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My love affair with games


On 02/25/2013 at 12:32 PM by Ranger1

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I've thought a lot about what was the actual catalyst for my ending up a gamer. I did play Pong, my uncle and aunt got one as either a wedding present or a Christmas present from someone and they had it set up on an old black and white TV in the spare room at their first house. It was fun and exciting, for about 15 minutes. And then I'd wander off and either play cards with them or go do outdoorsy stuff. So it definitely wasn't Pong.

Then, when I was ten, we went on vacation with my mom's boyfriend. We were staying in some cute little cabin on the coast of Maine before we moved here and he and I went for a walk to get away from my annoying little sister. She was three and extremely ADHD and he and I had had enough of being cooped up with her in a two-room cabin. On our walk, we came across an arcade and wandered in. Ulrich (my mom's boyfriend) gave me a couple of bucks and he and I played a couple of games of pinball. We also discovered a couple of arcade cabinets, one of which was Asteroids. I came from a very small, former mill town in western New Hampshire and I'd never seen an arcade video game before. Ulrich and I played as many games as we had quarters left before heading back to the cabin and the rest of the family. I wasn't very good at Asteroids, but I sure had fun. Ulrich managed to get his name on the high scores list. We went back again before vacation was over, and Asteroids got several more plays. I think that may have begun my fascination with video games.

We moved to Norway that fall, and Ulrich and my mom got married. He did a lot of work from home, back before it was common to have a home office if you didn't run your business out of your home. We had Breakout on the computer (I think it may have been the only game we had), and I got very good at it. Later, when we moved back to the States, he once again set up shop in our living room. He needed to finish a project and borrowed an Apple II from a friend. The friend brought games with it that he thought we kids would enjoy. I was 13 and my sister was 6 at this point. Applepanic was the game that he thought my sister would enjoy, and she did, for the five minutes she could manage to concentrate on anything. I liked it ok. It was a fun little arcade game where your little guy ran around being chased by killer apples, butterflies, and probably other things that I never got good enough to have come chase me. He had a mallet, and the point of the game was to break holes in the floor to trap the apples (and other things) and then hammer them through to make them disappear. Or at least I think that was what happened. It's been at least 25 years since I played that game. The game that Bob brought for me was the original Wizardry: Proving Ground of the Mad Overlord. I was hooked. I loved being able to create my own characters, play around with the classes to see what worked the best with my party of six, and explore the dungeon for loot and monster slaying. I was heartbroken when we had to return the Apple II a few months later. After having had that experience, my friends' Ataris just didn't cut it for me.

A couple of years later, Ulrich started his own business out of our home and we acquired an IBM clone (now known as a PC) of our very own. Ulrich used to get a catalog for software, and they had a games section. Imagine my excitement when I discovered that Wizardry was listed in there. It was $70, though, and I was 15 and getting a monthly allowance (my parents believed in teaching us how to budget early). It took several months of setting aside a little bit at a time, but I was able to hand Ulrich $70 in cash and he ordered the game for me. Then came the 4-6 week waiting period. I think the UPS guy was getting a little sick of me by the time my game finally arrived. Wizardry was my way of staying sane during the years of hell that most people call high school. I wasn't one of the popular kids, but I also wasn't one of the ones being picked on constantly, either. I kind of just did my own thing, and that included reading science fiction and fantasy, collecting comic books, and playing computer games. I even got my uncle Richard hooked on Wizardry. He had his own save disks for when he'd come to visit and he'd spend his nights at our house dungeon-crawling and collecting loot. I started writing short stories to give my characters back stories, because it just seemed like they needed them. Some I'd hand in for class writing assignments, but most just lived in a notebook at home for my own pleasure.

I gave up PC gaming after I headed off to college. I didn't have the money to invest in my own computer, especially as I was footing the bill for school myself. After college, well, let's just say that seasonal park rangers will never get rich and leave it at that. I ended up becoming a console gamer when I got a Genesis around Christmas of 1994. I like the simplicity of putting the game in and just playing (unless it's a PS3 or 360 game, then I sit and stew during the inevitable updates). I also started gaming a lot with my brother on his NES and SNES when I'd move back in with my grandparents in the winters after being laid off. Racing games, adventure games, arcade games, they were all good. If there was co-op, we'd play co-op, if they were single player, we'd either take turns or work together to solve puzzles.

I loved my Genesis, so many great games, and at the time, the graphics were so cool. It was my only console until after the PS2 came out. I don't really have an off switch when it comes to gaming, and I realized that about myself. I resisted getting a PS1 because I knew what would happen. I used to lie and tell people it was because I wasn't interested, the camera movement made me nauseous, etc. My boyfriend's little brother got a PS2 for Christmas in 2003 and he gave us the old, beat-up original Playstation that had originally belonged to middle brother Matt. By the end of summer of 2005, I had acquired a GBA SP, a PS2, an Xbox, and a Game Cube. I blame it all on that PS1 and the wonderful RPGs that I discovered for it.


 

Comments

Chris Yarger Community Manager

02/25/2013 at 12:42 PM

I remember what started me down the path of gaming; Double Dragon with my Dad while we were visiting my uncle. We had so much fun, that my Dad bought me an NES a few months later for Christmas, forever stapling me within the realm of gaming.

Ranger1

02/25/2013 at 12:58 PM

Chris, it's amazing how we remember what hooked us, isn't it?

Townz90

02/25/2013 at 12:45 PM

My uncle always goes on about Wizardry. My first gaming experience was with the Genesis. Great console! 

Ranger1

02/25/2013 at 12:59 PM

Matt, even with its crude, rudimentary graphics, it was the shit back in the day. I compliment your uncle on his good taste! As for the Genesis, I still have it, it still works, and I still find games for it.

BrokenH

02/25/2013 at 01:13 PM

Wow, a 15 year old girl in love with rpgs. You mush have been every teen boy's wet dream Tami. lol. I know if we had met as kids my mind would have been blown if you brought up Wizardry. Your significant other is a lucky mate! I'm sure I've said that before on 1up but we are sort of starting from square one again.

Ranger1

02/25/2013 at 02:21 PM

Ben, I don't know about every teen boy. I went to school with a lot of jocks before gaming was popular. So not every jock's wet dream, lol.

Serraxor

02/25/2013 at 01:22 PM

I remember playing a lot of Atari 2600 when I was two and three years old. I was pretty good at defender and Pressure Cooker. But I think like many people, Super Mario Bros. was probably the defining game for me. Granted, I was never truly "hooked" since I still went outside often and moderated my gametime. But when I moved out, that's when I really took gaming seriously. 

Ranger1

02/25/2013 at 02:24 PM

One can be hooked and still find time for a lot of other pursuits. One of my youngest cousins is in the game design program at RIT and he still spends a ton of time doing other things - parkour, backpacking, kayaking, reading. And he's been hooked on gaming since he was three and I put a Genesis controller in his tiny hand.

angelfaceband42

02/25/2013 at 02:40 PM

It was the NES for me too.  Super Mario/Duckhunt.  My brother is 14 years older than me.  He left to join the Air Force when I was 5 years old.  I always looked forward to him coming in to visit.  He would play games with me.  I will always remember playing Rygar on the NES with him one weekend.  We left the system on for 2-3 days until we finally beat it.

Ranger1

02/25/2013 at 04:16 PM

I never had a NES, so I never got into Mario. I'm trying to fix that now. And there's a lot to be said for the good times spent with older brothers gaming, isn't there?

Matt Snee Staff Writer

02/25/2013 at 02:46 PM

I've been thinking about this stuff too.  It's amazing how those first experiences stick with you and how deep that love goes.  

Ranger1

02/25/2013 at 04:20 PM

It's fun taking that trip down memory lane, trying to remember how you got here.

Aboboisdaman

02/25/2013 at 03:44 PM

Great blog Tami. Like Chris, it was Double Dragon on NES that hooked me. My cousin had it. It took like five minutes for me to fall in love with it. I love martial arts so beat em ups were really easy for me to get into. I remember trying to imitate Billy Lee's jumpkick over and over. I doubt the bed springs appreciated that lol.

Ranger1

02/25/2013 at 04:21 PM

Aaron, thanks! I can hear your mom yelling at now, lol.

SanAndreas

02/25/2013 at 06:22 PM

Awesome story, Tami. I used to love arcade games when I was young, and I had a PC at a young age, although I was more into Ultima than Wizardry.

Ranger1

02/25/2013 at 06:57 PM

Thanks, Andrew. I spent a chunk of time hanging out in arcades once we moved to Maine. There was a chain of drug stores called LaVerdier's that had arcades in the back, so just about every town that was big enough for its own drug store also had an arcade. I mostly watched other people play the video games and stuck to pinball myself, but I did spend my share of quarters on Qbert, Moon Patrol, Pacman, and Centipede.

mothman

02/25/2013 at 06:43 PM

I encountered my first IBM PC in 1985 but it was at my first job in IT. All my education had been on IBM mainframes and Commodore PETs. 

I finally got a PS1 when my daughter was old enough that I could claim I was buying it for her. At first we just rented games, I remember one of the first games we rented was Bug Riders. I'm pretty sure it was terrible.

The first RPG I ever played on it was Alundra

Ranger1

02/25/2013 at 06:59 PM

Peter, Alundra was one of the first RPGs I got for my PS1, too. It reminds me of a Sega Genesis game called Landstalker.

Homelessrook

02/25/2013 at 08:43 PM

Great blog Tami.

The movie War games got me interested in computers and the internet, before people knew of the internet like now. The DK arcade game got me into video games.

Ranger1

02/25/2013 at 09:22 PM

Larry - "Shall we play a game?"

Homelessrook

02/26/2013 at 03:42 PM

Anytime Tami. How about a nice game of Chess.

Ranger1

02/26/2013 at 06:42 PM

No, let's play Global Thermo-nuclear War.

Super Step Contributing Writer

02/25/2013 at 10:12 PM

I love Asteroids! So simple, so fun, such a great online time waster. lol

I hear you about college, the reason I haven't bought a system past DS is college expenses, and getting paid room and board only for two/three years with Residence Life, plus loans, haven't helped.

Thank God I found my current job, and will hopefully get more steady hours.

I remember when I continued with Nintendos and my brother got a PS1, he said he did like the lack of load times on cartridges; so things have come full circle with those updates on new consoles, eh? lol

Ranger1

02/26/2013 at 09:06 AM

I didn't even know Asteroids was available online. To me, it will always be an arcade game and near and dear to my heart because it's linked to such a good memory.

Super Step Contributing Writer

02/26/2013 at 11:03 AM

Jack FM's website had it, Space Invaders, Frogger, Tetris, and a few other classics available to play when I was in middle school, don't know if that's still the case.

KnightDriver

02/26/2013 at 01:31 AM

I can't think of a single moment that started me gaming. It was just always around me and part of my life. (this is 1UP's RunningWithGuns btw. Good to read your blogs again Tami!)

Ranger1

02/26/2013 at 09:10 AM

John, I'm glad to see you here.

Chunopo

02/26/2013 at 07:33 AM

For me the start had to be Operation Wolf on the ZX Spectrum, the screen used to flash everytime time you pulled the trigger so it was every epileptic's worst nightmare! I'm still pretty blown away by the concept of playing a game off a cassette!

Ranger1

02/26/2013 at 09:11 AM

Adam, my best friend had one of those computers with the cassettes. It was pretty amazing at the time, and now it's pretty amazing for being so prehistoric, lol.

FAF101

02/26/2013 at 10:06 AM

Oh man...when I started gaming it was on the Atari and my frist game was ET. For some reason I found that game so awesome when I was a kid haha. That was until I saw Mortal Kombat and that it was a lot cooler and then I moved to Dragon Warrior and Lunar by watching my half brother play.

Ranger1

02/26/2013 at 10:43 AM

ET...well, you didn't have anything to compare it to, did you?

FAF101

02/28/2013 at 10:18 PM

Not too many games no. I had a few other Atari games but I do not remember what they were. It wasn't until my half brother moved in when I got exposed to Nintendo and Sega

bullet656

02/26/2013 at 11:04 AM

Nice blog. 

 I guess I could blame my dad for me being into gaming, which is kind of odd since he never really played many games.  He has just always been into technology.  We had an atari with a bunch of games when I was young.  He also had a commodore 64 and a friend that was part of some hacking community, so we had literally hundreds of C64 games that I played (once I became a fan, I started actually paying for games though).

It sounds kind of silly, but when I was really young I used to have a universe in my head where all the games were connected, and I was like some super spy/soldier/etc that would be sent on these missions and have to assume the identity of whatever character I was playing in the game.  I would even pretend my real-life friends were the secondary characters.

 Anyways, except for a short time in college I have been buying and playing games ever since.

Ranger1

02/26/2013 at 12:11 PM

That's not silly at all. I used to do the same thing with books, movies and TV shows. I think that may be one of the reasons I love games so much - I can immerse myself in the game world and be a part of the whole thing. And that also reminds me: did you ever play Retro Game Challenge? The premise is a lot like what you used to do.

Machocruz

02/26/2013 at 06:43 PM

Wizardry (and first person "blobber" RPGs in general) is timeless.  I had a blast not too long ago playing Labyrinth of souls on PS3.  These game inspire the imagination.

First game I remember playing is Haunted House on Atari 2600. I'm sure I played games before that, but that one crystalized everything for me.  Then when saw and heard Castlevania on my friend's NES, that was it: stone cold game fanatic for life.

Ranger1

02/26/2013 at 07:34 PM

I have Labyrinth of Lost Souls, too. And the one that came out on the PS2.

It's funny how most of remember exactly what it was that made us fall in love with gaming.

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