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