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  • #31
    I'm 27, and I haven't really considered myself to be odd because I still enjoy playing video games of all descriptions. [If I still played with my Star Wars figures, or joined in the local games of 'army' with the local kids - then I would be worried]

    (Warning: the following is a subjective, nostalgic rant that may bore people with short attention spans. It is therefore advised that you simply scroll down to the next post)

    My first exposure to video games were the arcade cabinets they had outside fish & chip shops, and other various shops around my town. My interest in playing them began with Space Invaders, and declined around the time Double Dragon ushered in the era of fighter games. Competition for playing these arcade machines was intense, and the politics involved around the local video machines was incredibly complicated. It was common to have a crowd of spectators huddled around you whilst you played, thus perfecting such games became an incredible badge of prestige in your community, and failure to achieve even average levels of competence earned such unfortunates scorn and ridicule. There were usually an elite group of bevan bullies who dominated such machines and mini-pinball palours, so a generation of nerds like myself had to endure many violent encounters, and cigarette burns in order to fight for our right to video game.
    In the city there was a huge video arcade that was paradise for someone like me, and I only had access to such a Mecca if I waged [skipped] school. It only cost 20 cents per game, so it was quite affordable.
    Eventually fight machines and stupid racing machines began to dominate, and prices rose from 20 cents to $3 for some machines! Asians who loved these simplistic games began to take over the arcade palours in my city, and I quickly lost interest in the arcade machine. And today, Asian gangs hang out in the big arcade palours in my city, and as far as I'm concerned, they are welcome to them. I often watch them dancing on their Disco games transfixed out of morbid curiousity. [Why these morons waste their money when consoles like Nintendo and Playstation are available, I don't know.]

    Whilst I was still preoccupied with arcades, home consoles began to become available. I remember when I first saw Pong while my family were visiting friends. Pong was the only game the console played. I was hooked when I saw it, and burned with envy on the way home.

    A Christmas or two later, I got my first video game console, but for the life of me I cannot remember its name. It was thrown in the trash ages ago [without my consent or knowledge]. It played various games using cartridges, and a few that were programmed into it also.

    Then came along a range of battery operated, scrolling electronic games like Scrambler, and primitive hand held racing games that had moving plastic tracks. I had Futuretronics Scrambler. Great for their novelty of being totally portable.

    Then Atari came onto the scene, and I began a relentless nag campaign to secure one for Christmas. We got our Atari 2600 in 1980/81 [?], and I shudder to imagine the amount of time I spent playing games such as Asteroids, Joust, Reactor, Pitfall, River Raid....etc. [I still have my Atari 2600.]

    Around the time my interest in Atari declined, Apple IIE's were all the rage. I remember I would book time at my local library to play games on it like Load Runner, and dumb educational games which I never the less found fascinating at the time. But getting an Apple IIE was too much to expect for my Christmas wish list. Instead I got into Nintendo Game & Watch handheld LCD games.

    Then came the great Commodore 64, which I was obsessed with for many years. Heaps cheaper than Apple's, or the IBM computers that were becoming trendy at that time; and ten times better. Plus fully colour: monochrome monitors were not needed, cause you could just connect it up to your t.v. like regular video game consoles. Commodore games were the closest thing available to proper arcade machine graphics, and the best thing of all: there was a great network of other users in my area, so as long as you had a disk drive, you could have as many games as your heart desired. I ended up collecting way too many games that I could ever possibly hope to fully explore, so I guess this is when my first collector instinct concerning video games kicked in. Out of hundreds of games, I only had a half dozen I actually had paid money for

    After this period I hit a period devoid of gaming, where I became interested in other things like girls, drugs, rock music and booze. Eventually I came to my senses and bought an IBM compatible 386, and my first exposure to complicated strategy games like Civ.

    I've since played what Nintendo and Sony has offered up these days, but playing arcade games is little challenge anymore. Playing Quake or Half-Life on a network is about as close as I come to really being absorbed by action games these days. I almost exclusively play solo strat games on my own now.

    So, with so many other friends equally obsessed with video games, I have never considered myself to be abnormal because I'm still interested in such things.

    Anyway, even when I'm an old man of 80, I shall always be interested in the latest technology in entertainment, which will probably be full blown virtual reality then. I guess my parents generation are still intrigued by television, but because I have witnessed the advent of the video game era, it will always interest me.

    Bkeela.

    [This message has been edited by Bkeela (edited December 03, 2000).]
    Voluntary Human Extinction Movement http://www.vhemt.org/

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    • #32
      I am 36.
      I started when I was a child, with boardgames like Risk.
      I stop when I die, with PC-games like Civ103.
      For those who fight for it, life has a flavour the sheltered never know.

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      • #33
        I'm 28 and have been playing Civ2 since 1997 and CTP and SMAC since their release. I don't play as much as I used to, but that's more because of lack of time. I would play more if I had more time. These three are the only games I played for more than a year after they were released.

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        • #34
          This thread looks like a session of Alcoholics Annonimus Well, my name is MapleLeaf, I am 36 and I am a Civ adict! I play civ games since original. Some of them I didn't like much (SMAC) but even in such a case I keep the game. Why? Because I "collect and treasure" them! I own every original TBS game except for Colonization which I downloaded from warez site.
          ...anything else would be unCivilized...

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          • #35
            I`m 19,been playing all the games in the civ series.My first time was when I was 9 i think, on an old amiga 1000.But it took a coupple of years before me and my brother found out that changing the government actually was a good idea.
            The samurai has spoken

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            • #36
              I've been a Sky Dog for 31 years.
              "The media don't understand the kind of problems and pressures 54 million come wit'!"

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              • #37
                quote:

                Originally posted by MapleLeaf on 12-03-2000 10:30 AM
                This thread looks like a session of Alcoholics Annonimus


                Lol

                quote:

                Some of them I didn't like much (SMAC)


                THANK YOU!!! youre the first person ive ever met on these forums who has not generally accepted it as fact that smac is a great game. i played the demo and didn't bother to buy the real game because it hardly seemed different from civ2, and wasnt too great anywyay. plus, the graphics sucked compared to ctp. Anyway, youre the first person who didn't like smac, and i like that. thx
                [This message has been edited by dainbramaged13 (edited December 03, 2000).]
                And God said "let there be light." And there was dark. And God said "Damn, I hate it when that happens." - Admiral

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                • #38
                  40. Been at it since college, with players in the Wargames club, playing old gigundous games like Atlantic Wall. Also enjoyed Star Fleet Battles and Dungeons and Dragons.

                  Nowadays, nobody to play with but computer AI. So, when I'm not in the middle of some other project, I load up a computer sim.

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                  • #39
                    quote:

                    Originally posted by Paulypav on 12-02-2000 09:34 AM
                    I am 24 and have returned to school to become a history teacher.



                    Do you use CTP2 as a teaching tool? Who needs textbooks!? Hehe.
                    Where are you from? Put yourself on the Apolyton Map!

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                    • #40
                      31 myself. I started out with Lincoln Logs, stepped up to Risk and Monopoly, and then found Nobunaga's Ambition on the Nintendo in '89. I found Civ I in '93.
                      Btw, I gave up on SMAC when I realized that the AI routines were all the same as in Civ II, despite the new diplomacy options.

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                      • #41
                        Since everyone is writing about the journey to CtP, I'll share mine too. (I've posted my age earlier in this thread).

                        Like a lot of other people, I started with the typical board games, and found Avalon Hill's Civilization in 1986. I simply loved it, and played it on and off for another 8 years. I went on to other strategy board games and became Secretary of my school's 'Tactical Games Club'. I eventually got a pc in '93, and my club president introduced me to [i]Civ{/i], which I immediately liked and got hooked to. After which playing other games like Colonization and CIvnet came readily. I also spent quite a lot of time on Civ2, which I played throughout my University years. Then I finally found CtP last year and have been playing it since. Now I'm waiting for CtP2 to come to the local games shops.

                        And that's my story....


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                        • #42
                          There goes my theory that CTP only appealed to kiddies.


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                          Chaos, panic and disorder - My work here is done.

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                          • #43
                            quote:

                            Originally posted by Alexander's Horse on 12-04-2000 01:30 AM
                            There goes my theory that CTP only appealed to kiddies.





                            Hey, I heard that you were trying to get a free copy of the game, AH....so that brings up the mean age quite a bit, doesn't it?



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                            • #44
                              Ok - 43 a few months more.

                              Going through TPG II (ThePerfectGeneral)(ms-dos), Risk (ms-dos), CIV II, Ceasar III, SMAC to CTP and in a short time - I hope - CTP II.

                              Had a halfpart in both Ceasar and SMAC - but sold the SMAC to get the full Ceasar.

                              By the way - the old dos TPG II had a advantage, that I miss in these new windows games: You actually could see longer over sea, grassland and plains than you could in forrest, hills and mountains! As far as I remembered, default line of sight was 3, but varied from 2 to 10-15?? (can't remember any more). This LOS was reduced heavy in forrest, hills and mountains. If situated the right place you were actually able to ambush a much stronger unit - and get away after the attack.

                              Units could also bombard over several tiles!
                              First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win.

                              Gandhi

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                              • #45
                                Oh, how many times have I seen this thread. Painful. MarkG, please move it to Off-Topic or somewhere else, it's surely not for here.
                                BirdMan: played Caesar III? I tried it, though it's good, but after some 2-3 hours of play I shelved it.

                                ------------------
                                Solver - http://www.aok.20m.com
                                [This message has been edited by Solver (edited December 04, 2000).]
                                Solver, WePlayCiv Co-Administrator
                                Contact: solver-at-weplayciv-dot-com
                                I can kill you whenever I please... but not today. - The Cigarette Smoking Man

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