home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- ~The Good Old Days
-
- By Martin Keen
-
-
- Computers are way better now than they were a few years ago, right?
- Well apparently not, the recent upsurge in retrogaming suggests
- otherwise. Heres what was happening in the last three Octobers; on
- the Amiga in 1992, and the PC is 1993 and 1994.
-
-
- ~October 1992
-
- The Amiga 600 took a 100 pound price cut down to 299 quid this month.
- However if you wanted the HD version that came with a gigantic 20Mb
- hard drive the package would still cost 499 pounds! It left industry
- pundits guessing what Commodore was up to. Rumours were rife about why
- Commodore were doing this - was it to introduce a new replacement to
- the A2000? Commodore themselves were coming up with all sorts of
- reasons including "the new price seems more psychologically acceptable
- to the customer because it seems nearer 200 pounds and more remote
- from 400 pounds". They were to give the real reason next month, the
- all-new A1200 was to be released for the same price as the A600s
- making them obsolete.
-
- The CD-ROM drive for the A500 was also released. The single speed slug
- retailed for a disgraceful 350 quid, expensive for even then. Now
- Amiga owners everywhere could play games designed for the CD-TV. Yep,
- both of them.
-
- Zool and Premiere were the big name games of the month. Zool, the
- story of the ninja from the Nth dimension was a (very fast) platform
- game set out to beat Sonic on the Megadrive. It sold very well indeed
- but the only fault was the shameless product placement of Chubba Chup
- loppypops which kept popping up everywhere.
-
- Premiere set new standards in platform game cartoon graphics. Based
- on a number of film sets you could go in front and behind the scenes
- in a hunt for six missing film roles which were stolen in the superb
- cartoon intro. This game will always hold a special place in my heart
- because I had a solution to one of Premiere's puzzles published in
- Amiga Format along with my name. Fame at last!
-
-
- ~October 1993
-
- Computer Manufacturer Vanilla tried to get the PC competing with the
- Amiga by giving it an Amiga style price point. For just 400 pound you
- could get a 386DX bundle - designed to directly compete with the
- similarly priced Cartoon Classics which contained an A500. This all
- sounded pretty good until Vanilla mention the PC does not come with
- a hard disk. The reason for this glaring obmission is, they say,
- because Amiga HDs come as an extra so they do here too. What someone
- obviously forgot to tell Vanilla is most games on the PC simply don't
- work without a hard drive to install them on.
-
- The game charts were dominated by LucasArts with their games occupying
- the top three slots. Day Of The Tentacle sat on top, followed by
- X-Wing and Imperial Pursuit. Of course this was in the days before
- Sim City 2000 which is now suspicously always at number one in the PC
- floppy chart.
-
- Gamewise October proved to be a very poor month. The only highlights
- were Electronic Arts NHL Hockey although because it was an official
- licence it couldn't include all those fights that make ice hockey
- worth watching, and Lands Of Lore (just about). Nuff said.
-
-
- ~October 1994
-
- Problems started to crop up with the short lived utility DoubleSpace
- that came with MS-DOS 6. A whole host of games either crashed or
- refused to install at all - Tie Fighter being one. Microsoft were
- later to bring out an advanced version of DoubleSpace but then had to
- remove it after being sued by Stac Electronics who claimed it ripped
- off part of their Stacker code.
-
- Sigma Designs did its best to revamp its MPEG player ReelMagic which
- was suffering from poor sales and even poorer software support. So
- what did it do to make it more appealing to potential customers? Cut
- the price in half? Add a number of top quality MPEG titles? Throw in
- a few new useful features to make the card a joy to use? Nope, Sigma
- took the drastic step of renaming the ReelMagic card to REALMagic!
-
- The 10th October 1994 became 'Doomsday' which saw the release of the
- disappointing Doom II which turned out to be nothing more than a few
- new level designs with the difficulty level cranked up to almost
- impossible.
-
- Game highlight of the month was PGA Tour Golf 486. Sporting SVGA
- graphics that beat even Links this remains the best golf game to date.
- Play against or as up to 9 real PGA professionals who have all been
- digitised swinging, putting, and throwing down their clubs in anger
- when they mishit a shot. Only PGA Golf '96 stands any chance of
- beating this one.
-
-
- Watch out for The Good Old Days next month when (surprise, surprise)
- we take a look at past Novembers.
-