BurritoBeans Posted July 2, 2018 Share Posted July 2, 2018 VIC-20: Cheese and Onion - 25 minutes Pentagorat - 25 minutes Spaceship Minus One - 25 minutes Yeah, VIC-20 week I guess. So this was cool, for christmas I gave one of my coworkers a VIC-20 I found for dirt cheap that I cleaned up and got working right, well I haven't even touched a VIC-20 since then but the other day he brought the thing in with a cartridge I've never heard of, the "Penultimate Plus", which is a 3-35K RAM expansion alongside having something like 70 games built into ROM with a pretty clean menu to get around it all. Cheese and Onion was a neat little platformer with some nice graphics to it, I really had no clue what to even expect with a name like that but it was a lot of fun to mess around with for a while. Pentagorat looked like something off the ZX Spectrum, a little adventure game with what seemed like a bit of a horror theme to it - I've never seen graphics like that on the VIC-20, I'm used to blocky stuff that looks a bit "eh" at best, so this one was cool. Finally Spaceship Minus One was a flappy-bird type game where you just have one button and have to try and get as far as you can in a level without blowing the spaceship up by hitting too much stuff. There were a few more games but I put little-to-no time on most of them/was too busy thinking how neat the cartridge was so I don't have them in here, whoops. Well, the Activision Patch Quest thread started up for this year so I guess I'll be breaking out the 2600 (or some emulators at the very least) and getting some of those patch requirements. I'm not sure if I'll be crazy enough again to try for gold on Decathlon but hey, maybe I'll ruin another joystick just to do it. I looked into the S-100 project a bit and wow, that's going to be a lot of work and a chunk of cash but it's neat what's going on with it all. I'm thinking that maybe next time they do a group buy of boards on their google group (I'm not paying $300+ for four or five PCBs when I can pay $60 and just wait a week extra) I'm going to at least buy the PCBs to make a backplane and basic Z80 system and then over the course of time populate it all - it would be cool to buy an old box but I really don't have the money to try and buy an old IMSAI or Cromemco box and expand the thing so DIY is the way for me. Finally, well I'm thinking of breaking out some handhelds again so maybe those will pop up if I have the time, maybe the Wonderswan will get some attention again. 5 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Skippy B. Coyote Posted July 2, 2018 Share Posted July 2, 2018 There was only about half as much gaming time as usual logged in my household this week, due to the misses and I marathon watching the entirety of Ken Burns' 17 hour documentary on the Vietnam War together over the course of the week. Fortunately we were still able to make a little time for gaming here and there as well. IneligibleSilent Hill: Shattered Memories (Nintendo Wii) - 194 minutesGame Boy ColorMs. Pac-Man: Special Color Edition - 40 minutesProject S-11 - 69 minutesTomb Raider: Starring Lara Croft - 74 minutesWoody Woodpecker (Emulated on Nintendo Wii) - 137 minutesPlayStationParasite Eve - 104 minutesRayman - 55 minutesSega Master SystemOutRun - 20 minutesTotal Video Game Play Time This Week693 minutes (11 hours 33 minutes) [499 minutes eligible]Individual System Play Times This WeekGame Boy Color: 320 minutesNintendo Wii: 194 minutesPlayStation: 159 minutesSega Master System: 20 minutes When it came to gaming I spent the majority of the week playing a few different Game Boy Color games for the Nintendo Age forum effort to beat as many Game Boy Color games as possible in 2018, the tracker for which I've been running the past couple years. This week I did Ms. Pac-Man, Woody Woodpecker, and Project S-11; then started in on Tomb Raider towards the end of the week. I also finished up Silent Hill: Shattered Memories on the Wii this week, and you can find my short review of that game along with the GBC games I beat this week here in the Games Beaten in 2018 thread. The only other gaming I did this past week was just 20 minutes of OutRun on the Master System, which just frustrates the heck out of me with it's difficulty level so I didn't spend much time on it. As far as the misses' gaming time this past week goes she didn't really play anything until she got a copy of Rayman for the PlayStation on the mail on Friday. She had a lot of fun with it for the first few levels, up until the difficulty level spiked through the roof and the game stopped being fun for her. She does enjoy some really difficult games sometimes, so for her the fact that it was a tough game wasn't the problem, the problem was that it was a crazy tough game that demands lots of trial and error while only giving you a limited number of continues. I recall her saying something along the lines of "This is just bad game design. If a game is going to require this much trial and error you should have unlimited continues to figure it out with, and if the game is going to give you a limited number of continues then the game shouldn't require this much trial and error. Did they even play test this?" So Rayman went back on the shelf and the spousal unit went back to her second attempt at beating Parasite Eve, which took up the rest of her gaming time for the past week. She's just lucky she only spent $10 on the PlayStation version of Rayman and not $225 for the identical Atari Jaguar version. Well, I think that pretty much covers everything for this week! I'm guessing we'll both be logging a fair bit more gaming time next week, but we'll see how it goes. Until next time, best wishes and happy gaming to you and yours! 6 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Atarian7 Posted July 2, 2018 Share Posted July 2, 2018 Atari 2600 Kaboom! - 275 minutes River Raid - 98 minutes Hunchy 2 - 42 minutes Kaboom! : 110,769 Hunchy 2 : Played through all 14 levels twice and then made it to level 13. Final score was 4850. River Raid : Made a breakthrough last night. I decided to take a short rest but fell asleep and didn't wake up until 12:30 AM. So no score for the HSC. This will probably knock me out of the medal brackets for good. 6 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Opry99er Posted July 2, 2018 Share Posted July 2, 2018 We may go to blows... I grew up idolizing Agassi. 4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
+thegoldenband Posted July 2, 2018 Author Share Posted July 2, 2018 We may go to blows... I grew up idolizing Agassi. Oh, I love Agassi! Vastly prefer him to Connors, actually, or to just about any American men's player. I'm just quoting the famous line someone shouted from the crowd during the Agassi-Connors match in 1988: "He's a punk—you're a legend!" (Connors does have the better line of tennis video games, though -- a couple of his are decent, while all of Agassi's I've played are terrible...) 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Opry99er Posted July 2, 2018 Share Posted July 2, 2018 I don't recall that particular person from the crowd. Anyway, good... Agassi was the whole reason I played tennis in my youth. Always wanted to be able to strike a ball from behind the line and paint the corners with it. I got pretty good, but just against my dad. I never played organized tennis. But those marathon sets and matches with my dad in the South Carolina sun on that crappy cement tennis court were the stuff of legends. 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Opry99er Posted July 2, 2018 Share Posted July 2, 2018 Speaking of Agassi.... one of the most memorable sporting events I ever watched was the '99 French Open where Agassi was down two sets to none (and it wasn't even THAT close)... Agassi had never won the French Open-- He was up against Andre Medvedev and it looked like he was going to lose in his 3rd French Open finals... Some how, some way--something clicked in his head, and he put on one of the finest 3 sets of Tennis I've ever seen. That day--when he completed the career Grand Slam, I knew that no Tennis player would ever take his place in my mind as the best tennis player ever. He didn't beat Sampras much, and he lost to Federer in the '05 US Open... but to me, watching the guy play... I knew he was the finest striker and returner the game would ever see. He never had the huge serve like Federer, but he could return a ball served at 130 MPH and it would be returned harder than it was served... He left people's knees wobbling as he would snipe them from 10 feet behind the baseline. Loved watching him play... One of a kind. 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
+thegoldenband Posted July 2, 2018 Author Share Posted July 2, 2018 ^There's a great story in his autobiography (Open) about that Medvedev match. IIRC Medvedev's career had been in a tailspin and he asked Agassi for advice, which Andre helpfully gave...and found himself on the receiving end of it! I've always liked Agassi ever since he won Wimbledon in 1992. There's a basic humanity to him, a kind of openness and straightforward sincerity that's rare among people in general, let alone athletes in the spotlight. I remember watching a match in 1996 (I think) and even though I hardly knew anything about tennis at that point, it was so clear from the look in his eyes that he was adrift. Then, when he came back and reached #1 again, it was all the sweeter -- and his retirement speech at the US Open was one of the most moving things I've ever seen in sports. He was an unbelievable talent with unreal hand-eye coordination -- a Taylor Dent serve that once held the record for the fastest ever was returned by Agassi for a clean winner! -- and a really hard worker who overcame some serious physical limitations to do what he did. He hardly had the ideal tennis physique, and had terrible back problems to boot. And yet, he was one of the all-time greats. 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Opry99er Posted July 2, 2018 Share Posted July 2, 2018 I'll have to read that book. Thanks for the reference. He always struck me as the gritty self-made type, where Sampras always seemed like the country club player... I don't know much about their backgrounds, but that's how it always seemed on the court. 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
+wongojack Posted July 2, 2018 Share Posted July 2, 2018 As far as the misses' gaming time this past week goes she didn't really play anything until she got a copy of Rayman for the PlayStation on the mail on Friday. She had a lot of fun with it for the first few levels, up until the difficulty level spiked through the roof and the game stopped being fun for her. She does enjoy some really difficult games sometimes, so for her the fact that it was a tough game wasn't the problem, the problem was that it was a crazy tough game that demands lots of trial and error while only giving you a limited number of continues. I recall her saying something along the lines of "This is just bad game design. If a game is going to require this much trial and error you should have unlimited continues to figure it out with, and if the game is going to give you a limited number of continues then the game shouldn't require this much trial and error. Did they even play test this?" So Rayman went back on the shelf and the spousal unit went back to her second attempt at beating Parasite Eve, which took up the rest of her gaming time for the past week. She's just lucky she only spent $10 on the PlayStation version of Rayman and not $225 for the identical Atari Jaguar version. I have started and quit that game multiple times for the same reason. It isn't that it is a bad game. It's just so rage-quit inducingly hard. I don't understand how the franchise survived to have a sequel. However - I love almost everything that came after it. Overall it is one of my favorite franchises and certainly near the top for 3d platformers. 4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
carlsson Posted July 2, 2018 Share Posted July 2, 2018 (edited) Speaking about tennis players with their own video games, I thought there was at least one Pong video game featuring Björn Borg, but the only one I found after a quick search is this one by Tomy/Paltoy. I don't own it, but the question is if it would qualify for this tracker. http://www.electronicplastic.com/game/?company=&id=519 On the other hand, it seems our other sports giant at the time, Ingemar Stenmark was only awarded with board games. Perhaps video and computer games were so new back then that nobody saw the marketing potential trying to sell them with famous names. Edited July 2, 2018 by carlsson 7 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Opry99er Posted July 2, 2018 Share Posted July 2, 2018 (edited) Weekend Times (Sat-Sun) N64: Knockout Kings 2000 (120 minutes)Pokemon Snap (20 minutes) Nintendo: Duck Hunt (30 minutes)Hogan's Alley (60 minutes)Super Mario Bros 2 (90 minutes) TI-99/4A: Alpiner (150 minutes)NeverLander (30 minutes)Popeye (20 minutes) Still playing Knockout Kings quite a bit. I don't have the memory pack for my controller, so I have basically been playing Slugfest mode or doing a one-shot Career mode (usually with a character I create named "Cage" that I can't save... so I have to create him each time I play) My son has been playing Hogan's Alley quite a bit and my daughters have been enjoying Duck Hunt. I'm still trying for the Alpiner Record, but I always fail within 1,000 feet or so from Everest's summit. I can almost speed-run through McKinley, but Garmo is a crapshoot on the randomizer and Everest is insane because the falling rocks come so fast, you can't adjust for them. If they decide to fall in your area when you are climbing upward, you're toast. I'll get there... I've recently upgraded to a Slik Stik from my Wico Bat. The shorter throw stick helps quite a bit when you're trying to make split-second decisions. On Everest though, it doesn't really seem to matter. You have to be lucky... really lucky to summit Everest. Edited July 2, 2018 by Opry99er 7 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Skippy B. Coyote Posted July 3, 2018 Share Posted July 3, 2018 I have started and quit that game multiple times for the same reason. It isn't that it is a bad game. It's just so rage-quit inducingly hard. I don't understand how the franchise survived to have a sequel. However - I love almost everything that came after it. Overall it is one of my favorite franchises and certainly near the top for 3d platformers. Weirdly the only Rayman game I've ever played was Raving Rabbids on the Wii, but I've always meant to go back and play some of the earlier ones. When the misses picked up a copy of the original Rayman for the PlayStation she got it as a set with Rayman 2 and just started Rayman 2 earlier tonight. I watched her play for a bit and was surprised that it was a totally different style of game, a 3D platformer instead of a 2D one like the original. She's enjoying it a lot more though and says the difficulty is way more reasonable. Maybe I'll have to go back and try the original at some point now that she's shelved it in favor of the sequel. 4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
+thegoldenband Posted July 3, 2018 Author Share Posted July 3, 2018 Here's the summary for Week 26, running from June 25 - July 1. We logged 3967 minutes of eligible play, playing 69 games on a total of 19 systems. Top 10: 1. Tetris (NES/Famicom) - 360 2. Kaboom (Atari 2600) - 275 3. Alpiner (TI-99/4A) - 270 4. Knockout Kings 2000 (N64) - 240 5. River Raid (Atari 2600) - 217 6. Popeye (TI-99/4A) - 140 7. Woody Woodpecker (Game Boy Color) - 137 8. Super Mario Bros. 2 (NES/Famicom) - 135 9. Pole Position (Atari 5200) - 132 10. Baby Pac-Man [homebrew] (Atari 7800) - 105 Pre-NES top 10: 1. Kaboom (Atari 2600) - 275 2. Alpiner (TI-99/4A) - 270 3. River Raid (Atari 2600) - 217 4. Popeye (TI-99/4A) - 140 5. Pole Position (Atari 5200) - 132 6. Baby Pac-Man [homebrew] (Atari 7800) - 105 7. Solar Fox (Atari 2600) - 93 8. David's Midnight Magic (C64) - 83 9. Moonwalker (C64) - 52 10. Space Invaders Invasion [Megamania hack] (Atari 2600) - 50 Top 10 systems: 1. Atari 2600 (849) 2. NES/Famicom (675) 3. TI-99/4A (440) 4. Game Boy Color (320) 5. N64 (260) 6. Sega Master System (243) 7. C64 (175) 8. PlayStation (159) 9. Atari 5200 (132) 10. Philips CD-i (130) Another week at the top for the Atari 2600, led by Kaboom on the pre-NES charts, but it's Tetris on the NES that puts the pieces together to take the #1 spot overall. Meanwhile our #3 game, Alpiner, climbs into the 1000-minute club, with 1009 minutes logged to date giving it summit spot #332. Mid-year stats coming soon! 7 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Opry99er Posted July 3, 2018 Share Posted July 3, 2018 Awesome, can't wait for those stats!! 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
+thegoldenband Posted July 3, 2018 Author Share Posted July 3, 2018 And now it's time for: 2018 Mid-Year Stats So far in 2018 we've played: - 1078 games - 69 systems - 115,238 minutes, or just over 80 days Compared to 2017, that's a drop in gameplay time of about a third, with just under 200 fewer games played as well. Meanwhile, the number of different systems represented (69) is one less than last year. In any event, here are the top 100 games of 2018 so far, with all times in minutes: and guess who got its crown back? Not only that, but the top 3 games are all Atari 2600 titles -- proving once again that the pre-NES platforms are more than capable of holding their own alongside 16- and 32-bit systems. Games: 1. Kaboom (Atari 2600) - 6470 2. Solar Fox (Atari 2600) - 3937 3. Missile Command (Atari 2600) - 2634 4. Dragon Warrior II (NES/Famicom) - 2161 5. Army Men 3D (PlayStation) - 2003 6. Werewolves & Wanderers (TI-99/4A) - 1935 7. Tunnels of Doom [Quest of the King] (TI-99/4A) - 1770 8. Super Mario Bros. 3 (NES/Famicom) - 1513 9. Hunchy II (Atari 2600) - 1433 10. Mine Storm (Vectrex) - 1365 11. Parasite Eve (PlayStation) - 1264 12. Super Breakout (Atari 2600) - 1167 13. Albert Odyssey: Legend of Eldean (Sega Saturn) - 1065 14. Virtual Hydlide (Sega Saturn) - 1043 15. Doom (PlayStation) - 907 16. Dragon Warrior IV (NES/Famicom) - 892 17. Zak McCracken & the Alien Mindbenders (FM Towns) - 881 18. Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening (Game Boy) - 792 19. Ecco the Dolphin (Sega CD) - 791 20. Enduro (Atari 2600) - 774 21. Battlezone (Atari 2600) - 751 22. Beamrider (Atari 2600) - 728 23. Ecco: Tides of Time (Sega CD) - 721 24. Battletech (Genesis) - 719 25. Shaq Fu (Genesis) - 701 26. Knockout Kings 2000 (N64) - 690 26. HeroX (TI-99/4A) - 690 28. Faxanadu (NES/Famicom) - 685 29. Bigfoot (TI-99/4A) - 680 30. Davis Cup World Tour Tennis (Genesis) - 632 31. Sonic CD (Sega CD) - 630 32. Sonic 3 & Knuckles (Genesis) - 622 33. Toyshop Trouble (Atari 2600) - 620 34. River Raid (Atari 2600) - 619 35. Pac-Man Collection (Atari 7800) - 582 36. Dragster (Atari 2600) - 578 37. Markus of Marinus (TI-99/4A) - 575 38. Asteroids (Atari 2600) - 570 39. Chrono Trigger (SNES) - 540 40. Alcazar - The Forgotten Fortress (ColecoVision) - 539 41. Olympic Skier (Atari 8-bit) - 524 42. Tower Toppler (Atari 7800) - 521 43. Legends (TI-99/4A) - 520 44. Laser Blast (Atari 2600) - 490 45. Tetris (NES/Famicom) - 479 46. TI Trek (TI-99/4A) - 475 47. Paperboy (Genesis) - 466 48. Bally Pin (Bally Astrocade) - 460 49. Q*Bert's Qubes (Arcade) - 456 50. Alpiner (TI-99/4A) - 445 51. Break Point Tennis [aka Break Point] (Sega Saturn) - 427 52. River Raid II (Atari 2600) - 426 53. Space Pilot II (C64) - 416 54. Desert Falcon (Atari 7800) - 415 55. Sonic 3D Blast (Genesis) - 414 56. Werewolves & Wanderers (BBS Door Games) - 410 57. Qix (Atari 8-bit) - 408 58. Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (Genesis) - 401 59. Squish 'em (Atari 2600) - 379 60. Tails Adventure (Game Gear) - 374 61. Dark Cavern (Atari 2600) - 368 62. HardBall III (Genesis) - 366 63. Ms. Pac-Man (Atari 2600) - 360 63. Story Machine (TI-99/4A) - 360 65. Worm War I (Atari 2600) - 354 66. Berzerk (Atari 2600) - 351 67. Jet Set Willy (TI-99/4A) - 350 68. Silent Hunter (PC (DOS)) - 341 69. Burgertime (Atari 2600) - 340 69. Virtua Racing Deluxe (Sega 32X) - 340 71. Death Trap (Atari 2600) - 338 72. Ironsword: Wizards & Warriors II (NES/Famicom) - 337 73. Ballz 3D (Genesis) - 333 74. Gorf (Atari 5200) - 329 75. Sonic Triple Trouble (Game Gear) - 325 75. Stonix (Intellivision) - 325 77. Seawolf (Atari 2600) - 323 78. Popeye (TI-99/4A) - 320 79. Survival Run (Atari 2600) - 315 79. Wizard's Doom (TI-99/4A) - 315 81. Historyline 1914-1918 (PC (DOS)) - 310 82. Pac-Man (Atari 8-bit) - 306 83. Frostbite (Atari 2600) - 305 84. Deep Fear (Sega Saturn) - 300 85. Godzilla (NES/Famicom) - 299 86. Alien 3 (Game Boy) - 297 87. Soreyuke! Amida-Kun! (Game Boy) - 296 88. Sonic Spinball (Genesis) - 295 89. Galaxian (Atari 2600) - 294 90. Lemmings (Mac OS Classic) - 290 90. Chack'n Pop (NES/Famicom) - 290 92. Wizard of Wor (Atari 2600) - 288 92. Army Men: Air Combat (N64) - 288 94. Dragon's Fury (Genesis) - 281 95. Raft Rider (Atari 2600) - 279 96. Pole Position (Atari 5200) - 277 97. Doom (Sega 32X) - 276 98. Actual Reality (TRS-80 Model I/III) - 275 99. Eggomania (Atari 2600) - 272 100. Machaon (VG 5000) - 271 And here are the top 100 games on pre-NES platforms for the first half of 2018: 1. Kaboom (Atari 2600) - 6470 2. Solar Fox (Atari 2600) - 3937 3. Missile Command (Atari 2600) - 2634 4. Werewolves & Wanderers (TI-99/4A) - 1935 5. Tunnels of Doom [Quest of the King] (TI-99/4A) - 1770 6. Hunchy II (Atari 2600) - 1433 7. Mine Storm (Vectrex) - 1365 8. Super Breakout (Atari 2600) - 1167 9. Enduro (Atari 2600) - 774 10. Battlezone (Atari 2600) - 751 11. Beamrider (Atari 2600) - 728 12. HeroX (TI-99/4A) - 690 13. Bigfoot (TI-99/4A) - 680 14. Toyshop Trouble (Atari 2600) - 620 15. River Raid (Atari 2600) - 619 16. Pac-Man Collection (Atari 7800) - 582 17. Dragster (Atari 2600) - 578 18. Markus of Marinus (TI-99/4A) - 575 19. Asteroids (Atari 2600) - 570 20. Alcazar - The Forgotten Fortress (ColecoVision) - 539 21. Olympic Skier (Atari 8-bit) - 524 22. Tower Toppler (Atari 7800) - 521 23. Legends (TI-99/4A) - 520 24. Laser Blast (Atari 2600) - 490 25. TI Trek (TI-99/4A) - 475 26. Bally Pin (Bally Astrocade) - 460 27. Q*Bert's Qubes (Arcade) - 456 28. Alpiner (TI-99/4A) - 445 29. River Raid II (Atari 2600) - 426 30. Space Pilot II (C64) - 416 31. Desert Falcon (Atari 7800) - 415 32. Qix (Atari 8-bit) - 408 33. Squish 'em (Atari 2600) - 379 34. Dark Cavern (Atari 2600) - 368 35. Ms. Pac-Man (Atari 2600) - 360 35. Story Machine (TI-99/4A) - 360 37. Worm War I (Atari 2600) - 354 38. Berzerk (Atari 2600) - 351 39. Jet Set Willy (TI-99/4A) - 350 40. Burgertime (Atari 2600) - 340 41. Death Trap (Atari 2600) - 338 42. Gorf (Atari 5200) - 329 43. Stonix (Intellivision) - 325 44. Seawolf (Atari 2600) - 323 45. Popeye (TI-99/4A) - 320 46. Survival Run (Atari 2600) - 315 46. Wizard's Doom (TI-99/4A) - 315 48. Pac-Man (Atari 8-bit) - 306 49. Frostbite (Atari 2600) - 305 50. Galaxian (Atari 2600) - 294 51. Wizard of Wor (Atari 2600) - 288 52. Raft Rider (Atari 2600) - 279 53. Pole Position (Atari 5200) - 277 54. Actual Reality (TRS-80 Model I/III) - 275 55. Eggomania (Atari 2600) - 272 56. Machaon (VG 5000) - 271 57. LadyBug (Atari 2600) - 270 58. Commando Raid (Atari 2600) - 268 59. Tron: Maze-A-Tron (Intellivision) - 267 60. R2D Tank (Emerson Arcadia 2001) - 265 61. 2010: The Graphic Action Game (ColecoVision) - 264 62. Rabbit Transit (Atari 2600) - 259 63. Wheel of Fortune (C64) - 258 64. Spike (Vectrex) - 255 65. Baby Pac-Man [homebrew] (Atari 7800) - 254 66. Deceptor (C64) - 250 67. Super Pac-Man (Atari 7800) - 248 68. Star Trek S.O.S. (TI-99/4A) - 245 68. Submarine Warfare (TRS-80 Model I/III) - 245 70. Shark Attack (Atari 2600) - 240 70. Aperture (TI-99/4A) - 240 72. Skiing (Atari 2600) - 239 73. Space Jockey (Atari 2600) - 224 73. WarGames (ColecoVision) - 224 75. Super Cobra Arcade (Atari 2600) - 213 76. Flying Shark (TI-99/4A) - 210 77. Campaign '84 (ColecoVision) - 207 78. Pac-Man (Atari 2600) - 205 79. Auto Racing (Intellivision) - 204 80. Ultima IV: Quest for the Avatar (Apple II) - 200 80. Failsafe (Atari 7800) - 200 80. Moon Patrol (TI-99/4A) - 200 83. Spacechase (Atari 2600) - 199 83. Q*bert's Qubes (C64) - 199 85. Turmoil (Atari 2600) - 195 86. Donkey Kong (Atari 2600) - 190 86. Fork (TI-99/4A) - 190 88. Sky Jinks (Atari 2600) - 185 89. Megamania (Atari 2600) - 183 90. Othello (Atari 2600) - 182 91. Defender (Atari 8-bit) - 181 92. Stampede (Atari 2600) - 180 92. Old Dark Caves (TI-99/4A) - 180 94. King Kong (Atari 2600) - 179 95. Centipede (Atari 2600) - 170 95. GORF (Atari 2600) - 170 97. Pad [NRV] (Atari 8-bit) - 165 98. Breakout (Atari 2600) - 158 99. Taz (Atari 2600) - 157 100. Oink! (Atari 2600) - 155 100. Henhouse (TI-99/4A) - 155 100. Jungle Hunt (TI-99/4A) - 155 And finally, here are the total gameplay minutes for all the systems we've played so far this year, yielding a big win for the VCS: 1. Atari 2600 (33667) 2. TI-99/4A (12716) 3. NES/Famicom (10768) 4. Genesis (8613) 5. PlayStation (5040) 6. Atari 8-bit (3810) 7. Sega Saturn (3233) 8. Atari 7800 (3162) 9. Sega CD (2908) 10. C64 (2555) 11. Game Boy (2309) 12. ColecoVision (2151) 13. Vectrex (1745) 14. N64 (1637) 15. SNES (1455) 16. Sega 32X (1369) 17. Intellivision (1365) 18. Sega Master System (1350) 19. Atari 5200 (1215) 20. Emerson Arcadia 2001 (1202) 21. Arcade (1191) 22. Mac OS Classic (967) 23. Game Gear (936) 24. PC (DOS) (921) 25. FM Towns (881) 26. TRS-80 Model I/III (825) 27. Bally Astrocade (754) 28. Game Boy Color (611) 29. Odyssey^2 (521) 30. BBS Door Games (495) 31. TG-16/PC Engine (483) 32. VG 5000 (429) 33. MSX (335) 34. Dreamcast (329) 35. CoCo 3 (305) 36. CoCo 1 & 2 (295) 37. Neo Geo AES/MVS (278) 38. Neo Geo Pocket Color (265) 38. VIC-20 (265) 40. Apple II (262) 41. Amiga (243) 42. Cougar Boy/Mega Duck (240) 43. Watara SuperVision (205) 44. Atari Lynx (139) 45. Philips CD-i (130) 46. Sinclair ZX Spectrum (76) 47. Cromemco Dazzler (70) 48. Acorn Electron (67) 49. BBC Micro (65) 50. Game.com (45) 51. Sharp X68000 (43) 52. Interton VC-4000 (42) 53. Atari Jaguar (35) 54. CBM-II (34) 55. MSX2 (31) 56. CP/M (23) 57. Creativision (22) 57. Fairchild Channel F (22) 59. Atari Video Pinball (15) 59. Commodore PET (15) 61. Sord M5 (14) 62. Commodore 16 & Plus/4 (11) 63. Handheld/Tabletop ( 64. Amstrad CPC (7) 64. Microbee 32 (7) 66. Tandy MC-10 (4) 67. Pong (3) 68. ABC-80 (2) 68. Atari ST (2) 8 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
carlsson Posted July 3, 2018 Share Posted July 3, 2018 And finally, here are the total gameplay minutes for all the systems we've played so far this year, yielding a big win for the VCS: 3. NES/Famicom (10733) [...] 53. NES (35) Am I missing something, or are those 35 rogue minutes for the NES? 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Opry99er Posted July 3, 2018 Share Posted July 3, 2018 Still digesting the above information, but from what I can see, the 1-2 punch of Kaboom! and Solar Fox accounted for about 1/3 of all the VCS time so far this year (over 10,000 minutes!!!) That's pretty substantial playtime... 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Opry99er Posted July 3, 2018 Share Posted July 3, 2018 Also... on Atariage.com, I would have thought the Jaguar would have had at least one measly hour of gameplay. It hasn't even managed that so far. 4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Eltigro Posted July 4, 2018 Share Posted July 4, 2018 I think all those Albert Odyssey minutes are mine... still need to finish that game. I'm close to the end, just need to get it done... Also, I noticed that too, Opry99er. Figured the Jag would have more than 35 minutes... maybe I'll play some Raiden or something later to boost those numbers up to at least an hour. lol 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
+thegoldenband Posted July 4, 2018 Author Share Posted July 4, 2018 Am I missing something, or are those 35 rogue minutes for the NES? Ooh, quite right -- fixed. Those minutes came from a batch of games that were on a pirate-y multi-game system, and somehow lost the "Famicom" half of the label when they were entered into the system (probably because I was initially unsure about their categorization). 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
carlsson Posted July 4, 2018 Share Posted July 4, 2018 Atari 2600 at the top, Atari ST at the bottom. Of course a number of really obscure systems haven't been played at all this year, but despite being a Commodore/Amiga guy at heart, I must admit the ST deserves a little more love than it gets. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Opry99er Posted July 4, 2018 Share Posted July 4, 2018 I have my eye on a Vectrex and a Virtual Boy at a local shop..... If I could just come off the dough, I'd be pounding some Wario Land into the tracker. For those of you who haven't had the experience, Wario Land on the Virtual Boy is a truly good game, and when played on the real console, it is quite a unique experience. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Opry99er Posted July 4, 2018 Share Posted July 4, 2018 (edited) I just noticed that 20% of all the games in the pre-NES top 100 are TI-99/4A games... That's interesting...at least to me. Edited July 4, 2018 by Opry99er 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
karokoenig Posted July 4, 2018 Share Posted July 4, 2018 This will probably knock me out of the medal brackets for good. You're in right now. Just post some (any) score for Tunnel Runner, and with the 50+ points you get for that you will most likely stay there. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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