Nope, but one of you has got extremely close.
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Name the Game - Part 3
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ehmmm...Streets sports Basketball?Skeptics should forego any thought of convincing the unconvinced that we hold the torch of truth illuminating the darkness. A more modest, realistic, and achievable goal is to encourage the idea that one may be mistaken. Doubt is humbling and constructive; it leads to rational thought in weighing alternatives and fully reexamining options, and it opens unlimited vistas.
Elie A. Shneour Skeptical Inquirer
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Dang...I really thought that I was closer than Cap. You said that the rules were intuitively understood by the Swedes, so I assumed that this sport must be big in Sweden.
First I thought Bandy, but I couldn't come up with any c64 Bandy games. Then I thought that it had to be Hockey, but no...it was an American game.
THAT CLUE WAS FVCKING MISLEADING, BUCK
AsmodeanIm not sure what Baruk Khazad is , but if they speak Judeo-Dwarvish, that would be "blessed are the dwarves" - lord of the mark
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Bigger in sweden than American Football and Baseball, that's for sure.
We regularly played Basketball in Gym class, and it's got a reasonably big public following. Plus it's quite easy to understand intuitively unlike the more complex American Football or Baseball.
The clue was more along the lines of "Series of four sports games, some of which were published in 1987", which is what Cap got I'd guess. Either that or he recognised the CPU-Human screen in which case he's damn cool.Världsstad - Dom lokala genrenas vän
Mick102, 102,3 Umeå, Måndagar 20-21
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was it from Summer games?'The very basis of the liberal idea – the belief of individual freedom is what causes the chaos' - William Kristol, son of the founder of neo-conservitivism, talking about neo-con ideology and its agenda for you.info here. prove me wrong.
Bush's Republican=Neo-con for all intent and purpose. be afraid.
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yah, I win again but at the same time I feel kinda lame for knowing all this computergame trivia
Another 8-bit game, mid 80's released for the C64 (and Apple?)
Okay okay, being the first of its ilk it isn't well known.
It would still take some years before the concept had grown...
It's successor truly mastered phrasing.
But the first game is amazing...
Last edited by CapTVK; November 27, 2003, 17:52.Skeptics should forego any thought of convincing the unconvinced that we hold the torch of truth illuminating the darkness. A more modest, realistic, and achievable goal is to encourage the idea that one may be mistaken. Doubt is humbling and constructive; it leads to rational thought in weighing alternatives and fully reexamining options, and it opens unlimited vistas.
Elie A. Shneour Skeptical Inquirer
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Originally posted by Buck Birdseed
Bigger in sweden than American Football and Baseball, that's for sure.
We regularly played Basketball in Gym class, and it's got a reasonably big public following. Plus it's quite easy to understand intuitively unlike the more complex American Football or Baseball.
The clue was more along the lines of "Series of four sports games, some of which were published in 1987", which is what Cap got I'd guess. Either that or he recognised the CPU-Human screen in which case he's damn cool.Skeptics should forego any thought of convincing the unconvinced that we hold the torch of truth illuminating the darkness. A more modest, realistic, and achievable goal is to encourage the idea that one may be mistaken. Doubt is humbling and constructive; it leads to rational thought in weighing alternatives and fully reexamining options, and it opens unlimited vistas.
Elie A. Shneour Skeptical Inquirer
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The Hobbit is my first guess.Världsstad - Dom lokala genrenas vän
Mick102, 102,3 Umeå, Måndagar 20-21
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None of the above, but you're moving in the right direction.Skeptics should forego any thought of convincing the unconvinced that we hold the torch of truth illuminating the darkness. A more modest, realistic, and achievable goal is to encourage the idea that one may be mistaken. Doubt is humbling and constructive; it leads to rational thought in weighing alternatives and fully reexamining options, and it opens unlimited vistas.
Elie A. Shneour Skeptical Inquirer
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