ROBOTNIK666
06-15-2006, 10:52 PM
Here is a new game I created last night...Scenario.
I post a scenario that a person would have, usually choosing what video game to buy, and then you choose what seems to you the best choice.
Here goes...
The year is 1981. You are a 12-year old computer enthusiast who owns an Apple II. You are perfectly content with your current games, like Akalabeth: World of Doom, Zork, and Ultima, yet you want to try something new.
A different computer would be too much money, so you decide to upgrade your Odyssey 2000 pong system into a programmable home video game system.
On Saturday, you go down to some different computer and toy stores, and this is what you take note of:
Atari VCS: Atari's console has some very good games, like Asteroids, Space Invaders, and Breakout. The controls look very simplistic, with merely one button & an 8-way joystick, but some games use a keyboard controller, which is very good for games that need extra control. Even better is the BASIC programming cartridge, but I question its consistency with the actual programming language.
Overall, it seems like a good system for video games, less so for computing.
Magnavox Odyssey 2: When I first saw this console, I doubted it was actually a video game system, because of the keyboard on it. However, after reading the marketing mumbo-jumbo on the box, I realized that the keyboard was for educational use, and not for normal computer usage. I tried some of the games at a Toys R Us, and they were hardly passable. The one bright spot, however, is a Pac-Man game called KC Munchkin. They haven't released one for Atari yet, so this would be great to show my friends, who are all Pac-Maniacs.
Overall, this isn't a very good system at all, and the Pac-Man game only brings the system up to average.
Mattel Intellivision: From what I have seen, this is definitely the most advanced system so far. There are some good games, like Major League Baseball, Auto Racing, and Astrosmash, and the computer upgrade seems promising. However, the disc controllers are sort of hard to work with.
Overall, the games look good, and I am looking forward to the computer upgrade.
Bally Professional Arcade: When I went to Radio Shack, I noticed a very peculiar system called the Bally Professional Arcade. Bally/Midway is a gaming manufacturer that brought such games as Gunfight, Galaxian, and Pac-Man. Three games are built into the system plus a calcuator, which I would have a lot of uses for. A keypad is bulit into the system.
Overall, Bally Professional Arcade is a console I don't know much about right now, but it looks promising.
Use the poll to decide what you want. Remember, this takes place in '81, so your decision shouldn't be based on how the system is viewed now. For example, even though I said the "computer upgrade seems promising", you shouldn't say no to Intellivision just because it was never released. Vote on what you would say in 1981, not 2006.
If this get good posts, I will make more games of Scenario. Enjoy! :D
I post a scenario that a person would have, usually choosing what video game to buy, and then you choose what seems to you the best choice.
Here goes...
The year is 1981. You are a 12-year old computer enthusiast who owns an Apple II. You are perfectly content with your current games, like Akalabeth: World of Doom, Zork, and Ultima, yet you want to try something new.
A different computer would be too much money, so you decide to upgrade your Odyssey 2000 pong system into a programmable home video game system.
On Saturday, you go down to some different computer and toy stores, and this is what you take note of:
Atari VCS: Atari's console has some very good games, like Asteroids, Space Invaders, and Breakout. The controls look very simplistic, with merely one button & an 8-way joystick, but some games use a keyboard controller, which is very good for games that need extra control. Even better is the BASIC programming cartridge, but I question its consistency with the actual programming language.
Overall, it seems like a good system for video games, less so for computing.
Magnavox Odyssey 2: When I first saw this console, I doubted it was actually a video game system, because of the keyboard on it. However, after reading the marketing mumbo-jumbo on the box, I realized that the keyboard was for educational use, and not for normal computer usage. I tried some of the games at a Toys R Us, and they were hardly passable. The one bright spot, however, is a Pac-Man game called KC Munchkin. They haven't released one for Atari yet, so this would be great to show my friends, who are all Pac-Maniacs.
Overall, this isn't a very good system at all, and the Pac-Man game only brings the system up to average.
Mattel Intellivision: From what I have seen, this is definitely the most advanced system so far. There are some good games, like Major League Baseball, Auto Racing, and Astrosmash, and the computer upgrade seems promising. However, the disc controllers are sort of hard to work with.
Overall, the games look good, and I am looking forward to the computer upgrade.
Bally Professional Arcade: When I went to Radio Shack, I noticed a very peculiar system called the Bally Professional Arcade. Bally/Midway is a gaming manufacturer that brought such games as Gunfight, Galaxian, and Pac-Man. Three games are built into the system plus a calcuator, which I would have a lot of uses for. A keypad is bulit into the system.
Overall, Bally Professional Arcade is a console I don't know much about right now, but it looks promising.
Use the poll to decide what you want. Remember, this takes place in '81, so your decision shouldn't be based on how the system is viewed now. For example, even though I said the "computer upgrade seems promising", you shouldn't say no to Intellivision just because it was never released. Vote on what you would say in 1981, not 2006.
If this get good posts, I will make more games of Scenario. Enjoy! :D