![]() There are still a few servers around the world. Once experienced, you'll understand what all the fuss is about. The multi-player game over the internet is even better. If you have a reasonably modern Mac PPC, the unofficial Carbon MacGLQuake 1.1b3 is great looking, and fast. Even better with more RAM and a video card and OS 9.1. No problems on my early Macintosh 6360/160 PPC with 32MB RAM and OS 8.6. Make sure to download the Quake 1.09 update. It should stay popular for a few years to come, mostly because of its low-ish hardware requirements. Single player Quake 1 is a great game even though it's now a bit old, and hard to find. My favorites were Warcraft II and Quakeworld. Some of these can be downloaded from links provided on the web site. Lots of popular games and demos work using GameRanger. Updating to OSX 10.9 Mavericks broke this service recently. GameRanger GameRanger for Macintosh, is a helpful program for finding the best games on the 'net. (Not quite an iMac, but still comparable to many 2000 vintage machines.) Over the years I upgraded with a Sonnet G3/400MHz, 136 Mb RAM, 10 Gb HD, Voodoo3 2000 PCI video card, 25x CD-ROM, and SCSI Yamaha 400t CD-R, running with Mac OS 9.2.2. If you need all those upgrades, get a new computer. A big new HD is always a good investment. (Much harder to break.) It took a while to get used to.Īdding extra RAM (at least 32 Mb, up to 136 Mb), an L2 cache G3/400MHz processor, and PCI video card are highly recommended upgrades. Joysticks can be so expensive these days, and I'd already broken one. The only thing I really missed was USB ports. This machine is relatively easy to upgrade. It was good enough for some games, but the "out-of-box" machine was pathetic, even in it's day. Macintosh Classic Between September 1997 and May 2005 I was using an Apple Macintosh 6360/160 PPC (the so-called "Multimedia Performa"). The NoSTalgia emulator works for some games, but is a bit awkward to use. So far I have been able to run only a few of these successfuly in Atari ST emulators for Macintosh. The Civilization demo (left) used many hours. The Skate Tribe demo was a big hit with the kids. The freeware Nova was a great shoot 'em up. Various Atari magazine floppy disks were a good source of games. It's shareware, and pretty crippled when unregistered.įrom about 1986-1997, with an Atari 1040STFM computer, favourite games included Populous, Sim City and Gunship, the Apache helicopter sim. There is also Mugrat Coleco Emulator for Mac OS X. (Especially the more complex games that use a lot of buttons, like War Games.) It takes a while to set up the gamepad buttons to match the old controlers. The ColEm emulator program for Mac (Classic) and PC helps to bring these old games back. We broke several joysticks during heavy use. The original Coleco contollers were just about useless for most games compared to a joystick. Other favourites were Time Pilot, Pitfall, Cosmic Avenger, and War Games. It's still one of the best driving games ever. The great four-player car racing game Pitstop kept the Bradley Street crew occupied for hours at a time. ![]() ![]() I've loved playing computer games since I bought a ColecoVision console with the Atari 2600 expansion module back in the early '80s. r/pinball - Pinball specific discussion.TOXICO'S HOME PAGE: Favourite Computer Games Favourite Computer Games r/arcade - Original CoinOP Arcade specific discussion. r/RetroGamingNetwork - a multireddit for retro gaming! r/HyperSpin - HyperSpin specific discussion. R/MAME RULES/REGULATIONS REDDIT'S ARCADE COMMUNITY Over time, MAME (originally stood for Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator) absorbed the sister-project MESS (Multi Emulator Super System), so MAME now documents a wide variety of (mostly vintage) computers, video game consoles and calculators, in addition to the arcade video games that were its initial focus. The fact that the software is usable serves primarily to validate the accuracy of the documentation (how else can you prove that you have recreated the hardware faithfully?). The source code to MAME serves as this documentation. This is achieved by documenting the hardware and how it functions. As electronic technology continues to rush forward, MAME prevents this important "vintage" software from being lost and forgotten. MAME’s purpose is to preserve decades of software history. ![]() MAME is a multi-purpose emulation framework. Questions? Please check out OUR MAME/BYOAC Wiki! ![]()
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