Since XP can run DOSBox 0.74 there are a number of great games out there- I'm just beginning to find out about them.
There is a game called "Troddlers." It was inspired by "Lemmings" in that you are trying to get mindlessly marching critters to an exit, but instead of granting certain Lemmings certain abilities you control a hapless creature that makes boxes appear and disappear to accomplish this. You work for a wizard whom is slightly more tolerant of failure than Darth Vader. The graphics even by today's standards are BEAUTIFUL, the music is great, and the gameplay insanely addicting. It works surprisingly well on the netbook.
Then there is "Sixx." Another addicting puzzle game with good graphics and great music.
"Tiny Skweeks" is another great game, where you guide angry critters to resting places.
"Jinxter" is an odd text-based adventure with images. It was a Magnetic Scrolls game.
"Blockout" is a top-down version of "Tetris."
The classic "Digger," a "Mr. Do!" type game.
"Locomotion" can look like a ColecoVision game- change tracks, guide trains. Great fun.
And there are new DOS games, such as "EGACGA."
With the netbook, it's curious. "Last Half of Darkness" crashes every time, but with PocketDOS "Last Half of Darkness 2" works just fine.
To be honest that netbook's limits are showing. The libraries around here recently have agreement pages that block it from getting online, the Yahoo! search page does not work properly, the Youtube search page does not work properly, and since one cannot download 240p Youtube videos any longer from sites it can use- minimum 360p- that is a serious blow because its players cannot go beyond 240p for good playback. This is why I want to get either the TCPMP or CORE Players to deliberately skip every other video frame- converting 360p and even 480p videos to 12 FPS versions allow decent playback. But man, just try to find out how to get started on any of these projects, it would count as one of the Labors of Hercules.
The Sony of course has advantages. Now, if that technician can reinstall XP Home Edition in it, so it works again that would be great- it was clearly allergic to Professional.
And it's worth mentioning yet again