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JasperAK

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Everything posted by JasperAK

  1. And also Legend or Knights of the Round. Quite frankly, Amico seems perfect for single screen beat 'em up action. Crap, don't forget the likes of Double Dragon, Contra, or Metal Slug. I want my, I want my, I want my Amico.
  2. 8 Eyes for the NES did this with the falcon Cutrus. There were certain buttons or switches that only the falcon could reach. I don't have much experience with the game to know if how or if the falcon could attack the monsters, but it would be awesome for my son to play the game and his sister (or I [or mom]) could help out as needed. It would also be cool for a third player to take control of random monsters or even bosses. I wish games like Double Dragon or Streets of Rage let the second player take control of the bad guys. Talk about a gauntlet.
  3. Fuck me, I had no problem reading that. Didn't realize it was wrong until 'hsa'.
  4. I am buying two Amicos. One for the family room, and one for my game room. For game systems it really comes down do they have games I want to play. I don't have any Playstations after 2 nor Xboxes after 360 because I am happy with the games I have for those systems. I have a Switch but don't play more than Minecraft on it. Now my daughter and I play Warlords on my Vader 2600, and both of my children play NES games like Jackel and Heavy Barrel with each other. So we don't care so much about graphics, the question is are the games fun to play with as a group. I am chomping at the bit waiting for Amico.
  5. JasperAK

    Chess

    That is so amazing. Thank You. There is something about that color scheme that gets me.
  6. JasperAK

    Chess

    Don't get me wrong, I love your work on project. I was just struck by how the last pics looked like something I would have had on my original 286.
  7. JasperAK

    Chess

    Yes they are, but the effect looks more like an Apple 2e.
  8. JasperAK

    Chess

    I love the CGA look. Now if only white, black, magenta, and cyan...
  9. I remember reading this thread last year and had meant to post my thoughts, thank you Mr. Necro. So here we go with story time. I was very young when we first got a Woodgrain 2600 and I sucked on it. Badly. I stunk at some of my favorite games: Asteroids, Frogger, and Pac-Man. Try as I might, I could never come close in score to anyone else. I was never good with the arcade action and too young to learn how to play well. Didn't stop me from trying though. But one game got me hooked on video games forever. Haunted House. For two reasons: unlike the games above, you could take your time because the only penalty to dicking around was burning matches, and it was scary as fuck to a kid just starting elementary school. You could take your time and look around for the pieces of the urn, but you couldn't take too long because of that damn ghost. I never liked scary shows or movies as a kid, but Haunted House had me hook, line, and sinker. I don't think I ever beat it as a kid but have since gone back to it recently--we'll see this game pop up again later. Another special game for the 2600 was Yars' Revenge. Now I did much better with this one and it's for one reason alone. While all of the rest of the games didn't allow one to stop and plan while in game, Yars' had a shield that you could stay in while planning your attack. It was the first game where I learned to plan and strategize. Eventually I got my own 2600 Jr. for my room. It was really the first time that gaming became more of a solitary pastime for me. The only game from that period that meant anything to me was Solaris. I worked at building maps and trying to figure out where to go, but the combat was just too much. I still stunk. Not long after that I got a Nintendo. The Nintendo had me hooked with a few styles of games that were quite frankly garbage on the 2600. I started sports with MLB and always had Baltimore's #8 batting clean up but after a 101-x game I moved on to others. I eventually found Bases Loaded which was everything that MLB, Home Run, and Real Sports Baseball weren't. I played half a season after school with DC before getting distracted with other games like Baseball Simulator 1.000. And Tecmo Bowl for football, nuff said. These games were fun but they didn't take the place of actually going outside and playing tackle football out in the neighborhood. The games that kept me inside were more like Yars' Revenge and Haunted House. The one that stands out is, yes you guessed it, Silent Service--with a NES Advantage. The strategy and tactics involved in this game blew my mind. Yes, I was the kid that would follow a convoy for a hour--in real time--to set up an attack that would last all of a few minutes. I drew up sheet of concentric circles and used copies of it to plot the ships, their routes, and the best angles of attack. Good times. Other fantastic strategy games that stole my time were Desert Commander, Conflict, and Fucking Genghis Khan. For Desert Commander, I had a set of maps that I drew on graph paper. I plotted strategies by moving little wooden blocks around to count spaces to find how far I could move and still not be attacked. that game was all about first attacks. I had started maps for Conflict, but those boards were over too fast to make it worth while. And yes, M48s wrecked the Soviet Migs that they would waste time sending after you. I eventually got bored with it and moved on to Genghis Khan. I used to mark on my TV the borders of my empire with dry erase markers. I played some games so fucking long that the marker kinda stained the TV. I generally played as Richard and fucking hated Phillip (who I always captured and learned very quickly to marry off or he'd revolt.) and loved Flandre. And yes, I was always pissed that the German prince was in France and Flandre in the Holy Roman Empire. I never drew that map for Genghis Khan because my empire's borders never stayed the same for long--it was easier to just wipe a border off and redraw it, and I was never smart enough to draw a paper one and put it in a plastic sheet protector. Of course like everyone else, I liked The Legend of Zelda, though I preferred Adventure of Link--I hated needing the map from Nintendo Power to find everything for Zelda. But for those special adventure and Rpg games, those were Final Fantasy and Ultima 4. While both were similar, they scratched completely different itches. Final Fantasy is the one game that I think I have for every system that it was released on in the States. I bought a Game Boy Micro just to play the remake Dawn of Souls. For some reason it's that one game I just have to play every year or so. Sometimes I play with similar parties and others, well, two red mages, one white mage, and one black mage was challenging. Ultima 4 was an interesting one because I remember wandering around aimlessly for a lot of the time. I rarely went into dungeons. I never beat it, but I probably had all the regents maxed out. Amazingly enough you know what games I originally hated and sucked at? Like amazingly sucked at no matter how much I played? Castlevania, Metroid, Kid Icarus, and Contra. I'm the guy that would need 12 lives to beat the first board in Contra. Yes, that bad. But to round out this list with a similar game, the last one I want to mention that had a profound effect on me, one of the only action games that I had any chance at playing (and beating), yep you guessed it again, Metal Gear. Now back then, most everyone I knew had nearly direct access to Nintendo Power. And I swear that I only needed the hints for the two forest mazes (I can't imagine anyone would have ever figured out those) and strategies for beating one of the bosses. I forget who the boss was, but it was the one where you had to use the rocket launcher for something. I had so much trouble with that one. The stealth and keycard hunting was amazing for me at the time, so much so that once I got a PS2, I had to have Tenchu: Wrath of Heaven. I still regret not beating that one. And then there was the Genesis. Master of Monsters is the most amazing tactical strategy game I have ever played in my life. I made an mp3 CD that has all six background tracks repeating for like an hour. To hell with Final Fantasy Tactics and Suikoden. I don't want role-playing in my war games (says the guy who has a Nintendo 64 and loves Ogre Battle 64). Remember how I mentioned Tecmo Bowl for the NES earlier. Yep Madden '94 is my all time favorite football game. I do best with three fucking buttons. And truth-be-told, if I had NHL '94 or '95 they would have been my favorite hockey games. Back then it was absolutely Blades of Steel for the NES. I never owned the SNES back then, but borrowed one on many occasions. Top Gear 2 and Super Baseball Simulator are the only real standouts for that system. You know, except for A Link to the Past, my personal favorite Zelda game of all time. That's another one I go back to about once a year. Both Super Conflict and Super Genghis Khan sucked major monkey d--k. I played Final Fantasy 3, but it just didn't do it for me. I really ended up not getting too far into RPGs on the consoles. By this time I was getting tired of consoles. I'll tell you why. Now sometime around the beginning of the NES era, I finally got access to a computer. Might & Magic 2 and Europe Ablaze on an Apple 2e, AD&D Pool of Radiance on a Commodore 64, and SimCity on a CGA 286 were the first major experiences I had, and any one of them would have had me hooked. But by the time I had all but Europe Ablaze on my own first computer, a Tandy 1000, I started moving over. By the time I had Eye of the Beholder and Civilization though, I was basically done with the consoles as my primary gaming platforms. I had about 25 3.5 floppies with saved games for Civilization. I couldn't stop playing this game, and I played the crap out of 2 and 3. I got off the train at 4. Even though you stuck around so far, I will not bore you with any further play-by-play of my computer gaming, but I will mention that it wasn't so much playing all of these games that took up the time, it was learning how to use Soft-Ice 2.62 (2.82 never worked well for me), learning to use UGE and then trying to crack it by making a KEY file to get rid of the annoying shareware screen, and reading everything on the BBSs written by ORC+. I ran my own BBS for awhile. My DOS computer ran on menus using batch files. In TrueBasic, I wrote a AD&D 2.5 Edition Character Generator that eventually broke when I tried to add kits. And then I went into the Army and fell off the grid for the next four years. Stay tuned for Part 2 and Part 3.
  10. All it takes is Hardwork.
  11. Atari finally found its market: the 10,000 people that aren't happy with the Switch or Do-it-all-yourself machines. They found that ignored middle ground. I'd also love to hear from a Netflix mom.
  12. What's amazing is that he announced a three-year development period. I almost believe he was being realistic about some of his capabilities. The introduction of his team on the other hand made me realize that he had rapidly gone off the rails. You know, it seems like rapidly because I read the entirety of the thread over the course of few hours, but it seriously has gone on for almost 20 years! How much time passed before people started realizing how this would likely end; it's been a twenty-year train wreck. Oh if only I could have enjoyed this thread like an 18-year old scotch.
  13. He went to work for Fauxtari. You know, programming is Hardwork. I think neither programming nor English are his primary languages.
  14. Got me in 2021. I let my guard down for only a decade to finally succumb. I am never gonna give up on this thread.
  15. Congrats. Let me know if Activision sends you your patch. I'm still waiting for mine.
  16. I see what you there. Most excellent.
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