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Great Games To Put On a Free PC?

Lumpy writes "I am giving several new PC's to a local charity that will be giving them to needy kids this Xmas. They are not powerful, basically baseline Dells that have Intel graphics and Celeron, but more than enough to do homework and other studies on. They are going out with XP on them, an Ubuntu CD, and a bunch of OSS software like OO.o and the others. I would like to include some games for the kids. Strategy, fun, etc. Great freeware games that are fun to play. What would be the best games that a 13-16 year old will like to play that are free and legal to give away, and will run on this lower-end hardware?"

634 comments

  1. Battle for Wesnoth by javilon · · Score: 5, Informative
    --


    When his defense asked, "Which computer has Jon Johansen trespassed upon?" the answer was: "His own."
    1. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by stoolpigeon · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yep - great game in a format a lot of teen gamers will already know. I love playing it and the ability to download new scenarios and make your own is pretty cool. It is very well done - and a lot of fun.

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    2. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 5, Informative

      Wesnoth is a good one.

      Might also look into Teeworlds, World of Padman TORCS, Neverball and OpenArena.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    3. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Two words;

    4. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Paaskonijn · · Score: 5, Funny

      "Reply to This" and "Parent" are actually four words. Maybe you meant to say "Two buttons;"?

    5. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by pm_rat_poison · · Score: 5, Informative

      Pingus Lemmings clone with penguins!

    6. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by xgr3gx · · Score: 5, Informative

      Also Urban Terror (like Counter-Strike) urbanterror.net

      --
      Shameless plug alert: Game server control panel
    7. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Shack24 · · Score: 1

      I'll 2nd Neverball....along with NeverPutt (mini golf). Both kep me occupied for hours...and may run well enough on the older hardware.

    8. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Informative

      A great game, very polished (except for the spelling in the cutscenes). Why not link to this list which contains Wesnoth and a lot of others. When I'm bored, I visit this list and pick one I've not tried yet.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    9. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by psnyder · · Score: 1

      And http://www.wesnoth.org/ has been slashdotted into oblivion...

    10. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      "you have a 42.36% chance of causing 3 units of damage with the weapon you've chosen, and a 26.64% chance of causing 4 units of damage. Here is a table describing the probabilities of every outcome for every combination of weapons..."

      Do you really want that stuff interfering with the gameplay? Wesnoth is like doing math homework

    11. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree, this is a good game, even supports multiple players over LAN...

    12. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by ElizabethGreene · · Score: 4, Funny

      I second Wesnoth.

      OpenArena, Bzflag, and Armagetron would also be top picks.

      Please, for the love of god and country, DO NOT PUT FROZEN BUBBLE ON THERE.. Frozen bubble has stolen days..weeks.. years? of my life. Please, stop the madness. End the addiction cycle. Do not further the spread of Frozen Bubble.

      On second thought, frozen bubble would be fine. A little couldn't hurt right? I think I'll go play right now. Just one game? One game won't hurt. I can quit after one game.

      -ellie

    13. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Man+Eating+Duck · · Score: 1

      And http://www.wesnoth.org/ [wesnoth.org] has been slashdotted into oblivion...

      If you're on Ubuntu, it is available through Synaptic if you want to try it. A presentation is also available on Wikipedia.

      --
      Are you a grammar Nazi? I'm trying to improve my English; please correct my errors! :)
    14. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by indy_Muad'Dib · · Score: 1
    15. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Not only Slashdotted, but also a new version was released today, and that always slows the server down.

    16. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I bet that one's written in Mono :)

    17. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I remember playing the first couple levels of that game and absolutely hating it after 10 elf fighters were wiped out by a single orc fighter (during daytime). Felt a lot like playing one of those games from Midway featuring "computer assistance"...

    18. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by wrecked · · Score: 4, Informative

      If you like Urban Terror, you'll also like True Combat Elite, a spec-ops/terrorist tactical shooter based on the Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory engine. The pace is slower, with the emphasis on stealth. Aiming is by iron-sights or scopes only; there are no crosshairs.

      On the subject of freeware, open source and Free games, I wonder why no one checks Wikipedia:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_freeware_games
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alphabetical_list_of_open_source_games
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_commercial_games_released_as_freeware

    19. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      Doesn't bother my youngest brothers (4th and 8th grade).

    20. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 2, Informative

      singularity is also good
      and freedriodrpg can be played on intel (i think)
      widelands (may not be playable), adonttell & Einstein are also worth a shot

      Hell the kids/games metapackage for kubuntu kept me amused for a while.

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    21. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by HappySmileMan · · Score: 1

      The whole point is that YOU don't need to do the maths, it's done for you, big red bars mean you'll probably hurt(or be hurt) a lot, big green bars don't.

      Or simpler and more accurate, big bars at top mean you'll miss a lot, big bars at bottom mean you'll hit a lot.

    22. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by rite_m · · Score: 1

      "Reply to This" and "Parent" are actually four words. Maybe you meant to say "Two buttons;"?

      I feel like you posted the first comment as AC to set yourself up nicely for the "Two buttons;" joke.

      Karma whore!

    23. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by hjf · · Score: 2, Informative

      funny doesn't count for karma anyway.

    24. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Lumpy · · Score: 2, Informative

      You think that's bad.

      Crack attack...http://aluminumangel.org/attack/

      You start playing and then next thing you know..

      What? It's tuesday??? It was just saturday!!!!?!

      Although thanks for reminding me about frozen bubble. With the posts here I already have enough games on it that will keep the kids happy for at least a year.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    25. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wesnoth keeps getting mentioned in these OSS games lists and such, but it gets boring after ten minutes. It may be free, but it ain't fun.

    26. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by ElizabethGreene · · Score: 1

      Lol, I had uninstalled Crack Attack at the insistence of my SO and Kids. :) Thanks for the reminder!

      -ellie

    27. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by PincusJr · · Score: 0

      +1 for Teeworlds. Although it is only multiplayer.

    28. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure there's a joke there, but I'm not getting it.

      C++ & clanlib 0.6 until last year when it was ported to SDL, iirc.

    29. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Whiteox · · Score: 2, Informative

      Chuzzle stole my life away. Much more addictive than Frozen Bubbble especially when you get a high score of 190,000 on the first game. Then there is TAGAP, but that's too hard, even for a 15yr old.

      --
      Don't be apathetic. Procrastinate!
    30. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by MoriaOrc · · Score: 1

      (Score:4, Informative)

      Clearly now rite_m will need to expand his conspiracy theory to include a sock puppet or two. Or maybe you're all three?!

    31. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Pictish+Prince · · Score: 1
      --
      Only his tendency toward a dazed stupor prevented him from screaming aloud.
    32. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Provocateur · · Score: 1

      will keep the kids happy for at least a year.

      Don't forget to bring them out in the sun once in a while, and to feed them.

      BTW, maybe it's none of my business, but what are they doin time for anyway?

      --
      WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
    33. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Well, it's a game about mass suicide of penguins. Surely there must be a hand of Microsoft in it somewhere.

      Ah, nevermind. It was just a lame attempt at a joke.

    34. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Rulian · · Score: 1

      Also Urban Terror (like Counter-Strike)...

      Also Urban Terror (looks like Counter-Strike)... Fixed that for you ;) It's more like Quake III: fast, fast, and... ... often way too fast for me. but fun.

    35. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Jamey · · Score: 1

      Because the poster didn't ask for simply a list of games - the poster asked for *best* games that work on a certain class of machines.

      I'm thinking Slashdot needs a new moderation category: "Actually answers the original question", or maybe "On Topic".

    36. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by harry666t · · Score: 1

      No, he actually said exactly Two words;.

    37. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know that Torcs or Neverball will run (dunno about the others) - I had a laptop with an integrated graphics chip (sounds close to what those baseline dells are) and the opengl was so slow I couldn't run Torcs or Neverball to the point where I could actually play it.

    38. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Enigma23 · · Score: 1

      And to think that I actually still had some free time in between playing BomberMan Land Touch and FF XII Revanent Wings on my DS... until your suggestion of Frozen Bubble. Curses!

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une .sig
    39. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by clone53421 · · Score: 1

      Saying that you "could care less" about something is implying that you DO care about it, regardless of common usage.

      Sarcastic statements imply the opposite of what they mean.

      --
      Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
    40. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Open arena is kind of lame. Try Warsow instead

      http://warsow.net/

    41. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by redscare2k4 · · Score: 1

      Yep! +1 to Urban Terror.

      Also, you can find GTA1 and GTA2 in rockstar homepage for free :)

    42. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by HeWhowas · · Score: 1

      You've eaten away at my life. I will keep a running tally of how many breathing hours you owe me for introducing this game to me, and will bill you at the end. HeWhoWas.

    43. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by ElizabethGreene · · Score: 1

      Like I'll have any left following the divorce and child abandonment lawsuits. :) Sorry, I can't afford to be an enabler, I'm already addicted.

    44. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by HeWhowas · · Score: 1

      So long as you have a computer, you can continue to play. That's all that matters. If I find some places you can squat that have electricity, I'll let you know :-P

    45. Re:Battle for Wesnoth by alexjustdoit · · Score: 1

      I don't think any of the Shooters listed above will run on the machines he is giving out. My own recommendation: Glest. Well developed open source RTS game with a map editor and many mods. (If you can find them.) Also, I think this game is great for teens with a liking to computers as the open-source-ness of this game got me started in programming and I was 10 at the time. Glest.org

  2. FreeCiv by WiiVault · · Score: 4, Informative

    its a great choice and will run on almost anything.

    1. Re:Freeciv by hotdiggitydawg · · Score: 1

      FreeCiv is a freeware version of Civilization that I still play. They have linux and windows releases.

      http://freeciv.wikia.com/wiki/Download#Windows_Packages

      I second that. Great version of a classic game, and highly addictive. I've lost more hours than I care to count playing this one...

    2. Re:Freeciv by Itchyeyes · · Score: 1

      I second that. Mod parent up.

    3. Re:Freeciv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does FreeCiv's interface still look like it was written in 1993? I just looked and it has gotten somewhat better, but it's still a bit klunky. Granted a game doesn't have to look great to be fun, but if a game is ugly enough it can certainly detract from the fun.

    4. Re:Freeciv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      I second that. Mod parent up.

      I don't want to!

    5. Re:Freeciv by Sparr0 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I second that. Mod parent up.

      I don't want to!

      And now you can't.

    6. Re:Freeciv by tao · · Score: 1

      Don't forget FreeCol! Even more fun, IMHO.

    7. Re:FreeCiv by rrhal · · Score: 1

      I second this - it's one of the best games ever.

      --
      All generalizations are false, including this one. Mark Twain
    8. Re:Freeciv by suckmysav · · Score: 1

      He posted as AC. You fail at the internet

      --
      "You can't fight in here, this is the war room!"
    9. Re:Freeciv by Sparr0 · · Score: 1

      Did he post as AC, or did he post without logging in? We don't know, I just took a shot in the dark at the former.

    10. Re:Freeciv by davidphogan74 · · Score: 1

      You can post AC after modding.

    11. Re:Freeciv by davidphogan74 · · Score: 1

      I used to love the original, I'll have to try this out.

    12. Re:Freeciv by nahdude812 · · Score: 1

      Only if you fully log out first (or use a different browser that you're not logged in from in the first place). If you just tick, "Post Anonymously," it'll still undo your mods.

    13. Re:Freeciv by davidphogan74 · · Score: 1

      It's /., who doesn't have 3 or 4 browsers installed?

    14. Re:FreeCiv by Spliffster · · Score: 2, Informative

      With the upcoming SDL user interface of FreeCiv it even looks like a modern game (was unfinished when i checked a couple of months ago).
      http://freeciv.wikia.com/wiki/Screenshots

      Some freeCiv players also like freecol, a similar game written in java. I never got into it so I can't say much about it.

    15. Re:Freeciv by danieltdp · · Score: 1

      He can. Posted anonymously. Am I wrong?!

      --
      -- dnl
    16. Re:FreeCiv by doug · · Score: 1

      I agree. I was looking for a game to play with my sons (8 and 10) that required a bit of planning, and freeciv has worked remarkably well. Sharing a single PC sucks, but does work. My Mom watched my 8 year old play and was amazed at how many facts he was juggling.

      The sad thing is that they now prefer freeciv to the wii that I stayed out in the rain to buy for them last year. If only I had known.

  3. color? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is this colored red on the main page?

  4. Scorched earth by genner · · Score: 4, Informative

    The greatest game that's less than a meg. http://www.dosgamesarchive.com/download/game/144

    1. Re:Scorched earth by JohnnyBGod · · Score: 1

      That would be illegal. But, thankfully, Scorched 3D wouldn't, although I'm not sure it would run properly.

    2. Re:Scorched earth by whtmarker · · Score: 5, Informative

      It is not illegal to download shareware. It has been shareware since 1991.

    3. Re:Scorched earth by HyperQuantum · · Score: 3, Informative

      Atomic Tanks is a FOSS clone of Scorched Earch: http://atanks.sourceforge.net/

      --
      I am not really here right now.
    4. Re:Scorched earth by sammyF70 · · Score: 1

      I'll second Scorched3D if it runs on the rigs (which it probably will, albeit not in its full gory glory).

      --
      "DRM is like the Ford Pinto: it's a smooth ride, right up the point at which it explodes and ruins your day."-C.Doctorow
    5. Re:Scorched earth by Khyber · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Scorched 3D ran on old 3Dfx cards.

      Current intel graphics would more than handle it.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    6. Re:Scorched earth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better than a whole mess of games over a meg too... total classic and good for the age group (well except for the violent theme but cmon...)

    7. Re:Scorched earth by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      I just installed it and tested it to be sure. It's no speed demon, but it runs ok at 800x600 in a window on my x3100 as long as you disable the water ;) It's probably better if I wasn't running multiple monitors right now, but I don't have the time to test that.

    8. Re:Scorched earth by JohnnyBGod · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected. I skimmed through some licensing info and it mentioned site licenses, so I assumed too much.

    9. Re:Scorched earth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why the hell don't their screen shots work?

      i hope their C/C++ skills are better than their PHP skills.

    10. Re:Scorched earth by Khyber · · Score: 1

      The older versions of Scorched3D weren't as intensive, the engine was a bit more primitive. Now it's been upgraded and improved, so it does take up quite a bit.

      My GeForce 6800 still handles it at 1024x768 max everything no biggie. A little choppy in some places, usually during multiple warheads or flying creatures being rendered, but otherwise it's smooth.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    11. Re:Scorched earth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's also the deliciously modern (but expectably more graphics-intensive) http://www.scorched3d.co.uk/

  5. Combat Arms by Slicebo · · Score: 1

    .eot.

  6. Frozen Bubble by TheRealMindChild · · Score: 5, Informative

    Frozen Bubble

    Great for all ages and skill level

    --

    "When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
    1. Re:Frozen Bubble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Redundant

      That's a great one, along with Pingus.

    2. Re:Frozen Bubble by hedronist · · Score: 1

      Beware! Frozen Bubble is the most addictive computer game I have ever played. Be prepared to lose hours (and hours ...) of your life.

    3. Re:Frozen Bubble by Hatta · · Score: 4, Informative

      I'll put this here, since these are kind of arcadey games.

      ABA games has a number of free arcade shooters that are tons of fun to play. Most of them are available in Debian's repository, so they should be available on Ubuntu too. You can get windows binaries at that link. In particular, check out rRootage, Torus Trooper, and Tumiki Fighters. But they're all excellent games.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    4. Re:Frozen Bubble by LunarCrisis · · Score: 1

      Yes! rRootage is actually one of my favourite games.

      --
      Mr. Period: Nine is the one that's right by ten!
      Nine: One day I will kill him. Then, I will be Ten.
    5. Re:Frozen Bubble by BigFootApe · · Score: 1

      I have found that Frozen Bubble tends to interfere quite a bit with the whole doing work thing. It's more addictive than Tetris, which has always been the crack cocaine of computing in my mind.

      Fun, though.

    6. Re:Frozen Bubble by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      That link you posted had a bunch of Windows specific stuff (including XNA code, which even most Windows devs I know dislike because of the extreme lock-in it creates). The claims are that TUMIKI Fighters is for Windows, too, absolutely no mention of anything Linux or Open Source anywhere on the page. The game is in the Ubuntu repos, but it's odd that there's no mention of it.

    7. Re:Frozen Bubble by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Yeah, Mazer Mayhem isn't available on linux AFAIK. The games under the "Windows" heading are written with SDL, Vorbis, and the D programming language, and source is included in the zips. I guess the original author just wasn't interested in Linux and someone else managed to compile and package them as .debs.

      Before I found the debian packages, I was playing these games under Wine. Most of them ran perfectly.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    8. Re:Frozen Bubble by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      Odd. Frozen Bubble seems to bear a striking resemblance to Puzzle Bobble aka Bust-A-Move.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    9. Re:Frozen Bubble by Explodingchopsticks · · Score: 1

      OpenLiero Xtreme is really fun. You can play singleplayer, or lan and online. its 2d, so it will run easily on those pcs, and you can dl new menu themes, characters, weapon packs, etc. Best of all its only about 50 mb, you dont need to install it and its free :) http://lxalliance.net/LXRS/index.php?page=liero_xtreme_download

    10. Re:Frozen Bubble by clone53421 · · Score: 1

      Ooh, tetris!

      Does anybody else know about the negative score bug in the MS version? (well, it's a signed integer overflow, actually)

      There's another bug in the score that's a little harder to find... if you get over -10,000, the new score doesn't completely cover the old one, so the last digit just stays...

      I think my high score was around -200. I purposely lost so it wouldn't go through zero cause then I'd not have had a high score... I did roll it through zero once, though.

      --
      Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
  7. Freeciv by Calmiche · · Score: 5, Informative

    FreeCiv is a freeware version of Civilization that I still play. They have linux and windows releases.

    http://freeciv.wikia.com/wiki/Download#Windows_Packages

  8. A couple... by Nos. · · Score: 1

    Frozen bubble is always a good choice. Savage 2 apparently just went free, though I'm not sure how well it will run on your hardware.

  9. Frozen Bubble by javilon · · Score: 1, Redundant
    --


    When his defense asked, "Which computer has Jon Johansen trespassed upon?" the answer was: "His own."
  10. Armagetron by Anthony_Cargile · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Armagetron - its a great game based on the Disney movie Tron, very fun and addicting. Even better is that it is available with fully networkable clients for Mac, Linux and Windows so anyone can play with anybody given they have the game for their platform and a network switch.

    The game is a clean, competitive one that can be monitored via server. Comes in the Ubuntu package repositories by default.

    1. Re:Armagetron by Anthony_Cargile · · Score: 3, Informative

      Oops, somehow the link got messed up - http://armagetron.sourceforge.net/.

    2. Re:Armagetron by bluej100 · · Score: 1

      KTron is an enjoyable 2D version of the same game concept.

    3. Re:Armagetron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Completely forgot about Armagetron, only your link doesn't point to armagetronad. Still, wish I had some mod points - mod parent up.

    4. Re:Armagetron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      its a great game based on the Disney movie Tron

      Or you could just call it a very shiny implementation of Snake.

  11. Suggestions by Raul654 · · Score: 1

    Freeciv
    Battle of Wesnoth
    UFOAI (although this is in perpetual alpha)

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
    1. Re:Suggestions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      UFOAI will be slow without 3d acceleration...

      I'd also suggest openttd, but needs some files from the original game unluckily.

    2. Re:Suggestions by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      IIRC UFOAI was bearable on intel, its a no go with radeon drivers though.

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
  12. Same games we had by SoundGuyNoise · · Score: 3, Funny

    Gorillas
    Nibble

    --
    You never expect irony, do you?
    Want to be a professional wrestler? Visit www.iyfwrestling.com
    @iyfwrestling
    1. Re:Same games we had by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, the good(?) old days of QBASIC gaming, now where did I leave that boot disk...

    2. Re:Same games we had by aldo.gs · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Oh, man! I loved GORILLA.BAS (I mean the game, the code I didn't understand when I was five :P).

      I liked Nibbles too, but there was this level I just couldn't beat. It has two diagonal lines, I remember. Damn walls!

  13. Nintendo Emulator by Puls4r · · Score: 0, Troll

    Grab a good nintendo emulator like nesticle, and download a couple hundred roms for them off the net.

    1. Re:Nintendo Emulator by tekiegreg · · Score: 4, Informative

      While a great idea, I'm sure "legal" is a requirement as well, so unless he's willing to buy licenses for these hundreds of games, forget it :-/

      --
      ...in bed
    2. Re:Nintendo Emulator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great idea, and one I whole heartedly subscribe to on a personal level, but not entirely legal. Especially with the advent of things like GameTap and Xbox marketplace, Playstation Store, and Wii games channel downloads.

    3. Re:Nintendo Emulator by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 2, Funny

      And the charity will be ever so grateful for the massive copyright liability you've donated!

    4. Re:Nintendo Emulator by maxume · · Score: 4, Informative

      Never mind willing to buy, no one is selling.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    5. Re:Nintendo Emulator by Ailure · · Score: 1

      Use a modern NES emulator, like Nestopia. Nesticle is old as hell, and I wish people would stop using it.

    6. Re:Nintendo Emulator by Bobfrankly1 · · Score: 1

      Old as hell doesn't mean it sucks. If people are still using old as hell software, that means it stands the test of time. Next you'll be wishing people used a modern OS like Vista. Windows XP is old as hell, right?

    7. Re:Nintendo Emulator by Rhapsody+Scarlet · · Score: 1

      No, NESticle really does suck. Trust me, I've used more than my fair share of NES emulators and it bugs the hell out of me when people say NESticle is 'good enough'. Seriously, the latest version (which was released ten years ago) doesn't even work on Windows, you have to use DOS! The last version that works on Windows is from 1997, and I've no idea how well that would work on Windows XP. NESticle was ahead of its time, but its time was the late 90s. Move on people!

      Nestopia may be a bit heavy duty for low-end PCs like these though. FCE Ultra would be my immediate recommendation. It may not be quite up to Nestopia's level of accuracy, but it's close enough that most people won't notice and it's a hell of a lot faster. You could also give Mednafen a go. I've never tried it personally, but it looks good to me, and the NES emulation is based on FCE Ultra.

    8. Re:Nintendo Emulator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except for Nintendo for the Virtual Console on the Wii. But this is Slashdot, so every developer should work for free and copyright holders be damned.

    9. Re:Nintendo Emulator by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      mupen64+ works well for linux (that 4 usb cables + 4 old xbox detacahble controller cables, gives a pretty sweat setup)

      OFC this is all offtopic due to legal issues :( but if your not hampered by such technicalities then i strongly recommend getting a couple of xbox controllers and usb wires.

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    10. Re:Nintendo Emulator by cb88 · · Score: 1

      forget emulators ...i have nearly 200 games (or somewhere around that)installed in debian lenny 90% of these games are GPL you CAN sell them...just like you can sell Linux cds/dvds

    11. Re:Nintendo Emulator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A whole crapload of shops in Akihabara say otherwise.

    12. Re:Nintendo Emulator by Narishma · · Score: 1

      There are only a small number of games on the Virtual Console. And it's region locked to boot.

      --
      Mada mada dane.
    13. Re:Nintendo Emulator by HappySmileMan · · Score: 1

      I know you're trying to be insulting, but you should probably make it clearer, you look like that kid who tries too hard to fit in at school.

    14. Re:Nintendo Emulator by Hatta · · Score: 1

      FCEU is a real pain to set up and use. I haven't tried FCEUX, but the original was very sparsely documented and essentially had no UI. The emulation is excellent however, which is why it lives on.

      Mednafen is an absolute dream. Easy to install and configure, it has a well documented config file, and an easy to use in game controller configuration utility. There's even in game help, if you forget the hot keys. It supports all sorts of scalers and filters, and it supports a lot more than just NES roms. TG-16 in particular makes mednafen excellent.

      I've used a lot of emulators, and mednafen is my #1 favorite emulator on any platform and of any platform.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    15. Re:Nintendo Emulator by Khaed · · Score: 1

      Over a hundred is a "small number"?

      That and region lock-out aside, I'm not sure how the AC's post about the Virtual Console applies to putting free games *on a PC*...

    16. Re:Nintendo Emulator by Provocateur · · Score: 1

      He meant that since the games are still being sold for the Virtual Console, that these games are not 'abandonware', so be wary about licensing issues.

      --
      WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
  14. Here's a link.. by slummy · · Score: 3, Informative

    OSSWin Games List

    Take a look at the Platform and First Person Shooter games.

  15. The originals... by microcentillion · · Score: 2

    Doom 2 (Dunno if it's free yet) & Starseige Tribes.

    That's all you need to make any needy kid's Christmas 'super specail'.

    --
    But clearly you have something better to say...
    1. Re:The originals... by dword · · Score: 5, Funny

      I couldn't help myself from laughing... You want to give Doom for Christmas?

    2. Re:The originals... by nschubach · · Score: 1

      I only wish I could give doom for Christmas. It's getting boring with all these gift cards.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    3. Re:The originals... by grassy_knoll · · Score: 1

      beats fruitcake

      ^_^

    4. Re:The originals... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doom 2's engine is free, but it's resources are not. One cleaned-up version of the engine is prboom - http://prboom.sf.net/. There is a project to create open source resources, freedoom - http://freedoom.sf.net/. Disclaimer: I have been involved in both.

  16. Couple ideas... by JMZero · · Score: 5, Informative

    Ur-Quan Masters (Star Control II, but free)

    Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory (great role-based strategic shooter, inexplicably free)

    --
    Let's not stir that bag of worms...
    1. Re:Couple ideas... by hotdiggitydawg · · Score: 1

      Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory (great role-based strategic shooter, inexplicably free)

      I second the vote for WolfET too... It's free pricetag made it very popular. There were plenty of servers back in the day, so it should still be pretty easy to find somewhere with a decent ping for an online rumble.

    2. Re:Couple ideas... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I completely agree, Enemy Territory is the best tactical shooter I've ever played, and there sure are servers still available.

      Don't forget to apply the 2.60b patch, afaik they didn't update the official windows installer to that version.

    3. Re:Couple ideas... by SethJohnson · · Score: 1

      Enemy Territory will be a great game to put on these free computers. Runs on Linux, Windows. Don't think this free game made it to Mac OS X, though.

      Seth

    4. Re:Couple ideas... by domatic · · Score: 1

      I love UQM/SC2 but they do include the Syreen. The Syreen's ships look like marital aids with fins attached. There is PG-13 section where the game's hero uh..."interacts" with the Syreen commander. And the avatar for a Syreen ship's captain is a nearly naked blue girl seen from the side.

      I wouldn't dare put SC2 in any school or institutional situation unless those graphics can be sanitized. Ditto for an individual child with blue nose parents.

    5. Re:Couple ideas... by Kichigai+Mentat · · Score: 1

      It's free for OS X. It ran alright on my four-and-a-half year old iBook G4 too.

      --
      Rawr
    6. Re:Couple ideas... by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

      Have you seen any current TV shows or movies? The Syreen are blandly G these days. Disney films are more graphic. If anything, UQM needs a lot more violence, scatological humor, and sexual innuendo to make a non-toddler rating.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    7. Re:Couple ideas... by Hatta · · Score: 1

      UQM is an excellent example of classic games that ended up liberated. Check out Liberated Games for more. Command and Conquer, One Must Fall, Tribes 1&2, Simcity (micropolis), GTA 1& 2, The Elder Scrolls: Arena. All of those stand out as classics with binaries and data available.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    8. Re:Couple ideas... by jfim · · Score: 2, Informative

      Another free game with good production values is Allegiance. It's a multiplayer space simulation with quite deep gameplay and focused on teamplay.

      From Wikipedia:

      Allegiance is an multiplayer online game providing a mix of real-time strategy and player piloted space combat gameplay. Initially developed by Microsoft Research, the game was later released under a shared source license in 2002 and is now maintained and developed by volunteers.

    9. Re:Couple ideas... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i think there's also a team fortress mod for wolfenstein: enemy territory that was really well done (and was the sole impetus for my purchase of tf2).

    10. Re:Couple ideas... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you joking or are you really that much of a prude? The Syreen graphics are tame and wanting to censor it is like wanting a turtleneck sweater on Disney's Little Mermaid or pants on Donald Duck.

      I was only about 15 years old when SC2 came out and don't ever recall being uncomfortable with anything in it. In fact the Syreen part is one of the least memorable moments in the game.

    11. Re:Couple ideas... by domatic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I personally don't think those things are a big deal. To the social conservatives I work with, it would be and the situation is common. My objective isn't pointless prudery but to warn those who do have to deal with it. UQM isn't beyond a bright 8th or even 5th grader. A 60 year classroom teacher in red state coming across those scenes would definitely wig out and want someone in trouble.

      Public school classrooms aren't libertarian geek paradises as many us know all too well.

    12. Re:Couple ideas... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I second Wolf:ET...great game which will run on older hardware with detail turned down and still pretty darned fun FPS!

    13. Re:Couple ideas... by kalirion · · Score: 1

      Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory (great role-based strategic shooter, inexplicably free)

      Last year I spent half a day trying to get ET to work, to even join a single server. After hours of attempts to download whatever versions of mods, extra files, etc that every server seemed to require, I gave up and installed Alien Arena instead.

  17. FreeCiv comes to mind by tekiegreg · · Score: 1

    Fun to play, engaging, they might learn something...

    If you could cough up a few bucks I'd say go for one of the paid Civilization games as well (probably II or III) which are likely cheap on the secondhand market these days, or maybe you could write the publisher and ask really nice for some free licenses (doubt though, but they are older games...)

    --
    ...in bed
  18. Please elaborate by Red+Flayer · · Score: 2, Informative

    Free-as-in-beer, or free-as-in-speech?

    If you know the kids, you can tailor the games to their interests... I'm not sure how much mileage you'll get out of installing nethack when the recipient of the PC is a typical 14-yo girl.

    If they have a good internet connection, all they need are links to decent flash games sites. I'm fond of recommending Kongregate, since they also have great tools and tutorials for creating your own games, and I've yet to see malware there. (Doesn't mean it doesn't exist).

    --
    "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    1. Re:Please elaborate by illectro · · Score: 2, Informative

      Falcon's Eye or Vulture's Eye both add a nice isometric interface to Nethack which might make the game palatable to teens.

    2. Re:Please elaborate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      I'm not sure how much mileage you'll get out of installing nethack when the recipient of the PC is a typical 14-yo girl.

      14-yo girls should love Nethack. First, it has ponies which you can ride, and feed apples. Second, it has vampires for reenacting Twilight. Finally, it has dwarfs that they can name after their little brothers and sacrifice on an altar. What's not to love?

    3. Re:Please elaborate by Anthony_Cargile · · Score: 1

      Forget nethack, lets just give her text-only Counterstrike :D.

    4. Re:Please elaborate by maxume · · Score: 1

      Given that it says "Freeware" in the summary, I think you can assume free as in beer (or did I imagine the effort that the GNU folks have gone through to try and separate themselves from that term, sometimes by using phrases like 'free as in speech'...).

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    5. Re:Please elaborate by Boronx · · Score: 1

      I find crawl to be a bit more accessible, a bit more forgiving, and a bit more fun than Nethack. I don't know if there's anything out there like Falcon's Eye for it.

    6. Re:Please elaborate by ibbie · · Score: 1

      +1 for Vulture's Eye. If nothing else, maybe they'll get frustrated and learn C well enough to hack it for cheats. I know that ruins the game play, but hey, anything to get 'em to learn.

      Egoboo provides something like Nethack, but in 3d. It's not *pure*, but it's got enough eye candy to nab their attention.

      One thing I would suggest to the submitter is that, for those games that are open source, compile a list of those games - with the source code URLs included (since you have to go find the games anyway), and put it on the Desktop (or in "My Documents"). That way, if they're in any way inclined, they can go see what makes them tick. A lot of people I grew up with learned Pascal through hacking together door games for BBS's; it's a lot easier to motivate yourself to learn if it's fun. (:

      --
      The wise follow a damned path, for to know is to be forsaken.
    7. Re:Please elaborate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the recipient of the PC is a typical 14-yo girl.

      'Webcam' is a great game that they seem to love to play.

    8. Re:Please elaborate by pipatron · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how much mileage you'll get out of installing nethack when the recipient of the PC is a typical 14-yo girl.

      I take it from this comment that you don't know many 14-yo girls.

      --
      c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */
    9. Re:Please elaborate by danieltdp · · Score: 1

      OMGP!

      --
      -- dnl
  19. OpenDisc, Quake & FreeDoom by eldavojohn · · Score: 1

    You can check out theopendisc.org's games and give that along with them. Those are four pretty solid games. Another thing to check out would be the open sourced quake or even freeDoom.

    Are these primarily for kids? I'm also confused why you're installing XP but giving an Ubuntu CD? Live disc? That has a ton of great puzzle games you can start with and even a few decent starting learning games.

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:OpenDisc, Quake & FreeDoom by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      I am giving XP because the charity demanded a windows OS because of the requirement to be accessible for the entire family. Instead of trying to explain, I simply gave in.

      I'm including automatic restore CD's with them for the XP install as well as the Ubuntu live CD's.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    2. Re:OpenDisc, Quake & FreeDoom by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I'm also confused why you're installing XP but giving an Ubuntu CD? Live disc?

      He's asking a question on slashdot, what else is he going to say?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    3. Re:OpenDisc, Quake & FreeDoom by clone53421 · · Score: 1

      In that case, why not just make the system dual-bootable... a more-or-less clean Windows install (hide the IE shortcuts and install Firefox instead, and you'd probably want some sort of antivirus) would satisfy their demand that it be "accessible" to family members, but it wouldn't get much use if the Ubuntu partition had a bunch of free games plus Firefox for the inevitable e-mail/MySpace/Facebook, OO.o for typing up homework assignments, etc. They'd probably never even boot Windows as long as you organized the shortcuts so they could find what they needed in Ubuntu...

      --
      Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
  20. public domain by moderatorrater · · Score: 0

    Throw dosbox on and load it up with old games that are now in the public domain. Maniac Mansion, Dune 2, Battle Chess, Secret of Monkey Island, and games like that are still very fun and easy to run if you set it up properly. That's actually what I'm going to give my wife for Christmas this year since she just finished (and loved) The Dig.

    1. Re:public domain by jawtheshark · · Score: 4, Informative

      old games that are now in the public domain

      and then...

      Maniac Mansion, Dune 2, Battle Chess, Secret of Monkey Island,

      You are dreaming right? None of those are in public domain, not with copyright laws 90 years after death of the creator. They're abandonware at best, and that most certainly isn't legal.

      I though of fl0w and Plasma Pong. However Plasma Pong seems to be down :-(

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    2. Re:public domain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think any of the games you mention actually are in the public domain, though?

    3. Re:public domain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, no. Copyright lasts a lot longer than 18 years. You may find them as "abandonware" if they're not being sold anymore, but they sure as hell aren't public domain or legal to distribute.

    4. Re:public domain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that Maniac Mansion and Secret of Monkey Island are not in the public domain and - as the ScummVM team found out - Lucas Arts are willing to send cease and desist letters to those who think it's abandonware.

      Speaking of ScummVM - a few games that run on it are, however, freely distributable by the publisher's permission and downloadable at the ScummVM website. The best one is probably Beneath A Steel Sky but Flight of The Amazon Queen is also good. So putting ScummVM and the free games on it, is certainly a good idea.

      Relevant link: www.scummvm.org

    5. Re:public domain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's no such thing as the public domain. Copyrights don't expire anymore.

    6. Re:public domain by wastedlife · · Score: 1

      Had no idea Dune 2 and Battle Chess were in public domain, thanks!

      As for Maniac Mansion, Monkey Island, and The Dig, I'd recommend SCUMMVM instead of dosbox. SCUMMVM is a replacement engine for tons of older point-and-clicks that in nearly all cases plays the games better than the original engines. Its also supported on more hardware, including Dreamcast, PSP, DS and Wii.

      --
      Said, "It's just like dice but it's got more sides And it tells me who lives and who dies"
    7. Re:public domain by Bootvis · · Score: 1

      If you are going to install dosbox install Supaplex too. I have had so much fun with it it is the first thing I'm going to install _after_ my exams.

      --
      Read, refresh, repeat.
  21. OpenArena? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quake III, open source. It's basically ioquake3 (the open version of Quake 3) with remixed graphics. It's not finished, but it sure eats up my time.

    You can remove one of the .pk3 files to remove most of the naughty content.

  22. Classic console emulators: by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 0

    Nesticle, ZSNES, Genecyst, etc. are all very free and lightweight emulators with hundreds of fun, recognizable ROMs already bundled as torrents. I'm pretty sure that baseline dells would be able to run Nintendo64 and Playstation emulators as well, though I'm not sure of the legality of the latter two. Gamepad optional.

    1. Re:Classic console emulators: by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 4, Insightful

      None of those options are legal. Whether or not they should be is a different question.

    2. Re:Classic console emulators: by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      They shouldn't be. In my opinion, you should have to pay the price asked if you want a game or whatever. What I don't subscribe to, is having to pay extra just because you want it on a different platform - that should be free (or cheap, so as to cover only the cost of actually getting it to you).

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    3. Re:Classic console emulators: by Relic+of+the+Future · · Score: 1

      To be pedantic, the emulators are perfectly legal; the pirated ROMs are not (although there are a few good original distributed-as-free-software ROMs.)

      --
      Those who fail to understand communication protocols, are doomed to repeat them over port 80.
    4. Re:Classic console emulators: by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

      Ehm, I'm sorry... I agree that if you own the game, that you should be able to run it in an emulator. However, if I want to play the original Super Mario and do that in an emulator on my PC that is completely illegal because I do not own a single cartridge containing that game. No grey area, simply illegal. I don't understand what you tried to tell with your post.

      In the story it was asked about legal options: free as in beer or free as in speech games. Not "free as in the pirate bay", no matter what your opinion about the matter is.

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    5. Re:Classic console emulators: by theaveng · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I killed a man last year. You really think I care about respecting copyright? HA! Criminals don't care about anti-piracy or anti-gun laws.

      I'm just joking.

      Or am I?

      --
      FOX NEWS.com should be BANNED from television and internet. Have the Congress take it over and give us Truespeak.
    6. Re:Classic console emulators: by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

      I don't think that the question here is if we individually respect copyright. My pr0n collection testifies that I'm no saint. (Oddly enough, that's really the only thing I pirate)

      I don't expect you to either and I actually expect nobody to by piracy free. (With the exception of Richard Stallamn, and even then...) However, this is about a donation to a charity. You don't want them to get in trouble because of some boneheaded choices you made.

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    7. Re:Classic console emulators: by similar_name · · Score: 1

      The emulators are legal, as well as a few games that some authors have released or that were made by amateurs on the net. Unfortunately it's probably hard to find legal roms than illegal ones.

    8. Re:Classic console emulators: by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      I don't think that logic applies here. You just can't buy the systems anymore (except maybe if you luck out at a garage sale), let alone the games. It's well and good to say "you should have to pay the price asked" but what if there isn't a price asked?

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    9. Re:Classic console emulators: by similar_name · · Score: 1

      They shouldn't be. In my opinion, you should have to pay the price asked if you want a game or whatever.

      The problem is some old software does not have a price. Keeping them illegal, just increases the chance that these 'works of art' will perish over time.

    10. Re:Classic console emulators: by genner · · Score: 2, Informative

      To be pedantic, the emulators are perfectly legal; the pirated ROMs are not (although there are a few good original distributed-as-free-software ROMs.)

      Depends. Some of them require an illegal copy of the bios.

    11. Re:Classic console emulators: by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      Uh, you just said exactly what I did. You should be able to play a game in whatever platform it comes in, as long as you've bought it once.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    12. Re:Classic console emulators: by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      Well, thanks to Wii, a lot of these games actually ARE offered again. Sure, I don't own a Wii, but you can see the dilemma.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    13. Re:Classic console emulators: by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

      Yes, I said partially what you said, but we're in a discussion asking for free games. None of the ROMs for emulators you download are by any measure "free". Using them is copyright infringement. So unless this guy has a pile of Nintendo cartridges which he gives along with the PCs in order to be sure they have a licence..... Emulators with ROMS are OUT!

      That's what I want you to understand, and as such, I did say nothing like you said.

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    14. Re:Classic console emulators: by Hatta · · Score: 1

      In my opinion, you should have to pay the price asked if you want a game or whatever.

      I'd agree with that, as long as you don't artificially restrict who is asking the price.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    15. Re:Classic console emulators: by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      And I made no statement that what he was describing was OK - unfortunately it appears "should" can be interpreted in one of two ways, and you picked the way I did not intend.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    16. Re:Classic console emulators: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ....and the bios isn't part of the emulator.

    17. Re:Classic console emulators: by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

      No, you're wrong.... What was ambiguous was not "should" but "they". I read ROMs you meant Emulators. Yes, emulators should be legal (and are AFAIK), but ROMs are not.

      Nevertheless, so consider the utility of emulators if you do not have the legal ROMs. That's why your post as pointless. You can install emulators all you want, without having legal ROMs you can forget the whole deal.

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
  23. Oolite by nebulus4 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Oolite - Elite clone. Aaaaa... the memories :)

    --
    "It would be wrong to refuse to face the fact that everything is fundamentally sick and sad."
    1. Re:Oolite by Stephen+R+Hall · · Score: 1

      I second that. And it's more than a clone, there are a huge number of expansions, with new ships and missions.

    2. Re:Oolite by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Interesting. Thanks for the link. I've always been an elite fan and it appears that an online space sim community has finally implemented landing on planets, which will make it the first game, to my knowladeg, to have done so since Frontier First Encounters back in 1995.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    3. Re:Oolite by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      You can land on planets in Vega Strike (a spiritual successor to Elite, with a huge number of improvements).

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  24. Urquan Masters/Star Control 2 by Robbat2 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Very worthwhile, for both the strategy and melee modes.

    --
    ICQ# : 30269588
    "I used to be an idealist, but I got mugged by reality."
    1. Re:Urquan Masters/Star Control 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Second this motion. It's excellent, just like the original. http://sc2.sourceforge.net/

      http://www.tremulous.net/ is a good laugh too.

      You really should install the Ubuntu though... or at least wipe that XP off, you're not doing them any favor there.

    2. Re:Urquan Masters/Star Control 2 by happy_place · · Score: 1

      Best game ever! I love this game... Great suggestion. --Ray

      --
      http://www.beanleafpress.com
  25. google is your friend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    http://apcmag.com/top_5_best_free_open_source_games.htm

  26. Urban Terror by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 3, Informative

    Urban Terror is basically counter strike. It is based on the Quake III engine. I was surprised that it was both free and very well done. Available for windows, mac, and Linux. Lots of servers hosting games with lots of players. Free download http://www.urbanterror.net/news.php

  27. Cave Story by SeePage87 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Great game with cute robots. Can't go wrong.

    1. Re:Cave Story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I second. Good story, fantastic yet simple platforming gameplay, heavenly soundtrack. Should be standard on any computer ever.

    2. Re:Cave Story by Paaskonijn · · Score: 2, Informative

      Mod parent up. Amazing game!

      Here's a download site for the game + the English translation patch: http://www.cavestory.org/downloads_1.php

      You could also throw in GTA(2), which are now freely available as Rockstar Classics: http://www.rockstargames.com/classics/

    3. Re:Cave Story by Goaway · · Score: 1

      Most posts in this thread are dead wrong, except for this one. Cave Story is what you want.

    4. Re:Cave Story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could not agree more. By far the best freeware game around, also coming (non-free) to Wii soon.

    5. Re:Cave Story by Antlerbot · · Score: 1

      YES. One of the greatest freeware games of all time, bar none.

    6. Re:Cave Story by Captain+Jack+Taylor · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up. This is a hell of a game.

    7. Re:Cave Story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seconded. It's a "metroidvania" style game with some of the coolest secrets to find ever.

      http://www.cavestory.org/downloads_1.php

      -AJK

    8. Re:Cave Story by the+9a3eedi · · Score: 1

      I'd rate this a 10 Informative if possible :( This game needs more attention. It's so good it's coming on the Wii

  28. Plenty of older games have been release as freewar by Daravon · · Score: 3, Informative

    I seem to remember there being quite a number of older titles released as freeware. Older iD titles, some of the earlier GTA titles, Tribes 1/2. With the number of mods available just for Quake 3, there will be tons of playtime just in one title. Red Alert was also released free, if you want to include some variety (as opposed to endless FPS games).

    There are also current (ish) titles that might run on them. IIRC, Enemy Territory has a Linux port as does America's Army.

    There's also the free games usually available for Linux that have Windows ports, such as FreeCiv.

    --
    I traded all my mod points for these magic beans.
  29. Little Fighter 2 and another idea... by Zathain+Sicarius · · Score: 1

    http://lf2.net/
    One of my personal favorites. Shouldn't be too hard to run.

    Also, putting on a free game making program might be a neat idea to toy with. Then they can make their own free games. :D
    http://www.yoyogames.com/gamemaker

  30. Java Risk by macklin01 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I've wasted more than enough time with this recently: Java risk: http://domination.sf.net. The implementation seems to be pretty good, it has some basic AI players, and can be played over a network. Good, classic strategy game, without the overhead of sorting out all the little army pieces. -- Paul

    --
    OpenSource.MathCancer.org: open source comp bio
    1. Re:Java Risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Java risk? Is there a patch yet?

      *ducks*

  31. Oregon Trail by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 1

    I mean, isn't that the quintessential first 'educational' game that we all played at one point or another?

    --
    Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
    1. Re:Oregon Trail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i used to love buying a hundred wagon axles and no food, traveling and a grueling pace, never hunting, and watching my family die off one by one.

      it was very educational.

    2. Re:Oregon Trail by clone53421 · · Score: 1

      I remember spending about a month of in-game time going back and forth on the toll road at the end of the trail – hunting, trading meat for dollars (bullets when necessary), traveling a bit so it wouldn't tell me the game would become scarce, and then hunting again. Repeat until I'd nearly reached one end or the other of the toll road, then turn the wagon around and continue.

      I finally got bored of it and finished the game, got 2nd place in the List of Legends IIRC.

      --
      Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
    3. Re:Oregon Trail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What????

      You can't go backwards in Oregon Trail!!!

    4. Re:Oregon Trail by clone53421 · · Score: 1

      Maybe you played an earlier version. You could turn your wagon around in the game I played.

      --
      Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
  32. Orbiter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not really a game but a realistic spaceflight sim:

    http://orbit.medphys.ucl.ac.uk/

    The base package runs fine on my old low-end laptop. It seems complex but a lot of teenagers take to this. They can goof around in semi-realistic rocket ships.

  33. Mogestu Nobokeryatsu Schoolgirl Tentacle Rape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shareware edition

  34. ScummVM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ScummVM allows you to play some of the classic point-and-click adventure games.

    http://www.scummvm.org/

    They even offer some freeware games which you can then include on these PCs.

    -Beneath The Steel Sky
    -Flight of the Amazon Queen
    -Lure of the Temptress
    -Drascula - The Vampire Strikes Back

    http://www.scummvm.org/downloads.php#extras

  35. Secret Maryo Chronicles by arnott · · Score: 0
  36. Game! by Mad+Merlin · · Score: 1

    Technically you wouldn't put it on the laptop per se, but you could add a link or desktop shortcut to Game!. It'll play on anything with a browser.

  37. X-Moto by KingPrad · · Score: 2, Informative

    I vote for X-Moto. It's a 2-D motocross simulator game. Lots of fun and challenge from easy to nigh-on impossible, and very addictive.

    There is also a simplified version more suited to kids.

    --
    Stop the Slashdot Effect! Don't read the articles!
  38. Wing Commander by theaveng · · Score: 1

    I love that game.

    And if you figure out how to make it work on XP, please let me know. I'm stumped. ;-) I also recommend an Atari VCS/2600, Commodore=64, Sega Genesis, and Nintendo 64 emulators since classic games are always fun!

    --
    FOX NEWS.com should be BANNED from television and internet. Have the Congress take it over and give us Truespeak.
    1. Re:Wing Commander by wc_paladin · · Score: 2, Informative

      Unless you have the Kilrathi Saga pack, you'll need dosbox to make it work.

      Wing Commander isn't free though, so I doubt it could be packaged with these computers. Maybe Vegastrike or one of it's mods would be a better option.

    2. Re:Wing Commander by nebulus4 · · Score: 0

      Are you referring to Wing Commander Saga or the one from 1996?

      --
      "It would be wrong to refuse to face the fact that everything is fundamentally sick and sad."
    3. Re:Wing Commander by wc_paladin · · Score: 1

      '96 one. WC Saga only has the Prologue released.

    4. Re:Wing Commander by Captain+Jack+Taylor · · Score: 1

      How about Wing Commander Universe? It's going to be persistent-world multiplayer soon, so you can have all your multiplayer RPG without the Massive number of idiots.

  39. Re:Plenty of older games have been release as free by bluej100 · · Score: 1

    And, while this is the wrong crowd, there are lots of non-free older games that are trivially cheap. A few copies of Age of Empires II, for example, could provide a lot of entertainment at a low price, and it's even quasi-educational.

  40. quake engine games... by spleentor · · Score: 2, Informative

    I suggest a couple multiplayer shooters. Warsow http://www.warsow.net/ and Urban Terror http://www.urbanterror.net/ They're both free and based on the open sourced Quake engine (2 and 3). The Intel cards in those Dells should be enough for them. Plus they both have Linux and Windows clients.

  41. Pocket Tanks by BRSQUIRRL · · Score: 1

    Pocket Tanks is a great artillery game, similar to the classic Scorched Earth. It is technically shareware, but the unregistered version is relatively nag-free and full-featured. It is lightweight, simple to learn, and can be played alone (against an AI-controlled tank) or with another person. It's great fun to figure out what all of the different weapons do.

  42. Out Of Order, Ur-Quan Masters, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Out of Order - an adventure game I had a lot of fun with. Humor similar to Day of the Tentacle, if you've heard of that game.
    http://outoforder.adventuredevelopers.com/

    There's also star command 2 - the ur-quan masters. Great adventure/scifi.
    http://sc2.sourceforge.net/

    And finally, Vantage Master- a really fun turn-based strategy game that starts off simple, but ends up evolving into quite a complex game.
    http://www.falcom.co.jp/vantage/index_e.html

  43. +1 lumpy for Christmas Spirit by kaizendojo · · Score: 1

    + 2 for givin' da rugrats Linux!

  44. C&C Red Alert by Hokie06 · · Score: 2, Informative

    The original Red Alert is free now. http://www.ea.com/redalert/news-detail.jsp?id=62:.

    --
    Kilroy was here.
    1. Re:C&C Red Alert by Werthless5 · · Score: 1

      Oh I completely forgot about this, yes! This is perfect for this kind of project

  45. Wing Commander - Privateer Gemini Gold by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remake of an oldie but a goodie -

    http://priv.solsector.net/

  46. sc2 by caubert · · Score: 1

    When I was at that age, I played StarControl 2. It was almost impossible to buy games in Estonia back then but I got it. Nowadays the game is opensourced. Search google: Urquan masters

    1. Re:sc2 by caubert · · Score: 1

      one other thing. Download DOSBOX and search the web for free old dos-games. They are the best

  47. DXBall by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A good, freeware game (the first one is) that runs on low-end software. I dunno that it'll do with in Linux (as it was developed for Direct X), but since the machines are going out with XP, that's not a huge concern.

    Fun little Breakout/Arkanoid clone.

  48. if you're using a popular linux distro by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    like fedora or ubuntu, just load up the app browser (yum or yumex in fedora), and go to the games category. you'll find a long list of games.

  49. There is only one game you need by kitsunewarlock · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Mine Sweeper.

    --
    Ginga no Rekshiya Mata Each page.
    1. Re:There is only one game you need by clone53421 · · Score: 1

      Ah yes, Minesweeper. 2/17/57, IIRC.

      --
      Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
  50. Dwarf Fortress by Desert_Scarecrow · · Score: 1

    This game has enough layers of complexity to keep the recipient entertained for quite some time, and they can engineer magma and water systems while watching their dwarves stubbornly not do what they want them to. http://www.bay12games.com/

    1. Re:Dwarf Fortress by PhoenixFlare · · Score: 1

      Not that Dwarf Fortress isn't a kickass game, but I think it might be more than a little too complex for a lot of teens - especially if they haven't used a computer much before.

    2. Re:dwarf fortress by Conditioner · · Score: 1
    3. Re:Dwarf Fortress by Don853 · · Score: 1

      Awesome game, but it's got a very steep learning curve and it's not going to run well on a low end system.

    4. Re:Dwarf Fortress by OolimPhon · · Score: 1

      Teens... not used computer much before... Do you live in the same reality as the rest of us?

    5. Re:Dwarf Fortress by PhoenixFlare · · Score: 1

      Do you live in the same reality as the rest of us?

      No, possibly not. You have a problem with that? :P But seriously - as someone mentioned after me, the learning curve for Dwarf Fortress is so steep that, well, it's more a vertical line than a curve. Have you actually played it?

      Yes, there may be some exceptions, but if you really think something like DF is going to be appealing/accessible to the average non-geek teenager, much less one who is poor enough that they're getting their gaming system from a charity....Then I may not be the only one living in a different reality.

  51. Enemy Territory! by ggambett · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Enemy Territory, no questions. Awesome FPS action with objectives, classes and teams. You can't beat its gameplay! Works on old hardware and looks great. Free as in beer (good enough for me!)

  52. Spiderweb Software by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

    You'd have to check, but I think their older Exile series has been released to some extent as free. Not Avernum, but Exile. Direct link to their older games: http://www.spiderwebsoftware.com/productsOld.html

    They are fun adventure RPGs, story-driven, and will run an old [as in Pentium I, I think...] hardware. I believe their Exile series can be downloaded for free, and Blades of Exile's code has actually been GPL'd recently. I highly recommend the games. Great fun.

  53. Sopwith... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sopwith2 and Snowcraft. Good for many hours of brainless entertainment.

  54. Flash Games by jamessnell · · Score: 1

    I'd suggest you make shortcuts on their desktops (or put them inside a folder "Games") that are just browser bookmarks to various good online flash games. Here's some that I think are fun: http://www.i-am-bored.com/bored_link.cfm?link_id=17727 http://www.kongregate.com/games/preecep/desktop-tower-defense-1-5 http://www.fugly.com/flash/819/flash-tetris.html http://www.runescape.com/ http://www.thegamehomepage.com/play/tangerine-panic/ I suppose another option may be SNES emulators and whatever if you can find legit free roms for them. Good luck

  55. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 3, Informative

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  56. Go with the classic! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go with the classic, Scorched Earth. It's far more fun than almost any of the replacements. You can edit the settings file to give yourself *millions* of dollars to buy all the fun toys, and it runs quite well as long as you run it inside DOSBox.

  57. Angband by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 3, Informative

    Angband http://rephial.org/ is all the kids will ever need. Just kidding, but it is an awesome game if kids get past the fast that it is ASCII character-based.

    1. Re:Angband by MaXMC · · Score: 1

      There are several graphical variants also.

    2. Re:Angband by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 1

      Oops, fact, not fast.

    3. Re:Angband by Flwyd · · Score: 1

      Mines of Moria worked for me! I spent countless hours moving around 20x64 character dungeons when I was 13-16. And it served as good cognitive priming when I started using vi.

      You could also prepare the kids for college (circa 1999) by installing Snood with a shortcut called "Run this when you have school work to do."

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une signature.
    4. Re:Angband by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes: my 12 year old son is now an addict. Great.

  58. TripleA, Axis and Allies simulator by Werthless5 · · Score: 2, Informative

    TripleA is free. The older kids may appreciate having a more complicated board game like A&A on there. It even goes beyond the classic maps

    And bookmark a few good flash gaming sites while you're at it. Some of the best games are online

  59. A few more... by Plekto · · Score: 1

    If you really want free, a couple of games come to mind:

    - NetHack/Angband/etc. Yes, these are text-based, but they formed the basis and inspiration for the Diablo series of games, which were frankly, watered down. I've played Angband off and on myself for nearly fifteen years and have only come close to beating it once. Plus, there are a zillion variants out there as well.

    - I'm amazed that nobody has mentioned MAME. True, the legality of having the ROM images is suspect, but I doubt if a video game company that's been out of business for a decade will actually do anything about it, either.

    - Lastly, with an emulator, tons of abandonware is available. I've spent many a night playing Elite, Apshaii, Sundog, Alternate Reality, and other classics.

    1. Re:A few more... by tobiasly · · Score: 1

      True, the legality of having the ROM images is suspect...

      If by "suspect" you mean "blatantly runs afoul of copyright law", then yes, the legality is "suspect". Just because there's no one to press charges doesn't mean it's legal or OK, and the OP obviously wants stuff that's undeniably redistributable.

    2. Re:A few more... by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      When you're donating to a charity, skirting the law by providing ROMs and emulators is just stupid. The last thing a charity needs is a bunch of lawsuits because you feel that you don't have to honour copyright (even if the particular situation does seem stupidly obvious, when the companies in question went out of business they probably assigned their "IP" rights to their creditors).

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    3. Re:A few more... by Plekto · · Score: 1

      Just because there's no one to press charges doesn't mean it's legal or OK, and the OP obviously wants stuff that's undeniably redistributable.

      Obviously if the OP is uncomfortable with any of this advice, he'll not do it. But emulators are perfectly fine by themselves. He could just as easily load the emulators on the machines and let the end user figure it out. If you look online, it's actually quite difficult to find MAME ROMs, though a few free ones are available(the major ROM sites were taken down years ago). That may be 15 or so free ROMs, but it is a viable option.

      http://mamedev.org/roms/
      Free ROMS. Toss a few on the machines and the kids will be happy.

      As for copyright, the interesting thing about it is that it's not like patents, which are jealously guarded and bought after a company dies. In the case of abandoned software by decades dead companies, there have been no major cases about this. At worst a few nastygrams have been sent out, but always to the projects/distribution sites(which stop making those files available) and not the end users. Those that were taken down but really popular almost always have sourceforge or similar groups that have made clones as well.

      99.9% of the time the places in question that have such files take them down if there's a question.

      http://www.the-underdogs.info/faq.php
      This site is a good place for exact info and they keep their data current. (note - TONS aren't available or are blocked) Some games are shareware, some are abandoned, and some are still available, and usually dirt cheap at that.

      It's pretty easy as well to find who owns the rights as well(sites like the above are full of info on each program's status), if you really care. Many of the original authors have explicitly given their okay to use it OR they have outright gifted it to the community/made it open source/etc. There are hundreds of pieces of old abandoned software out there like this. Use those titles and he's fine.

      Or just go to Ebay and buy a few copies of the original floppies. I have a box of old programs like this in storage, and I get old stuff like this at garage sales just for this reason. The last I checked, a copy of Elite for PC was nearly free. The floppy need not even work - all you need is the physical disk.

      Oh, but wait - the actual sequels are available online as shareware!
      http://www.eliteclub.co.uk/download/

  60. A Few of my Favorites by Jurph · · Score: 5, Informative

    FreeCiv, a freeware implementation of the Civ and Civ II rules - http://freeciv.wikia.com/wiki/Main_Page

    Dwarf Fortress is a fantastically complex game, like a cross between SimCity, NetHack, and Oregon Trail - http://www.dwarffortresswiki.net/index.php/Main_Page

    NetHack is a classic dungeon crawler with ASCII graphics - http://www.nethack.org/

    Command & Conquer is an old but awesome RTS, now available for free from EA - http://www.commandandconquer.com/intel/default.aspx?id=62#NewsMain

    Abandonware is murky but you can find install files for many abandonware titles online as well.

    1. Re:A Few of my Favorites by Fumus · · Score: 1

      I can't quite understand why this post is modded funny.

    2. Re:A Few of my Favorites by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      Command & Conquer is an old but awesome RTS, now available for free from EA - http://www.commandandconquer.com/intel/default.aspx?id=62#NewsMain

      He'd have to be very careful with this, many of the 'free' oldies available for download from existant publishers, such as C&C, or Bethesda's first 1st-person RPG, have a EULA only... that is, you can download and play the game, but you can't distribute it.

      Read the license you agree to before distributing any systems with these games installed.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    3. Re:A Few of my Favorites by Darundal · · Score: 1

      He might not be able to distribute games like that himself, but he could put a text file on the desktop with links, descriptions, and instructions on installing pretty easily.

    4. Re:A Few of my Favorites by Twilight69343 · · Score: 1

      Must secound Dwarf fort, it's a wonderfull game if horribly complex, the sheer amount of details in it are great. I think it really encourages a bit of imagination building to, sometimes lack of great graphics is actually a good thing.

      http://www.bay12games.com/dwarves/

      Some of the best fun can be had making your game into a story, try reading the boatmurdered story if you have the time - http://lparchive.org/LetsPlay/Boatmurdered/

    5. Re:A Few of my Favorites by sa1lnr · · Score: 1

      EA have just released Red Alert for free too. Posted the link earlier.

    6. Re:A Few of my Favorites by timbalara · · Score: 1

      EA is also giving away C&C: Red Alert for free as well:

      http://www.ea.com/redalert/news-detail.jsp?id=62

      Still one of the best RTS' I've played. =)

    7. Re:A Few of my Favorites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My favorite abandonware title: Typing Of The Dead. Shoot zombies by typing - each target has characters on its chest. If you don't type fast enough, the zombies get close enough to cause damage.

    8. Re:A Few of my Favorites by Fweeky · · Score: 2, Informative

      Dwarf Fortress is a bit easier to get into with a good tileset like DFG.

    9. Re:A Few of my Favorites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want ASCII, try DoomRL. you can find it at http://doom.chaosforge.net/ and other roguelikes by the same person at http://chaosforge.net/.

    10. Re:A Few of my Favorites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the love of god, don't give the poor child Dwarf Fortress if they have any OCD tendencies. Or if you don't want them to develop any OCD tendencies.

  61. Freeciv is non-intuitive. Here are some others. by Khopesh · · Score: 5, Informative

    As much as I love playing Freeciv, I worry that it's not quite ready for people who have never played either it or some other version of Civilization. It is not at all intuitive, and it's not engaging to somebody who isn't already a known quantity at the whole getting sucked into the game thing.

    How about OpenArena (a.k.a. Quake III) or Extreme Tux Racer? TetriNET/Blocktrix, a good multi-player Tetris game, is also a winner. Finally, there's a really good list of "open source" games over on Wikipedia.

    --
    Use my userscript to add story images to Slashdot. There's no going back.
  62. I made a few... by bhunachchicken · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Blob Wars : Metal Blob Solid

    Project: Starfighter

    Virus Killer

    All are 2D software rendering with screen modes of 640x480 or 800x600. They've proved fairly popular in the past...

    1. Re:I made a few... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I wouldn't recommend giving a copy of Blob Wars to a charity unless you like giving them IP problems, unless there's a new version which doesn't include unlicensed artwork and music.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    2. Re:I made a few... by Menkhaf · · Score: 1

      Oh, so true.

      Just the other day I was taken aside at the airport and asked for licenses for all of the software installed on my laptop.

      In real life, who gives a fuck..? If I browse to a website that contains artwork that has similar "IP problems", who gets in trouble? Not me, that's for sure. And if you do get in trouble for that, I suggest you move out of the country straight away. It's only going downhill from there.

      --
      A proud member of the Onion-in-Hand alliance
    3. Re:I made a few... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      In real life, who gives a fuck..?

      As an individual, no. However, as a large organisation you may be subject to BSA audits or similar. If you are giving software to a charity, then you should make sure that you have the rights to do so. Giving them copies of Microsoft Windows or Office would very likely get them large fines. Giving them copies of Blob Wars has the potential to have a similar effect, so unless you hate the charity in question, why expose them to the risk? There are other games which are fun and free.

      There's a reason that most distributions no longer include Blob Wars - the code is GPL'd but the music and much of the artwork is from third parties who did not give the author of the game permission to distribute them.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  63. Windows Registry by dangitman · · Score: 3, Funny

    A challenging puzzle game that can provide hours of brain-bending entertainment. Linux has a similar program called "emacs" where you have to guess strange combinations of keystrokes, and get rewarded with an odd text adventure called "man".

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
    1. Re:Windows Registry by ianezz · · Score: 1

      Linux has a similar program called "emacs" where you have to guess strange combinations of keystrokes, and get rewarded with an odd text adventure called "man".

      You have not really tried that hard if you still believe that the odd text adventure in Emacs is "man" (hint: M-x dunnet). Of course, there's M-x man as well if you really want, but I'd suggest M-x woman, which is better (no, seriously). :-)

    2. Re:Windows Registry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      s/emacs/vim/

      obviously posted as AC

    3. Re:Windows Registry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, if you thought emacs was hard to beat, wait 'til you get a load of vim!

    4. Re:Windows Registry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, quite seriously, emacs actually /does/ have an odd text adventure in it.

      M-x dunnet RET

      Dead end
      You are at a dead end of a dirt road. The road goes to the east.
      In the distance you can see that it will eventually fork off. The
      trees here are very tall royal palms, and they are spaced equidistant
      from each other.
      There is a shovel here.
      >

  64. Game! by Master+Rux · · Score: 1

    Browser based games are always a good option. My favorite being http://wittyrpg.com/ of course.

    --
    IMO the best browser game ever http://wittyrpg.com
  65. KDE Games by TheCycoONE · · Score: 1

    My wife is completely addicted to KNetWalk, some of the others are pretty good as well and appeal to a variety of ages.

  66. casflow101 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    cashflow 101 for kids,

  67. Valuable Life Skills by ahoehn · · Score: 5, Funny

    Don't think of just entertainment, choose games that will teach the children valuable life skills. For example:

    Teach them to Rule the World: Freeciv
    Teach them the value of running over hookers: GTA 1&2
    Teach them the awesomeness of fighting robots: One Must Fall 2097
    Teach them to conquer the world in a different way: C&C Red Alert 3
    And finally, teach them to conquer the world of worms (you never know): Wormux

    --
    Mod my comments down. It'll be fun.
    1. Re:Valuable Life Skills by forkazoo · · Score: 1

      Teach them to Rule the World: Freeciv
      Teach them the value of running over hookers: GTA 1&2
      Teach them the awesomeness of fighting robots: One Must Fall 2097
      Teach them to conquer the world in a different way: C&C Red Alert 3
      And finally, teach them to conquer the world of worms (you never know): Wormux

      Red Alert 3 isn't free. Red Alert, however is. Releasing Red Alert is a promotional move in the hopes that you'll be interested in the series and buy Red Alert 3. That said, Red Alert is good fun, and well worth the download. I've been playing through the soviet campaign. Also, "Ground Control" has been available for free for a while. It's a sort of "tactics only" RTS that still looks decent for something that was written to run on a PII with a TNT.

      Now if only "Moon Project" was available for free like Ground Control, I'd be in cheapskate underappreciated RTS heaven. Moon Project was like a game made of pure marshmallow win.

    2. Re:Valuable Life Skills by ahoehn · · Score: 1

      Red Alert 3 isn't free. Red Alert, however is.

      Excellent point. I'll just go back and edit my post...

      Shit.

      --
      Mod my comments down. It'll be fun.
    3. Re:Valuable Life Skills by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 1

      He says a baseline Dell. Ain't no way a baseline Dell is running RA3.

      Give them the computer and a Demonoid invite.:)

    4. Re:Valuable Life Skills by forkazoo · · Score: 1

      Excellent point. I'll just go back and edit my post...

      Shit.

      Look on the bright side -- all the time you save by not editing your post can be spent playing Red Alert!

  68. ScummVM plus Beneath A Steel Sky by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's also a couple of other free point and click story games to play on ScummVM, I'm sure the website lists them.

    Also, what about an Infocom interpreter?

  69. Emulators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While it's definitely in the legally gray area there's always mame + roms. Not to mention Zsnes and Super Nintendo games, NES and SMS emulators. When it comes to low-end computers these are by far the best options for games.

  70. ScummVM + Free games by revoked · · Score: 2, Informative

    This might be too "old and moldy" for a young teen but: http://www.scummvm.org/downloads.php Scroll down to "Extras, game downloads". Beneath a Steel Sky is entirely worth the time it takes to download and play. Definitely a staple of my childhood gaming. There are a couple other gems in the free downloads as well.

    1. Re:ScummVM + Free games by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Wait... you mean there's a way to get past that first guard? I tried everything I could think of short of finding a walkthrough. I'm not a fan of "click and die until you find the right pixel to click" games.

  71. powermanga by Marrow · · Score: 1

    Very nice little asteroids/space invaders game.

  72. Little Fighter 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.lf2.net/
    'nough said.

  73. Cave Story by DanielG42 · · Score: 1

    A nice little platformer with a great storyline.

    http://www.cavestory.org/index.php

    --
    Daniel
  74. Sauerbraten by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    http://sauerbraten.org/

    Free FPS that is easy to create maps for.

  75. Freespace 2 by Selfbain · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't think the FSF would classify it as 'Free' but it's close enough for what you want it for. I enjoyed the game a great deal.

    --
    Well, it has never been successfully tested.
    1. Re:Freespace 2 by thepotoo · · Score: 1

      Freespace 2 open still requires you to own the original game. It's not expensive at gog.com, but still not free.

      --
      Obligatory Soundbite Catchphrase
    2. Re:Freespace 2 by Hatta · · Score: 1

      It's an excellent game, but it's gotten less free recently. The Freespace 2 license originally encouraged sharing between friends on a non-commercial basis, and people took that as license to share the game data as well as the source code. However later versions of the game did not include that statement, so it's always been unclear what the legal status is.

      Since Good Old Games has started selling Freespace 2, the Freespace Open project no longer distributes the game data. Whether it's legal or not to distribute, you're going to have to find the game data somewhere else now.

      But yes, it's an excellent game, and the Freespace Open project has done wonders with the code. I just wish the Homeworld code would receive such attention, but it's saddled with a particularly awful license.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    3. Re:Freespace 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Freespace 2 Total conversions which don't require the originals files:

      The Babylon Project - http://babylon.hard-light.net
      Freespace 2 total conversion based in the Babylon 5 universe

      Beyond The Red Line - http://www.beyondtheredline.net A freespace 2 total conversion based on the new Battlestar Galactica universe

    4. Re:Freespace 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and the Freespace 2 SCP extended the storyline and improved the graphical experience drastically.

  76. Some more OSS goodies by Benanov · · Score: 1

    Found entirely in Ubuntu/gNewSense package repos:

    Which Way Is Up? (wwisup) - 2D platformer with a "twist"
    Pathological - pattern matching madness
    gPlanarity - Untangle planar graphs
    Fish Fillets NG (fillets-ng) - box pushing with hilariously witty fish

    1. Re:Some more OSS goodies by elex · · Score: 1

      I put Fish Fillets on my wife's Mini 9. She loves it. It's really well made, and brilliantly thought through.

  77. First Post? Is that a game? by davidwr · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Free, check. Legal, check. Works on the computer described, check. Annoying enough that bored 13-16-year-olds will eat it up? YouBetcha!

    OK, we can close this thread now.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  78. S.W.I.N.E. -- RTS, was commercial, now free by Infoholic · · Score: 1
  79. Transcendence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Transcendence is free, extensible and bloody great fun!

  80. Bittorrent by sunderland56 · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'm not up on the details, but I've heard that ther is this program called "bittorrent" is extremely popular with gamers.... If you don't install it yourself, I'm sure your average 15 year old PC user will figure it out pretty quickly.

    1. Re:Bittorrent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.gog.com/en/gamecard/freespace_2

  81. Pingus - Lemmings remake by malignant_minded · · Score: 1

    http://pingus.seul.org/ Uses penguins instead of lemmings. Actually I find it better than lemmings. It does more special tasks for the penguins like jumping, which is really hard to make a penguin jump multiple times while trying to do the same for his other penguin buddies. Installs on windows, osx, and linux. It has its own level editor so you can make as many boards as you want but from the default it has way more than any single version of lemmings did.

  82. Visual Pinball + Vpinmame by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 1

    Most of the VP only tables should run and if the systems are not too old then you should be able to get some of vpinmame games working as well others may end up running too slow.

    http://www.vpforums.com/

  83. BZ FLAG!!! by Sephollyon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    BZ FLAG! Ahh the countless hours spent pwning classmates in CS lab....

  84. warzone 2100 wz2100.net by sjwest · · Score: 2, Informative

    in Ubuntu as deb but oldish website has rc2 - quite fun.

  85. Re:Freeciv is non-intuitive. Here are some others. by ex0a · · Score: 1

    If I still had modpoints I'd throw you +1. Nice information!

  86. Not just games by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Give them some programming tools. Something they can learn and perhaps better themselves ( and their situation ) with.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  87. Command & Conquer and MechCommander by drgould · · Score: 1

    Command and Conquer Gold GDI and NOD ISOs are free, legal downloads.

    Along with MechCommander, MechCommander 2 and MechCommander Gold.

    1. Re:Command & Conquer and MechCommander by mad_cat_elite · · Score: 1

      That is awesome, I already have MechCommander 2, and I know Microsoft released the Source Code for MC2 for XNA, but actually releasing the games legally, that is awesome.

  88. I hear... by Chyeld · · Score: 1

    That Spore is pretty good. You should try that.

  89. Wormux by Max+Romantschuk · · Score: 1

    Not sure about the specs, and not that "politically correct", but Wormux, http://www.wormux.org/ is a GPL clone of the ever classic 2D Worms. Should be right-on for 13-16 year olds.

    --
    .: Max Romantschuk :: http://max.romantschuk.fi/
  90. Open Transport Tycoon Deluxe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    openttd.com is fantastic. You need some of the original game files but they can be found legitimately (google for 'transport tycoon clive owen'). Suitable for all ages and it's really fun.

  91. Jellyfish Backgammon by M0b1u5 · · Score: 1

    "Jellyfish" Backgammon.

    Level 7 is a world-class player. Tough to beat. It doesn't cheat, no matter what (useless) players say.

    --
    How many escape pods are there? "NONE,SIR!" You counted them? "TWICE, SIR!"
  92. games 4 win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.games4win.com/freeware-games/

  93. Gigagames, Phoenix, etc. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are a load of old-school games available at http://archives.scovetta.com/.

  94. Sokoban! by Jonah+Bomber · · Score: 0

    ...of course.

  95. BZFlag by phyrestang · · Score: 2, Informative

    www.bzflag.org Free, Open-source, multi-player tank battle ala Battle-Zone.

    1. Re:BZFlag by cool_arrow · · Score: 1

      I second bzflag. Cool game. I will destroy you phyrestang - how about some 1v1? :)

    2. Re:BZFlag by phyrestang · · Score: 1

      You probably would. I used to be big in tourney play years ago, but I haven't played in 4 years or so other than occasionally popping on for 5-10 minutes.

  96. My two favorites: Fracas and Pathological by UltraAyla · · Score: 1

    These two games are both super addictive - one is a risk-like strategy game while the other is a...well, it's it's own sort of puzzle game:

    Fracas: http://www.smozzie.com/fracas.html

    Pathological: http://pathological.sourceforge.net/

    I've spent a lot of time playing each of these, and they are a blast for kids too.

  97. Charred Dirt by Foldarn · · Score: 1

    There's the classic Scorched Earth and then the re-written freeware version, Charred Dirt. It's the predecessor (I think) to the Worms series of games. Just google "Charred Dirt" and you'll find it.

  98. Wormux by jopsen · · Score: 1

    Wormux runs find on my old intel graphics card: http://wormux.org/wiki/en/index.php
    It's a worms clone, actually very cool...
    It's also available for windows... Also pingus, if it's avaiable for windows...

  99. Space Patrol? by Mr+Z · · Score: 1

    I'm partial to my own game, Space Patrol. I'd be happy to wrap up jzIntv + Space Patrol (full edition) for such a thing. Both jzIntv and Space Patrol are GPL, and the Windows emulator works on even fairly slow machines. (I developed it on a 300MHz machine, and it runs full speed on 200MHz ARM machines.)

    Also, there's an interesting game or two at Farbs.org.

  100. Maelstrom -- Great Asteroids Game by borbetomagus · · Score: 0

    http://www.devolution.com/~slouken/Maelstrom/binary.html This is a 1993 clone of Asteroids for the Mac, but was ported to Windows and other operating systems. Still fun to play, with funny sound effects.

    1. Re:Maelstrom -- Great Asteroids Game by wheresthefire · · Score: 1

      I second Maelstrom, I always loved this game. It's Asteroids on steroids--modern graphics and sound effects, extra bonus targets, multiplayer capabilities, etc. Runs great on Linux as well as Windows and Mac.

  101. FPSes? by joe_cot · · Score: 1

    If they're 13-16, and some of them are boys, they're probably going to enjoy first person shooters. There are a number of good ones: a short list would be Sauerbraten and Urban Terror. They're free to distribute, they run on Windows and Linux, and they're lightweight enough to run on intel graphics without any issue.

  102. Urban Terror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Urban Terror is my personal favorite free FPS, plays a lot like Counter-Strike and has a pretty active community. It runs on a modified Quake3 engine (as does openarena) and should work well on older harware, assuming you've got at least 32 megabytes of video memory and full OpenGL support.

  103. torrent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Give a child a game and he plays for a day... give a child a bit torrent client... :p

  104. Glace (sidescroller) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Glace is a cute little sidescroller, an old favorite of mine

    http://www.tommyvisic.com/Glace/

  105. Why noone mentioned some of the classical games? by nobodylocalhost · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Reversi/othello
    Checkers
    Chess
    Go

    instead of mind numbing violence and graphic eye candy, maybe it is a better idea to switch gears and provide something that actually cultivate the mind?

    --
    Where is the "Ignorant" mod tag?
  106. Everyone remembers Tribes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Starsiege: Tribes is freeware now. FreeOrion might also be good if they can stand it.

  107. Simutrans by Snodgrass · · Score: 1

    simutrans is a really fun Transport Tycoon-type simulation game.

  108. GREAT GAME! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.perfectworld.com/ is free and as good as WoW or any other pay to play mmo.

    Minimum Req's:
    Windows 98/ME/2k/XP/Vista
    800mhz cpu (P4 1.5 recommended)
    256megs ram (512 recommended)
    2.5 gig hard drive space
    32meg graphics card (although 256 meg recommended)

    With a little tweaking I have run it on some pretty low end machines and it plays well.

  109. A few "donts" for little kids... by LunarEffect · · Score: 1

    No:
    Sauerbraten
    Open Arena
    Nexuiz
    ...although they are pretty nice.

    But seriously...a good resource to check is this list on wikipedia.
    That should give you more than enough to choose from =)

  110. Xmoto by pmfa · · Score: 2, Informative

    Xmoto is great, available from Ubuntu repositories, and non-violent. Apart from when the bike falls on top of the character that is! hehe

    You should check out Edubuntu, it was designed the sort of thing you want to do in mind.

  111. Is there an internet connection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anarchy Online.

  112. Angband & Variants by Plekto · · Score: 1

    I know it's been mentioned before, but here are the actual links to the game and the literally hundreds of variants.

    A couple of notable features are the AI is very good and the game has the only truly fully random number generator in it that I know of, so every game really is unique and odd things can occasionally happen.

    My son plays it and has been known to hit the screen in frustration. :) Not bad for a game that will run on most any machine out there. There are also versions that run as a self-playing screen saver. Quite possibly the most interesting screen saver that I know of.

    http://www.thangorodrim.net/
    Older files, but then again, not much has been changed in the last few years, either.

    http://www.zangband.org/
    The most popular variant out there that I know of.

    http://www.simugraph.com/simutrans/iso_angband/download.html
    3D isomorphic version.

    http://rephial.org/
    This was mentioned before. Get the newer version here, though you likely will have to compile it.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ToME_(video_game)
    http://www.t-o-m-e.net/main.php?tome_current=0
    The most recent surviving variant. Well worth your time to read these pages and ask around on the forums.

  113. Free games by tambo · · Score: 2, Informative

    Star Control: The Ur-Quan Masters. One of the absolute best games I've EVER played for ANY platform - ported from the 1990's as free software.

    Seiklus. One of my all-time favorite action/adventures: simple, colorful, evocative.

    Within a Deep Forest. Really fun and neat game where you play a bouncing ball.

    Spheres of Chaos. INCREDIBLE trippy Asteroids clone with lots of power-ups.

    flOw. Of course.

    Overgod. Very fun 2D arena shooter with upgradable ships.

    ROM CHECK FAIL. Old-school craziness. =)

    Cave Story. Metroid-style old-school side-scroller.

    - David Stein

    --
    Computer over. Virus = very yes.
  114. Regnum by Athens101 · · Score: 1

    http://www.regnumonline.com.ar/ The only free MMORPG I know of.

    1. Re:Regnum by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      Anarchy Online is free, too.

  115. Scorched 3D! by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 1

    Or how about...

    Scorched 3D

    Free in both ways, networked and local play, installers for most platforms (including Windows and Ubuntu). And a whole extra DIMENSION, baby.

  116. Best Asteroids clone ever: Maelstrom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love Maelstrom.

  117. Open Source filtering software? by theaveng · · Score: 1

    >>>will be giving them to needy kids

    Just curious - what open-source software are you using to filter the internet & protect their young eyes from seeing goatse.cx or playboy.com?

    --
    FOX NEWS.com should be BANNED from television and internet. Have the Congress take it over and give us Truespeak.
    1. Re:Open Source filtering software? by Whiteox · · Score: 1

      Don't need it. Just point to OpenDNS. Just change the DNS IP and customize the filtering as required. Free, easy to set up, free, has great filtering, free, also allows design of custom error pages and it's free.

      --
      Don't be apathetic. Procrastinate!
  118. TrackMania & TrackMania Forever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is in my option the best free game out there it's a racing sim. The best part is users can create their own tracks so there is lots of variation. People can create tracks for speed or just for difficulty or even for fun.
    From the Site:
    â A completely free game.
    â A captivating solo mode with 65 brand new tracks.
    â Solo and team based multiplayer modes. Join millions of players online on the TrackMania servers.
    â One complete TrackMania environment: Stadium ââ(TM)Foreverâ(TM)â(TM).
    â An in-game editor to create your own tracks, video studio to realize your own movies and a paint shop to customize your vehicles.
    â Official ladders for solo and multiplayer.
    â Compatible with TrackMania United Forever (profile and multiplayer servers).

    http://www.trackmania.com/en/index.php?lang=en&rub=nations

    1. Re:TrackMania & TrackMania Forever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I second TrackMania. Although I don't know if the Dell computers can handle it (Intel graphics are iffy).

      System requirements from http://store.steampowered.com/app/11020/

      Minimum:
      Supported OS: Windows 2000/XP/XP-x64/Vista
      Processor: Pentium IV 1.6GHz / AthlonXP 1600+
      Graphics: 3D accelerator 16 MB DirectX 9.0c compatible graphics card
      DirectX Version: DirectX 9.0c or better
      Memory: 256 MB (512 MB with Vista)
      Sound: 16 bit DirectX compatible sound card
      Hard Drive: 750 MB free disk space

  119. Tower Defense by Fearan · · Score: 1

    Lookup the millions of TD games, most are shockwave, some are downloadable. Tower Defense is quick fun, easy to understand and doesn't need a beefy system.

  120. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by oldspewey · · Score: 3, Funny

    Reversi/othello Checkers Chess Go

    instead of mind numbing violence and graphic eye candy, maybe it is a better idea to switch gears and provide something that actually cultivate the mind?

    I think you're probably overstating the developmental capacity of checkers.

    --
    If libertarians are so opposed to effective government, why don't they all move to Somalia?
  121. Re:Freeciv is non-intuitive. Here are some others. by Bobfrankly1 · · Score: 1

    TETRINET!!!! and me without mod points! That's great if you'll have a network of users.

  122. Re:Freeciv is non-intuitive. Here are some others. by oldspewey · · Score: 1

    As much as I love playing Freeciv, I worry that it's not quite ready for people who have never played either it or some other version of Civilization. It is not at all intuitive,

    These are 13-16 year olds the OP is talking about ... I'm sure they'll figure it out in short order.

    --
    If libertarians are so opposed to effective government, why don't they all move to Somalia?
  123. Look for Linux games by Protocron · · Score: 2, Informative

    Many of the open source Linux games also have pretty good Windows ports:

    Take a look for "Linux Game" sites and follow the links to the homepage of the games. Most times the Windows ports will be included. Here's a few good examples:
    At getdeb.net you can get Super Methane Brothers. If you go to the homepage of Super Methane Brothers you find a Windows Exe.
    You can take a look at LinuxGames, playubuntu.com and probably find more via Google.
    Games that I would recommend specifically:
    Tux Math Command
    gridwars 2
    OpenAlchemist
    Hedgewars
    Game Maker
    Frets on Fire
    Secret Maryo Chronicles

    --
    CAPS LOCK: ITS LIKE THE CRUISE CONTROL FOR AWESOME
  124. Best Games!!!1! by IHC+Navistar · · Score: 1

    1) Tetris

    2) Missile Command

    3) Space Invaders

    4) Asteroid

    5) RISK

    6) Donkey Kong

    7) N+

    --
    Knowing Google's lust for data collection, the Soviet Union is still alive and well inside the psyche of Sergey Brin....
  125. Various Options by mad_cat_elite · · Score: 1

    You have a couple of choices, as I am sure many will give you.

    You can do shareware, while they do limit total gameplay, it is free and there are some out there that are really fun.

    You can do demos. Now an days they are time based, but back in the day they were level based.

    There are also Open Source games that have been released in the last few years, such as Freespace and Freespace 2. Of course, they had their source code released but people have made some good mods off of those. You can try http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_open_source_games

    You can also try abondonware games, though the trick there is not all will work with XP properly and you would need to use an emulation software such as DOSBox.

    Another option you can do, which is not a game in it self, and was recently a discussion on Slashdot is GameMaker. You can download a trial for it and provide some tutorials for it and kids can make their own games.

  126. Penguins are cool! by jasontromm · · Score: 1

    TuxKart http://tuxkart.sourceforge.net/
    SuperTux http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SuperTux

    I believe there are XP and Ubuntu versions available for both.

    --
    "Politicians always tell the truth, when they're calling each other liars."
  127. 2 more games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    warzone, now free to get http://wz2100.net/
    and a free mmo eternal lands http://www.eternal-lands.com/page/download.php

  128. UT2004 Demo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unreal Tournament 2004 Demo. Its free and actually still quite fun to play locally or online with just the maps included with the demo. It should be quite playable with intel graphics if you turn the detail level down a bit.

  129. GTA2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Grand Theft Auto 2 is available free from Rockstar: http://www.rockstargames.com/classics/

  130. What??? by Khyber · · Score: 1

    Umm, writing an emulator is perfectly legal. Downloading an emulator is perfectly legal. Format-shifting your PSX bios from one piece of hardware to another is perfectly legal a long as you OWN the system you're transferring from. Using the said BIOS in an emulator to play games you legally purchased is LEGAL.

    Get that illegality nonsense out of your damned head - ever hear of BLEEM!? COMMERCIALLY SOLD EMULATION SOFTWARE.

    Catch up with the times, even though those times were nearly a DECADE AGO.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    1. Re:What??? by clone53421 · · Score: 1

      Using the said BIOS in an emulator to play games you legally purchased is LEGAL.

      Yeah, legal.

      hundreds of fun, recognizable ROMs already bundled as torrents

      ...not legal.

      --
      Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
    2. Re:What??? by Khyber · · Score: 1

      "hundreds of fun, recognizable ROMs already bundled as torrents ...not legal."

      BULLSHIT! If you happen to own every game in that torrent file, it's legal. Oh, you can pick and choose the files you can download, as well, so even if there were a thousand games in the torrent, you'd only have to download the ten you own.

      I'm sorry, but technology has pretty much gone way past anything you're thinking about. I still own over 300+ NES cartridges, but no working NES. So I download the ROMs from the internet and emulate using FCEUltra.

      It's only illegal *IF YOU DON'T ALREADY OWN IT.*

      Sony tried this bullshit with me once for downloading FFVII. I brought my three-disc physical copy, disc 3 mangled, into the small claims court, and won within five minutes.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    3. Re:What??? by clone53421 · · Score: 1

      BULLSHIT! If you happen to own every game in that torrent file, it's legal.

      Yeah, but we both know that wasn't what he meant.

      'Course, to be legal that would also require donating the cartridges along with the computer.

      --
      Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
  131. Pacman! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    No game pack is complete without Pacman!

    There are lots of other great freeware games at that site, just to name a few:
  132. Chips Challenge by ndberry · · Score: 2, Informative

    I personally never get sick of Chip's Challenge. Great old school puzzle game that fosters the development of problem solving skills.

    1. Re:Chips Challenge by Pinckney · · Score: 1

      While I agree with you completely, it is unfortunately not free.

  133. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by dougisfunny · · Score: 0

    Chinese checkers perhaps?

    --
    This is not the funny you're looking for.
  134. Soldat by Drakin020 · · Score: 1

    http://www.soldat.pl/

    Fantastic side scroller game, great for multiplayer.

    --
    The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
  135. Re:FP? by lysergic.acid · · Score: 5, Interesting

    one of the funner games i remember playing as a child was AT-Robots. i'm not sure if it was free back then (i might have gotten it at a swap meet or something), but it's certainly free now.

    basically, it's a robot battle simulation. you use a text editor to write the AI for your bot(s) in ATRA (Advanced T-Robot Assembly), a simplified assembly-like language used in the game, and then you load your custom-made bots up in the game and run battle simulations against other types of robots.

    even if you don't assembly or don't have any programming experience, it's relatively easy to open up one of the pre-written robots that come with the game and figure out what different instructions do by altering different program parameters and then seeing how this changes the robot's behavior.

    it's a great way to get kids interested in programming (and perhaps robotics/AI) while having lots of fun. one of the game's best qualities is that it encourages experimentation and creativity. once you get into the game you're always trying to tweak your robots and experiment with new techniques to improve their battle performance. it's largely a process of trial-and-error when you first start, but it also encourages deductive reasoning and other analytical skills.

  136. Savage by Whyzzi · · Score: 2, Informative

    No one has mentioned "Savage, Battle for Newerth". Has windows, Linux, and MAC downloadable binaries.

    --
    "BSD is about people pissing each other.." (Moid Vallat)
  137. Re:Looks like shit by Anthony_Cargile · · Score: 1

    Disregarding your apparent dislike of open source, I meant Armagetron Advanced, as another AC pointed out above.

  138. shameless plug : Ice Ice Penguin by sammyF70 · · Score: 1

    Can be found HERE and should run in windows XP too.

    It's a remake of the old dreamcast classic "Chu Chu Rocket" (no online play ... yet, but at least it has got penguins)

    --
    "DRM is like the Ford Pinto: it's a smooth ride, right up the point at which it explodes and ruins your day."-C.Doctorow
  139. Star Control 2 by mokiejovis · · Score: 1

    Another vote for The Ur-Quan Masters (http://sc2.sourceforge.net/). It's fantastic, and it's even in Ubuntu's Universe repositories.

    $ sudo apt-get install uqm

  140. HP48 Emulator by Ken_g6 · · Score: 1

    OK, this is an off-the-wall idea, but hear me out...

    The HP48 is a slightly old HP scientific, graphing calculator (more like a small computer). It so happens that you can download an emulator for it, and a ROM for said emulator legally, and for free. I believe its processor was 4MHz, so any computer being built today will have no trouble.

    Now, why did I mention this in a question about games? Because there are hundreds of free games available for the calculator. Some of them might even be worth installing the emulator for. Not to mention the fact that the kids get a free scientific/graphing calculator program in the process.

    --
    (T>t && O(n)--) == sqrt(666)
  141. Text Adventures by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's kind of an archaic genre, but there are a lot of fun text adventures ("Interactive Fiction") in the public domain. http://www.ifarchive.org/ is a good place to dig them up.

  142. dwarf fortress by Conditioner · · Score: 1
  143. Perl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    best game evar!

  144. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Plaid+Phantom · · Score: 0

    Apparently you've not played Checkers Fight Club rules.

    --
    All comments are properties and trademarks of the voices in my head. Not like I'm gonna claim them.
  145. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    You missed a classic in there:

    Global Thermonuclear War

    Shall we play a game?

  146. GameTap by Belial6 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Install the GameTap client. While they have a pay service. They also have 150 free games. These are real commercial games including:

    Tomb Raider Legend
    Metal Slug 2
    Bubble Bobble
    Sensible Soccer 2006
    King of Fighters '96
    Robotron 2084
    Elevator Action
    Burger Time
    Commandos 3
    Warlords Battlecry III
    Cannon Fodder
    Hitman
    More...

    While the pay part of the service is worth the money, the free part has a suprisingly high number and quality of available games.

  147. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Benzido · · Score: 1

    I think maybe you need to be modded 'ignorant' yourself. There are plenty of modern computer games with more cognitive depth and educational content than any of the games you listed.

  148. Abandonware OK? by fm6 · · Score: 1

    Before you try this, make sure that whoever's sponsoring this program is OK with your installing abandonware. Although this is not strictly in accordance with copyright law, abandonware sites (at least the ones that don't like getting sued) only provide abandoned games that their owners don't object to being made available. In many cases, the owner has gone out of business and there's really in a position to object — but verifying this is impractical.

    Now then, go to an abandonware site and download every DOS game that looks at all fun. By modern standards, these games have tiny footprints, so you might as well go crazy. These will mostly not run directly under XP, so you should install an x86 emulator to use with them. (Yes, running an x86 emulator on an x86 system is weird, but it's the best way to deal with the low-level compatibility issues you get with DOS software.) The one I use is DOSBox, and there seems to be broad agreement that it's the best. Even emulates old sound cards!

  149. Not OpenArena by bigngamer92 · · Score: 1

    Open Arena would not be my pick of Quake 3 fork. For one this is going to kids and the game even tells you on the homepage that it is more of an adults only game. Warsow on the other hand is not very gory and uses some very nice graphics. I think its a bit more intensive than Open Arena but it wont illicit unwanted legal attention.

    1. Re:Not OpenArena by Khopesh · · Score: 1

      Neat, except that's a Quake II mod (which isn't to say that it's bad).

      Right after I posted that, my Wikipedia crawling unearthed Tremulous, which "came in first in a Best free game based on GPL Quake source? poll on the PlanetQuake website." Another one mentioned a few times in the comments around here is Padman.

      OpenArena looks like the closest match to Q3A for what that's worth.

      --
      Use my userscript to add story images to Slashdot. There's no going back.
    2. Re:Not OpenArena by Narishma · · Score: 1

      Warsow isn't a Quake 2 mod. It's using a modified Quake 2 engine that has most of the features of Quake 3.

      --
      Mada mada dane.
    3. Re:Not OpenArena by packman · · Score: 1

      It indeed isn't a 'quake 2 mod', and it's even quite beyond Quake3 if you look at engine capabilities. It's based on QFusion, which was originally based on the Q2 sources, but which has been improved and expanded quite a bit...

  150. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by CyberLord+Seven · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I believe you underestimate the game!

    While I used to beat my dad at chess starting from my high school years (15 to 18 years for those not from the U. S.) he kicked my ass at checkers up until the weeks before he died.

    Ditto for my Uncle Obie.

    I'll bet there's a bunch of old coots sitting around just waiting to teach you a thing or two about checkers.

    Oh, and for what it's worth, Go is really simple too.

    --
    We have always been at war with Eurasia!
  151. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by corywingerter · · Score: 1

    All of your game options are playable without a PC. Most (if not creatively, all) of them can be played with sticks and stones.

    I'm assuming he wants to use the PCs to give some games that they can't already play.

    --
    Work smarter, not harder.
  152. Re:Freeciv is non-intuitive. Here are some others. by griffjon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    On the educational side, TuxType, TuxPaint and TuxMath are all great programs that teach spelling, typing/speed, basic geometry/colors, and basic math problem solving.

    --
    Returned Peace Corps IT Volunteer
  153. Kolf by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kolf had a great addiction factor in our laptop class... similar to Elma.

  154. Abandonia FTW by Weaselmancer · · Score: 1

    Go check out Abandonia.

    Loads of certified abandonware. It was all good enough to sell once long ago. Now it's free.

    And since it's for older PCs it should run on your Celerons just fine.

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
  155. my pick by cyberzephyr · · Score: 1

    Zuma

    --
    I'm here for the experience, not the Hyperbole.
  156. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by EdwinBoyd · · Score: 5, Funny

    The first rule of checkers fight club is that you do not talk about checkers fight club.

  157. Dark Dominion by HaymarketRiot · · Score: 1

    There's always Cave Story. Dark Dominion is being released soon, and that's supposed to be freeware. (http://www.dopterra.com/ddscreens/ddominion.html)

  158. Classic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Verrrry interesting is package bsd-games. Specially i like Air Traffic Control (atc). If you survive an hour with default setup you should apply for real ATC job :-).

  159. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, Reversi and Checkers get old fast, and for Chess and Go, pick one:
    Good
    Free

  160. C&C Red Alert is free by Mistakill · · Score: 1

    At FileShack you can find the ISOs for the http://www.fileshack.com/file.x/12826/Command+&+Conquer:+Red+Alert+-+Allied+Disc Allied and http://www.fileshack.com/file.x/12827/Command+&+Conquer:+Red+Alert+-+Soviet+Disc Soviet discs. Both are about 500mb downloads. Red Alert can be installed under Windows XP, 98, 95 and ME.

  161. Why XP? by poolmeister · · Score: 1

    Why are you sending these out with Windows XP?
    Are they legitimately licensed copies of Windows XP? Are you allowed to transfer ownership of the license to the recipient?

    Considering you've gone to the trouble of individually downloading and installing your choice of FOSS applications on these Windows boxes and you're even distributing Ubuntu CDs with the PCs why are you even bothering with Windows in the first place?

    The majority of gaming suggestions on this thread are FOSS or shareware games available on Linux anyway.

    --
    CN=poolmeister.OU=lurkers.CN=slashdot
  162. Jetpack by Dominican · · Score: 1

    http://www.adeptsoftware.com/jetpack
    Hours, upon hours of fun.
    Back in the day I paid for it, but it is now free.
    The download is less than 500KB. and there are many user contributed levels.

  163. Dark Disciples by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Despite the eerie and cool graphic on the page this is a great old fashioned RPG. Puzzle oriented more than a hack n slash.
    http://www.darkdisciples-rpg.com/

  164. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Rick+Bentley · · Score: 5, Funny

    Reversi/othello Checkers Chess Go

    instead of mind numbing violence and graphic eye candy, maybe it is a better idea to switch gears and provide something that actually cultivate the mind?

    I think you're probably overstating the developmental capacity of checkers.

    ...and chess. I play chess well yet I'm functionally retarded when it comes to talking to women. My excellent slashdot karma doesn't seem to help either. I don't know where I went wrong in life but I couldn't get laid underwater with the only SCUBA tank in swimming distance.

    Do the kids a favor and install an instant messenger, Skype, and help them sign up for Myspace and FB accounts so that they develop some social skills before they die alone in an apartment with too many cats, a great chess ranking, a lot of slashdot posts, and too many high scores.

    --
    My favorite quote doesn't fit into 120 characters. Now no one will like me.
  165. Games by Hordeking · · Score: 1
    --
    Disclaimer: The opinions and actions of the US Gov't are in no way representative of those held by this author or its ci
  166. Don't forget services! InstantAction and GameTap! by KanSer · · Score: 1

    Leave bookmarks on each computer and make sure they have everything needed to play the free games at instantaction.com.

    Lots of goodies for free.

    Install a GameTap account and let them play the free silver games. All sorts of neat old-school arcade games, they rotate the free games, and they can play the infinitely awesome Psychonauts. (Which will probably murdalize the hardware but oh well.)

    --
    • MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward Wednesday April 20, @4:20
  167. Warning: Known sockpuppet/troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    User maintains more than a dozen sockpuppet accounts on Slashdot.

  168. sites to look at by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.happypenguin.org - has a lot of games, mostly free and linux capable, however I find the quality varies dramatically.

    http://db.tigsource.com/ - is the database part of The Independent Games source blog, where they store tons of indie games, some really good some only worth a small diversion.

    http://www.thewayoftheninja.org/ - N is free and super super addictive

  169. Web games by Fri13 · · Score: 1

    - TA Spring (You can get games for that what ain't using the Total Annihilation files) (+ not so good for slower machines)
    - Nexuiz (not so good for slower machines)

    I would just place games what educates and teach basic strategies like chess, go and such games. For younger childrens a KDE-edu package is bretty good.

    And then of course set of marble and science applications, because those might some like to be fun.

    Oh, and dont forget old kind commandline games and links to desktop heading to online java games.

    1. Re:Web games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      - TA Spring (You can get games for that what ain't using the Total Annihilation files) (+ not so good for slower machines)

      It's been renamed to 'Spring'. Without the 'TA'.

  170. Re:Open Arena Not Suitable For 13-16 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the OpenArena front page:

      OpenArena is a violent, sexy, multiplayer first person shooter based on the ioquake3 fork of the id tech 3 engine. It has many game types beyond deathmatch and a lot of characters. Due to violent and racy content, it may not be suitable for children under 17.

  171. Knytt Stories by F�an�ro · · Score: 1

    Knytt_Stories

    Peaceful 2d jump&run with great art and level design

    review

    1. Re:Knytt Stories by richtaur · · Score: 1

      You beat me to it. I can't recommend this game highly enough. It's more involved and has higher progression than the first Knytt game. So good!

  172. Get Abandonware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Guaranteed to blast your past off or your money back.
    Some of the better ones:

    Ascendancy -- Space exploration and domination similar to Master of Orion, micro/macromanagement and diplomacy and such.

    Gobliiins -- Hilarious puzzle game, point and click style.

    Discworld -- Cartoony point and click adventure, based on the book series.

    Command & Conquer -- mentioned above, the first great top-down strategy.

    Dune 2 -- Precursor to Command and Conquer, and an excellent war strategy game. Interface is clunky compared to today's standards.

    Settlers 2 -- Civ-like build-stuff-and-conquer strategy.

    NetStorm -- Aerial island based tech/research/attack strategy.

    Alone in the Dark -- Spooky 1st-gen 3D third person explorer.

    The Colonels Bequest -- Waaaaay old but one of the best mystery/suspense games I can remember.

    Tyrian 2000 -- Top-down space shooter, pretty good.

    There's hundreds more, check 'em out.
    Be advised: you'll need DOSBox or equivalent program to run most of these.

  173. Racer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Racer Car and Racing Simulator (big range of community developed cars and tracks) http://www.racer.nl

  174. Bzflag! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who could resist the experience of driving a tank that can jump and/or fly, shoot laser beams, guided missles and the most destructive of all - shock wave. Many free servers are available that feature maps/worlds optimized for 'capture the flag' - where you work with teammates to capture the other teams flag, or free form, or 'rabbit hunt'. Great game, not a huge download, runs well on Linux, Mac and Windows. You do need a decent internet connection...something one step up from dial-up at least. I would recommend that you 'observe' for a while before you play....also, servers that are not in the top five generally are a bit more tolerant about new players.

    http://www.bzflag.org

    Enjoy!

  175. Re:FP? by NotQuiteReal · · Score: 1

    While I don't doubt AT-Robots was a "funner" game for you, I do seriously doubt the average, needy 13-16 year old recipient of the donated computer would find it so.

    I'm not saying there aren't needy nerds, but I would go with the odds and suggest that games that don't involve too much thinking would be much more fun for them. (And there look like plenty of winners, listed in other threads.)

    But what the hell, toss some stuff like that on there too. Maybe put it in a folder called "keep out" to get them to look at it.

    --
    This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
  176. Freecol by chazzf · · Score: 1

    FreeCol: Sid Meier's Colonization reimplemented in Java. Good graphics, good gameplay, multiplayer works well across platforms (just the other day there were three of us playing: I hosted on Ubuntu, my friends had XP and Vista). It isn't at the 1.0 release but it's playable as is and is actively developed.

    --
    No statement is true, not even this one.
  177. BZFlag - Multiplayer Tank Game by GRNXNM · · Score: 2, Informative

    BZFlag is a fun multiplayer tank game that you can jump right into and have fun but also has a lot of potential for skill growth. It works well on even crappy video cards.

  178. Red Alert for free by sa1lnr · · Score: 1

    http://www.ea.com/redalert/news-detail.jsp?id=62

    With installation instructions for XP and Vista.

    They also did this a while back with Command & Conquer Gold which is still available on somewhere like filefront iirc.

  179. The Babylon Project/Beyond The Red Line by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about some of the Freespace total conversions:
    The Babylon Project - http://babylon.hard-light.net
    Beyond the Red Line - http://www.beyondtheredline.net

  180. Continuum (Subspace) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A really great free online 2D space action/shooter game.

  181. Nebulus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tower Toppler (also known as Nebulus):
    http://toppler.sourceforge.net/

    1. Re:Nebulus by nebulus4 · · Score: 0

      Absolutely love this game :)

      --
      "It would be wrong to refuse to face the fact that everything is fundamentally sick and sad."
  182. Ogame.org! by NineNine · · Score: 1

    Just put a link to OGame.org on their desktops. One of the biggest, best free MMOG's out there.

  183. talk to Stardock by MBraynard · · Score: 1

    Brad Wardel may give you a bunch of licenses for Entrepreneur, etc. gratis. Nice write-off for him, perhaps, and he seems like a pretty friendly guy.

  184. Transcendence by bwcbwc · · Score: 1

    at http://neurohack.com/transcendence/ This is by George Moromisato, the same guy who wrote Anacreon, back in the DOS 3.x days.

    Anacreon is available there http://neurohack.com/ too, if you're taking character-mode programs. And where it used to be shareware, it's now free.

    And I also second votes for FreeCiv, Vega Strike, and Wesnoth, among others.

    --
    We are the 198 proof..
  185. what you need is by nawcom · · Score: 1

    XBill!!!!! Teach those kids about what needs to be done to prevent Bill the hacker from spreading his Windo.. I mean virus to other computers in the network! This game builds fucking character dammit!

  186. Snood by The+Dancing+Panda · · Score: 1

    It's not free, but the free trial of Snood is still a ton of fun for me.

  187. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is the second rule, learn to copy and paste! You fail at Internet.

  188. In this post, I explain exactly why Nesticle sucks by tepples · · Score: 1

    Use a modern NES emulator, like Nestopia. Nesticle is old as hell

    Old as hell doesn't mean it sucks.

    But in this case, it does suck. It takes a mere four lines of 6502 asm code for an NES program to detect whether it's running on Nesticle or a more accurate emulator:

    nestc_detect:
    lda $2002
    bpl nestc_detect
    lda $2002
    bmi nesticle

    And it sucks because it's old; the NES behavior that this code depends on wasn't discovered until Nesticle was no longer maintained. If you're going to be playing homebrew games such as Tetramino or anything on pdroms.de, I'd recommend using Nestopia or one of the FCE Ultra forks.

    Next you'll be wishing people used a modern OS like Vista. Windows XP is old as hell, right?

    No, it's more like recommending Windows XP over MS-DOS.

  189. Re: GTA(2) by Abreu · · Score: 1

    You could also throw in GTA(2), which are now freely available as Rockstar Classics: http://www.rockstargames.com/classics/

    I don't think the people running this kids charity is going to appreciate that particular game...

    --
    No sig for the moment.
  190. Nexuiz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.alientrap.org/nexuiz/ Free Open Source FPS Based on the Quake 3 engine. Scales very well on any hardware.

  191. Re:FP is like XP for Christmas. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Will someone please think of the children! All of them!

  192. GTA and GTA 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    http://www.rockstargames.com/classics/index.html

  193. you cannot miss phun! by Marco+Guardigli · · Score: 1
    Definitely you have to consider including phun. this is not strictly a game, but a 2D physics lab.

    Go see on youtube many interesting movies. You will like it. I have two kids enjoying it a lot.

    www.phunland.com

    Oh, yes, it is multiplatform.

    marco

    --
    smile and have fun
  194. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by nog_lorp · · Score: 1

    Go? Are you trying to cultivate the mind or scare them away from intellectual persuits!? Honestly, Go must have the most complicated strategy in existence.

  195. Some of these kids might be ...... female! by OutOfMyTree · · Score: 1

    Do think about a wider variety of games (and other programs), for both boys and girls. I hope other people can add to my limited list.

    Favorite Fox Sudoku. 123 Free Solitaire.

    Kids can have fun with The Gimp, Picasa, Sketchup, Audacity (there must be a friendlier free program than Audacity....)

    ?Provide them with URLs to Teen Second Life and Game Giveaway of the Day.

    1. Re:Some of these kids might be ...... female! by clone53421 · · Score: 1

      Audacity (there must be a friendlier free program than Audacity....)

      Oy... Audacity is the opposite of friendly. Something along the lines of GarageBand might be fun, perhaps, but I don't know of any such programs which are free and run on Windows.

      Gimp is great if you need its features, but I'd have to admit it's just barely friendly enough to consider as a decent replacement for MS Paint for a newbie who just wants to doodle. You should probably write a short readme with instructions on how to do some basic stuff (e.g. create a new blank image, draw a straight line using shift-click, draw a rectangle/ellipse by filling/outlining a selection)...

      --
      Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
  196. Repositories by anexkahn · · Score: 1

    I would suggest looking through the repository after installing Ubuntu, There are quite a few games.

    --
    Curious about Storage and Virtualization? Check out
  197. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by nog_lorp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why? So they'll be competing with us for women? We need to make a socially illiterate next generation, so there will be young women available for us!

  198. and :FreeCol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FreeCol is still undergoing development and needs more work, but it's already playable and enjoyable. It has a moderate educational factor, which is a bonus for use by kids. It also has the improvement over the original SM's Colonization of using a backend server that's multi-player capable. A package is available in the Ubuntu universe repository. You're better off with the 7.4 package for Ibex than the 7.2 release in Hardy. 8.0 looks like it has some nifty improvements, but it won't be ready for deployment by Christmas.

  199. Re:Freeciv is non-intuitive. Here are some others. by HappySmileMan · · Score: 1

    As much as I love playing Freeciv, I worry that it's not quite ready for people who have never played either it or some other version of Civilization. It is not at all intuitive,

    These are 13-16 year olds the OP is talking about ... I'm sure they'll figure it out in short order.

    Or they'll get bored due to a lack of action scenes and attractive women.

  200. One game to rule them all ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pong

    Pwned fsckers!

    And get off my lawn

  201. Nexuiz - Free and GPL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not sure how this hasn't been said yet! This game screams slashdot.

    Built on the Quake Engine clone Darkplaces, this game is about the level of quake3 in terms of quality and features.

    http://www.nexuiz.com

  202. Great Free Games for low end machines by agargan · · Score: 1

    Hi There You can have a look at all th equake 1 engine based games :) they are are free and run on most anything :). Also stuff like kpooka for linux or free civ ... there are even open versions of warcraft one. HTH

  203. RedAlert 1 by pbulteel73 · · Score: 1

    Command and Conquer: Red Alert (the original) is being given out for free by EA.

    -P

  204. Let them create their own games by dave562 · · Score: 1

    Give them the first five applications on this list. ;)

    http://sectools.org/

  205. I'll donate one of mine. by tjstork · · Score: 1

    I wrote a stupid shooter called Independent. It's pretty fun - a bottom moving spaceship blasts a bunch of things dropping from the sky. It uses 3d graphics but runs fine on a corporate Dell Latitude D610. Go to http://mightyware.com/independent.htm and help yourself. The registration code is 1138 (after the famous movie). Heck, I'm not selling it, so, if anyone wants it, go ahead and download and mirror.

    --
    This is my sig.
  206. Dammit! by BenEnglishAtHome · · Score: 1

    I do NOT come to Slashdot to look in the mirror!!!

    1. Re:Dammit! by TheDreadSlashdotterD · · Score: 1

      Why not?

      --
      I have nothing to say.
  207. Free games by renegadesx · · Score: 1

    There are alot of good open source games out there. My personal favourate is Battle of Wesnoth.
    Alien Wars, Freecraft, Nethack, FreeCiv, TORCS & others can be found in the Ubuntu repo's that are fairly good.

    --
    Make SELinux enforcing again!
  208. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by skarphace · · Score: 1

    I think maybe you need to be modded 'ignorant' yourself. There are plenty of modern computer games with more cognitive depth and educational content than any of the games you listed.

    Score for not listing any. Sitting here on my gentoo box just wishing for someone that knows so much to show me a decent game.

    --
    Bullish Machine Tzar
  209. Jewel by blind+biker · · Score: 1

    I don't really believe this post will be noticed at this point, but it costs nothing to try: I love Jewel, a great Unix/LInux game. In fact, my favourite game of all time - but I can't find a version for Windows. If anyone knows of one, please let me know.

    --
    "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
  210. Star Control 2 by OzPhIsH · · Score: 1
    --

    "To lead the people, you must walk behind them"

  211. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by dslbrian · · Score: 3, Informative

    For fans of the board game Settlers of Catan, there is a similar online version which is quite nice:

    Sea3D (here are some screenshots)

    That one is a bit old, but stable (it is similar to Settlers plus the seafarer expansion), and the S3D Connector website can match up players.

    The newer version in devel is Cities Online (similar to cities and knights expansion).

    Those are pretty good board games.

  212. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Benzido · · Score: 1

    Can't you get SimCity for linux, at least? I know they have it on OLPCs.

  213. Two more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BOS Wars
    WarZone 2100 are my favorites.

    Just look them up in your local packetmanager or on google.

  214. Download Java SDK and Netbeans! by HeavyDevelopment · · Score: 1

    Hours of fun for the whole family!!!!

    --
    Badges!?! We don't need no stinking badges!
  215. Subspace / Continuum by daashton · · Score: 1

    Classic online asteroids, will run on any pc http://www.getcontinuum.com/

  216. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe because all of those games are horribly boring to play alone on any computer.

    I'm all for games without violence and eye candy, but please... I have *less* fun playing those than hitting random keystrokes in notepad.

  217. Flight Gear by CallsignBaron · · Score: 1

    I suggest Flight Gear flight simulator. Any modern computer should be able to run it, it is not as graphics intensive as you might think, just need OpenGL. Great game, fun to play and also teaches the physics of flight and world geography. My kids and I love it! You can find pre-built Debian packages at http://packages.debian.org/sid/flightgear they should install just fine on Ubuntu.

    --
    "I reject your reality and substitue my own." ~ Adam Savage, Mythbuster extraordinaire.
  218. Re:Plenty of older games have been release as free by i.of.the.storm · · Score: 1

    I'd like to add that Starcraft rocks too, and is fairly cheap. AoE II does have more of the historical bent to it though. Both games are excellent.

    --
    All your base are belong to Wii.
  219. Simon Tatham's Puzzle Pack by wizzahd · · Score: 3, Informative

    http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/puzzles/

    'Net' is my favorite puzzle in the set, but there are 27 different puzzle games total including Mastermind, Minesweeper, a number sliding puzzle, and Sudoku.

    Available for PC, Mac, Linux, and Palm.

  220. BZFlag by morrison · · Score: 2, Insightful

    http://bzflag.org/ There are plenty of servers rated "PG", "PG-13", and even "G" suitable for children of all ages. The servers for kids tend to be very heavily monitored with strict language and behavior rules.

    --
    Cheers!
    Sean
  221. I can't believe no one mentioned this? by allaunjsilverfox2 · · Score: 1

    Http://www.happypenguin.org Full of interesting LINUX games. Since you mentioned ubuntu cd I thought it might be useful. And Savage 2 is fairly interesting.

    --
    Restore the madness of youth's lechery
  222. No mention of KoL? by FreshKarma · · Score: 1

    Tight plot continuity, fantastic UI, learning as you play; none of these phrases describe Kingdom of Loathing. (Motto: An adventurer is you!) It mostly defies description. You can play as a Disco Bandit. The currency is meat. See? No help. Check it out for yourselves :)

    --
    The future ain't what it used to be.
  223. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the problem IMHO is that you consider womEn. Womanizers consider women. They are actors and get sure successful with womEn... but they don't really love em; they love getting them.

    If you don't act well, just be. I suggest to treat women as peers - which will kinda disorient the beautiful ones- and listen more than talk. Think about the womAn you like, not how to be popular with women. She may play with your infatuation, or exploit it, or go away, cause she feels for one of the stupid actor above :) but all you need is just one that likes "the light" shining through you.

  224. Battle for Wesnoth by defective_warthog · · Score: 1

    It a good simple game, available for most all mainstream os's. My 9 year old grandson plays it with me twice a week. His mother regulates his time. http://www.wesnoth.org/ the warthogs are dead....

  225. Tremulous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tremulous.

  226. GLTron by Britz · · Score: 1

    Gltron can be played by up to four people in front of one computer. Great fun for a couple kids. I have seen it.

    http://www.gltron.org/

  227. Re:SuperTux by bfree · · Score: 1

    The best bit about supertux is the easy level editor. My nephews discovered it and all of them spend at least as much time making levels as playing the game which they invariably ask for when the come over (an eee with supertux makes for a quite life). They range in age from 4-11 and all love it.

    --

    Never underestimate the dark side of the Source

  228. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Enderandrew · · Score: 3, Informative

    Micropolis is the official SimCity for Linux I do believe, but Lincity-NG is an even better clone more akin to SimCity 2000.

    --
    http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
  229. Golf and Billiards on the PC... by ProfanityHead · · Score: 1

    Not free but for $7.00 i can play the game that first interested me in computer gaming: http://www.linkscountryclub.com/

    I always liked golf on the PC, better than solitaire for killing time. Multiplayer too. Between this and Virtual Pool 3 Download version I have all the gaming I need for $30 total.

    Problem is you need to run Windows. I bet they run in an emulator on linux though.

  230. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Enderandrew · · Score: 4, Funny

    I've got wood for sheep!

    --
    http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
  231. Armadillo Run* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *Armadillo Run isn't usually free, but I bet they could be persuaded to provide a charitable group license.

    It's great fun as a puzzler and educational to boot. Very low system requirements.

    http://www.armadillorun.com/

  232. Anacreon by sasami · · Score: 1

    Another vote for Anacreon!

    More specifically, a vote for the freeware rewrite: Anacreon is no longer a character-mode game. George Moromisato reimplemented the entire thing from scratch and -- crucially -- added netplay.

    For those not familiar with Anacreon, it's a 4X turn-based space conquest game that delivers unusual depth despite its relative simplicity; it is complex without being complicated. Its hardware requirements are, accordingly, minimal. Yet IMHO it compares favorably with GalCiv II in several respects, and is significantly better than Master of Orion I/II or Space Empires IV (which is a game that attempts to be richly complex but only succeeds at being drably complicated).

    --
    Freedom is not the license to do what we like, it is the power to do what we ought.
  233. Scorch3d by funkboy · · Score: 1

    scorched earth, worms, etc were all great, but this open-source 3d version is a riot, especially with some of the mods

  234. Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For the RPG gamer, Charles Barkley Shut up & Jam: Gaiden.

    It's a hilarious cyberpunk adventure through neo-newyork using such films as space jam as lore.

    It's really funny, and free.

  235. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by ReverendLoki · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Do the kids a favor and install an instant messenger, Skype, and help them sign up for Myspace and FB accounts so that they develop some social skills

    IM, Facebook and MySpace are as useful to the development of social skills as a horse is to playing water polo. Sure, some of the syntax is the same, but it's just a really bad idea.

    --
    09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
  236. For Ubuntu you can add T.E.G. by Ramirozz · · Score: 1

    You can add T.E.G. in Ubuntu... it is like Risk. I'm not sure if it's available in english.

    --
    http://www.quasarcr.com/
  237. Numpty Physics by lizardb0y · · Score: 1

    I've been playing Numpty Physics on my phone while commuting by bus for the last week or so. It is thoroughly addictive, runs on very low-spec hardware, and is kid-safe.

    http://numptyphysics.garage.maemo.org/

  238. Dota by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dota

  239. FlightGear as well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I dunno about the rest of the /.'ers here but man was I awed by that trailer of Flight Sim 95 in those M$ Trial Pack CD's back then. I was hooked on it ever since.

    FightGear is one thing you definitely add to the pack, hopefully the new generation will find the joy in flying again rather than today's constant fear.

    cheers.
    AC

  240. Three Words, One Acronym by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Columbine_Massacre_RPG!

  241. Maraton (Aleph One) by jrothwell97 · · Score: 1

    Marathon's FPS engine was open-sourced in 2000 (the engine is called Aleph One), and you can also grab a revised version of the original game's data files to play with it. If your child has a James May-like disposition, he may also be interested in the pseudo-3D engine.

    --
    Those using pirated Tinysoft signatures(TM) are a real threat to society and should all be thrown in jail.
  242. Real Games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You shouldn't rely on others to code your game. YOU should code YOUR game!! The computers should come with an e-book on C (Or, even better, COBOL.) Make them make their own games!

    NetHack is okay, I suppose. But you shouldn't provide them with binaries.

  243. ManiaDrive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://maniadrive.raydium.org/

    Good fun

  244. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by hairyfeet · · Score: 3, Informative

    And here is a list of FPS and MMOs. While you didn't list what kind of Intel graphics chip it shouldn't take you very long to pick a few out of these lists that will work. Basically anything pre 2003 should work with a 915. I haven't tried the newer GMA chips but I heard they are even better. Personally I like any of the free FPSs based on the Quake engine myself. You just can't go wrong with a little Quake style blasting to help relieve that schoolwork stress ;-)

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  245. YES! by ihaveamo · · Score: 1

    Dwarf fortress AND TA spring - you need nothing else. Good combo to suggest, mr Conditioner!

  246. Please reconsider! by hackel · · Score: 1

    As you can see from the comments here, there are an *abundance* of excellent free, open source games available for Linux. Please do not ship these machines with Windows XP! Instead, you could ship them with Ubuntu and a load of games and educational software pre-installed. Getting new users, and especially kids, hooked on MS from the start is the worst thing you could do!

    1. Re:Please reconsider! by clone53421 · · Score: 1

      As you can see from this comment here, the author didn't really have a choice.

      --
      Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
  247. Xmoto by Alvare · · Score: 1

    Xmoto, it's very addictive, makes you think and isn't ugly at all.

    --
    4 - A robot may not masturbate, except where such action would conflict with the Second Law.
  248. Some ideas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some ideas, in decreasing order of accessibility:

    Vantage Master (http://www.falcom.co.jp/vantage/index_e.html) - Only the cut scenes are in Japanese.

    The Spirit Engine (http://thespiritengine.com/tse1.html)

    Dungeon Crawl Stone Soup (http://crawl-ref.sourceforge.net/) - I consider it a slightly less sadistic version of NetHack. Open source.

    Gargoyle Interactive Fiction Player (http://ccxvii.net/gargoyle/) - Look through http://www.ifarchive.org/ and pick some high quality, age appropriate titles.

  249. Warsow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    www.warsow.net

  250. Re:Freeciv is non-intuitive. Here are some others. by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

    heh, i hope they've tightened up their client-server model. i remember back in high school i wrote a proxy server to monitor the traffic between my TetriNET client and the server. at first it was just a stream of jumbled characters to me, punctuated by the occasional chat message that was displayed in plain text. but after studying the traffic for a few hours and with a little experimentation, i was able to decipher pretty much all of the traffic flowing between the client and server and document their entire communication protocol.

    yea, it's just a game so security naturally won't be a major priority, but there were some pretty major design flaws. for instance, even though the networking architecture technically followed a client-server model, nearly all of the game intelligence/mechanics was entrusted to the clients. all the server did was give everyone a single host to connect to and serve as a broadcast address. the actual instructions to update each player's screen came from their own clients. and to make things worse, the server (and therefore also the clients) made no attempt to distinguish where a message originated from and whether that host had any business issuing that message/instruction.

    so by the next day i had hacked together a proxy/cheat program that let me manipulate anyone's screen at will--including adding/removing rows, dropping power-ups, clearing/filling a screen completely, and even drawing words/flowers/smiley faces on the screen using blocks/power-ups. oh, and i could also spoof chat messages or boot everyone off the server. the game lost its fun after that, but reverse-engineering their communication protocol was funner than playing the game anyway.

  251. Micropolis by pan_sapiens · · Score: 1

    (aka Sim City[tm]) would be a nice addition. The source is available under the GPL, but a bit of Googling didn't find me any pre-compiled Windows version. Anyone know where one might be ? There are certainly deb packages for Debian/Ubuntu around.

  252. BZFlag!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Awesome online multiplayer tank FPS.

  253. Warzone 2100 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://wz2100.net/

  254. Gta 1 & 2 by shlepp · · Score: 1

    Grand theft auto classic and grand theft auto 2, both available free from R*'s website, as well as VDoom (open source doom, hexen, doom 2), and Wolfenstein Enemy territory.

  255. Re:FP is like XP for Christmas. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah, I did wonder whether there was a level of proprietary software that you'd sell yourself out to recommend to people, other than of course consoles.

    Admit it - you don't like free software, you just hate Microsoft. The whole thing is completely irrational.

  256. Open Arena by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My grandkids love Open Arena http://openarena.ws/

    There are a lot of other doom/quake clones available.

  257. Crack Attack (puzzle type game) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try Crack Attack, a freeware puzzle game based on Tetris Attack.

  258. Shall we play a game? by hosecoat · · Score: 1

    global thermonuclear war

  259. Re:FP? by twocows · · Score: 1

    Sounds like Robocode to me. http://robocode.sourceforge.net/

  260. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by ericartman · · Score: 1

    I love mahjong and knetwalk. Think they qualify, in this day of copyrong who knows?

    Cart

  261. Re:FP? by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

    while i agree it's a niche genre, so are some of the more complex SRPGs like Spectral Souls or Generation of Chaos, which i think have a steeper learning curve than AT-Robots. even World of Warcraft has more parameters, stats & complex game mechanics to learn/memorize than AT-Robots.

    really all the robot AI algorithms simply break down into a few basic directives: scan, attack and chase/evade.

    • Scan for enemies - just specify the scan arc and search pattern of your robot. the wider your scan arc, the less range/accuracy you have. the narrower the scan arc, the harder it is to locate the enemy. a simple strategy is to start with a medium-arc scan and then gradually narrow it down to determine the precise angle of the enemy. but there are weaknesses to this strategy.
    • attack - the attack algorithm works in parallel with the scan algorithm. but you can fine-tune the accuracy (strength) of the shots and rate of fire. a major consideration when programming the attack algorithm is heat, as each shot fired increases your bot's body temperature, and if your bot overheats it can burn off armor, temporarily shut down, or explode. it's also a bad idea to shoot an enemy point-blank as your projectiles have a large blast radius.
    • chase/evade - this directive is pretty self-explanatory, but there is also a lot of depth to programming your robot's movement. obviously how your robot maneuvers should depend on where enemies are located, and you also have an overburn feature available to use, though you run the risk of overheating. AT-Robots don't start/stop/turn on a dime, and if you collide with another object at high speeds you can take damage.

    aside from those three points, there's just the allotment of base stats:


    • scanner
      weapon
      armor
      engine
      heatsinks
      mines
      shields

    i think AT-Robots would appeal to any child who's ever wanted to build their own robot. but unlike building a robot in real life, this is much cheaper and easier to pick up. besides, just because a child comes from a poor background doesn't mean he's dumb/has a short attention span. likewise, a game doesn't have to involve mindless action to be fun/entertaining. a lot of people enjoy empire-building strategy games, chess, and puzzle games like Sudoku.

    plus, kids around that age are still pretty mentally malleable and inquisitive. kids aren't born nerds or intellectuals/geniuses. you can cultivate a healthy interest for intellectual pursuits in just about any child, and educational games are the perfect means of doing just that. it's important not to sell a child short and withhold intellectual challenges from them because you think it's beyond their mental capacity--especially underprivileged children.

  262. What about some Bubble Bobble love..... by VampBoy · · Score: 1
    --
    the cake is a lie
  263. Online flash games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An internet connection and bookmarks to some of the sites containing hundreds of flash games, like Kongregate and Newgrounds. Free game lists like jayisgames.com provide lots of candidates, too...

  264. Missing option by taucross · · Score: 0

    Dink Smallwood - the best adventure game ever. And Free.

    --
    "In the absence of the ability to establish the attribute of truth they tried to establish the noble attributes."
  265. Re:FP? by GreenCow · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Similarly, Logo can be a great way to educate programming skills, as well as artistic and problem solving skills. Logo can make spirograph-type art, and puzzles such as mazes can be navigated. I'm not sure if Logo has been developed as far as having AI, but it seems possible.

    Logo may be more appropriate for younger audiences. Something with a similar artistic/programming approach for teens would be interesting. Maybe sodaplay or processing, although these maybe a bit too difficult.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logo_(programming_language)

  266. Re:Freeciv is non-intuitive. Here are some others. by peterhoeg · · Score: 2, Interesting

    On that note - we have a 4 year old at home (soon to be 5) who is hooked on GCompris. Most of the mini-games there are too difficult, but she loves the ones she can figure out.

    She switches on the PC and logs on herself (with her own password) to get to it.

    While I thought about giving her Sugar as the DE, she seems very comfortable with GNOME.

  267. Consider Tremulous by neonfrog · · Score: 1

    Better than Wolf in many ways is Tremulous.

    http://www.tremulous.net/

    I've run the PCs at a a gaming convention for several years and have had Wolf there every year for the past 4. This year I tried Tremulous. Most everyone, especially the 13-16 year-olds really enjoyed it. Many said, "Way better than Wolf!" We even had girls playing!

    It ran on more aged hardware much better than Wolf did. Higher FPS. Snappier. Ran on meh MacBooks with Intel graphics quite acceptably. Has enough newness with the aliens so it's not a same-old same-old FPS. Some RTS elements. I like it.

    --

    I'm thinking about it, therefore I might be.

    1. Re:Consider Tremulous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My only issue with Tremulous are the poorly made maps and models. Not to sound arrogant but I've been seriously considering contributing to the project to improve those things.

  268. tux racer by morelife · · Score: 1

    tuxracer.sourceforge.net or http://www.extremetuxracer.com/?screenshots

    tuxracer flat out rocks!!

  269. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    +4 _insightful_?

  270. linux_game_tome by stoicio · · Score: 1

    You just need to know where to look.

    http://happypenguin.org/

  271. Freespace 2 by Simmin · · Score: 1

    Freespace 2 is now open source. It's pretty good.

  272. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is this modded "insightful"? Have Slashdotters grown to be that desperate? :P

  273. Alien Arena, absolutely. by Alienkillerrace · · Score: 1

    http://red.planetarena.org/ - Alien Arena 2008 Consistent style, smooth gameplay, and the game is very configurable, capable of running on older hardware, or if you have the horsepower, capable of running very nice effects. There are tons of modes of gameplay, all suitable for kids of any age. Great, friendly community that always welcomes players of any age into the mix. Gameplay is very well balanced, and easy to learn.

  274. blender apricot project - yo frankie! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yo Frankie! has just recently been released online. It is a project which makes use of the 3D Blender game development platform.

  275. N - Way of the Ninja by Captain+Jack+Taylor · · Score: 1

    You guys have forgotten about the game that is frustration incarnate. That's right, N! http://www.thewayoftheninja.org/n.html Get your ninja on.

  276. Re:FP? by FatdogHaiku · · Score: 2, Informative

    DXball (MegaBall based breakout game) runs OK on basic machines, you can still get the free version on cnet:
    http://www.download.com/DX-Ball/3000-2099_4-10155579.html
    Also, NoNags has a lot of games, all free. I would think anything saying it is Win9x and XP compatable would not be too demanding. At Nonags you want the 6/6 rated software, though some of the 5/6 stuff is OK too.
    http://www.nonags.com/

    --
    You have the right to remain sentient. If you give up the right to remain sentient, you will be elected to public office
  277. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  278. K Bounce by Cymeth · · Score: 1

    I love K Bounce!

    I'm sure you could find a Windows version of a Bounce-themed game.

    --
    Can anyone recommend a good therapist for me.. er.. my schizophrenic network card?
  279. Re:FP? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds a bit like Core Wars.

  280. America's Army by fishizzle · · Score: 1

    America's Army might run on your hardware. It ran fine on my PC back when I played it, and all my hardware is at least 6 years old now (PIII, GeForce 4, etc.) I was playing back when it was in the 1.x versions however, and now it's in the 2.x's. I believe they're using a newer generation of the Unreal Tournament engine since I last played. I don't know if you can still play the 1.x engine online.

    It was a very polished game for being free. Being released by the US army as a recruitment tool, it was obviously quite realistic. You went through basic training first, and could only become a sniper if you passed with really high scores, etc. Combat is very team oriented (limited number of each player class available per level, etc.) and realistic (when you die, you have to wait until the mission is over to come back, etc.)

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/America's_Army

    Between that and Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory, I didn't have to buy a PC game for at least a couple years... back when I still had time to play them.

    1. Re:America's Army by clone53421 · · Score: 1

      I found that it performed in a pretty sorry fashion on lower-end hardware when I played, and that was before they implemented the Karma physics engine. Of course, lower-end hardware today is miles ahead of what it was then, so you might get decent performance, but I'm betting it won't play well at all.

      The learning curve is a bit steep, too... just passing basic marksmanship can take several tries, and you're stuck shooting at targets until you get the hang of it enough to move on. Once I graduated to the multiplayer maps, I found that I usually died very quickly until I got a feel for one particular map (Pipeline, and really only on the camping^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hdefense team). Even then when I tried a different map I quickly switched back to Pipeline because the learning curve started all over again.

      Don't get me wrong, I liked the game, but it's not for everyone.

      --
      Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
  281. Re:FP? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LSD - are you sure you aren't burned out? Are you sure?

  282. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Dr+Dodgy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You're right, why hasn't this been modded to +5???

  283. Wormux. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like worms, but with penguins and gnus.

  284. Good abandonware dos games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Master of Orion
    Merchant Prince
    X-Com
    Perfect General 2

  285. Urban Terror. by crhylove · · Score: 1

    It's not Open Source, but it is based on the GPL'ed Quake 3 engine, and it's probably one of the funnest FPS in existence. And it's free, and plays GREAT in Ubuntu!!

    --
    I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
    1. Re:Urban Terror. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The sad part is that it's not meant to be comical.

  286. Snood by ryry · · Score: 1
    --
    -ryry
    ::insert witty .sig here::
  287. Re:Freeciv is non-intuitive. Here are some others. by SnEptUne · · Score: 1

    13-16 years old does not imply boys. Or are you implying girls will get bored without attractive women?

  288. Fracas by onosson · · Score: 1

    http://smozzie.com/fracas.html Nice little Risk-style game, but not a clone. Customizable pseudo-random maps, good AI, low system requirements.

    --
    ? syntax error
  289. IT'S TIME TO JOIN THE INCREDIBLE BATTLE! by aDSF762 · · Score: 1

    Awesome 3rd person, on-line, shooter! http://www.gunzonline.com/

    --
    sense of security, like pockets jingling...
  290. My current favourites by jandersen · · Score: 1

    Daimonin: a better looking version of Crossfire. And The Mana World, which is a bit like WoW. Both are free and run on Linux as well as other OSes I shall not mention here.

  291. Free to Multiple Good Homes... by PreDefined · · Score: 1

    I was involved with a student game project at my university this year. It's a turn-based strategy game in which you are an independent music label recruiting bands across your city. We've had about 700+ downloads so far and I'd be very happy if we could give some of what we did to these kids. Available for Windows and Mac http://www.labelriseofband.com/

  292. OpenTTD by JimPenn · · Score: 1

    How about learning how to make the trains run on time?

    OpenTTD is a well-polished clone of the Microprose game 'Transport Tycoon Deluxe'. Your job is to create and manage the transportation infrastructure of an island. Trains, Planes, Automobiles and Boats!

    Hours of fun and below-the-radar learning!

  293. fossgames by segagman · · Score: 0

    cube2, Requiem, google free mmorg

  294. Jardinains 1.2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This was a simple fun game... the author went and spoiled it in Jardinains 2.0 with a load of commercial bullshit. Get the Jardinains 1.2..Lotsa fun. It is free with donations accepted.

  295. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by jjason82 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Who modded this modded as insightful?

  296. ufo: alien invasion by richlv · · Score: 1

    hmm, i didn't see it mentioned, so gere it goes ;)
    http://ufoai.sourceforge.net/

    --
    Rich
  297. Frets on Fire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Frets on Fire.. I love it..

  298. Frets On Fire by frenchbedroom · · Score: 1

    http://fretsonfire.sourceforge.net/
    A Guitar Hero clone that you can play with a regular keyboard (F1-F5 for "frets", Enter to "pick")

  299. How about some funny... errrm... physics? by kubajz · · Score: 1

    Have you considered Phun Physics ( http://www.phunland.com/wiki/Home )? It's a 2D environment where you can build "machines" a little similar to The Incredible Machine, but obeying many physical laws. So far, everyone who has seen the demo video, from my 4-year old son to some Ph.D. educated friends, has fallen in love with it :o)

  300. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Also Pioneers.

    It's in the Debian and Ubuntu repos.

  301. Some more games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hex-a-hop - a little girl jumping on hexagonal tiles. Should be available in the repositories of most popular distributions (Debian Lenny and Ubuntu for sure). (Home page seems down though) http://www.aceinternet.co.uk/~mokona/

    Antigravitaattori - multiplayer flying saucer racing game. Available (at least) in Debian Lenny repositories, as well as Ubuntu. http://www.luolamies.org/software/antigrav/

    Trigger - 3D car racing simulator

    njam - pacman clone, but enhanced

    gl-117 - action flight simulator

    glest - real-time strategy - Magic vs. Tech

    globulation - real-time strategy with blobs

    singularity - (already mentioned, but it's a great game) you are an AI and have to stay hidden from public - http://www.emhsoft.com/singularity/

    All games mentioned above are available in Debian Lenny, and most likely in Ubuntu as well.

    Hack The Game (for Window$ but works with wine) - Basically some hacking simulator that is free, as opposed to Uplink and Hacker Evolution and the like. http://www.hackerforever.com/hackthegame/

  302. Venture Africa by ajschatz · · Score: 1

    I'd be happy to donate some copies of Venture Africa and Venture Arctic to your cause (kid-friendly games about building ecosystems of animals). Feel free to contact me through the contact-us form on the Pocketwatch Games website (www.pocketwatchgames.com/contact-us).

  303. **steps out of time machine** by w0mprat · · Score: 1

    Why not put the shareware versions of all the big titles out there at the momment? You should be able to scrounge a few floppies of games off people or download from a BBS if you have a fast enough 19200 baud or better modem. Oh you'll need PKUNZIP.exe too!

    Hey what is this place? Oh what's that you say? Really? ... you mean to tell me the pc game industry has forgotten about... shareware? How can this be, companies like ID software made their millions on that on that model!

    All joking aside, if this was 1994 I would have said just load that PC up with shareware, like the shareware versions of DOOM and Descent were pimped all over the place, there was no need to pirate games because you could get decent stuff for free if you wanted *sigh*. Today it's different, other than ancient abandonware there are disappointingly very few decent entirely free shareable games, and anything commercial usually has a crippled demo version.

    --
    After logging in slashdot still does not take you back to the page you were on. It's been that way for 20 years.
  304. Who wha? by Ponyegg · · Score: 1

    I'm hoping I'm not the only one who initially read this post as being '... will be giving them to nerdy kids this Xmas' :-)

  305. Toribash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's better than a physics-based fighting game that educates people in the human anatomy?

    http://www.toribash.com

  306. Demos? by KlausBreuer · · Score: 1

    How about some demos?
    Yes, while most demos are space-wasting crap, quite a few are actually very nice. For example, have a look at "World of Goo" (http://2dboy.com/), which comes with a very nice and long demo.

    --
    Free PC version of ChipWits at http://www.breueronline.de/klaus/chipwits/
  307. The Original GTA by Canazza · · Score: 1

    The original GTA is going free on Rockstar's website. It's up to you if you think it's suitable for 14-16 year olds (when it came out it was an 18, but then again, that was a decade ago, attitudes change)

    --
    It pays to be obvious, especially if you have a reputation for being subtle.
  308. Transport Tycoon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I recently downloaded the great Transport Tycoon Deluxe for Windows and spend the whole evening in this game.
    http://www.abandonia.com/en/games/240

    Check also other games on abandonia, it's a very good site for us - retrogamers.

  309. HEROES III by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heroes III linux build is free and is a great multiplayer role playing game with hot seat option!

  310. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stop being a smartarse.

    Noone comes after morninge.

  311. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by dintech · · Score: 1

    giving them to needy kids this Xmas

    Abondonware? :)

  312. Yo Frankie by mariourk · · Score: 1

    How about Yo Frankie? The new game made by the Blender team: http://www.yofrankie.org/

  313. Pogo Sticker by MacBirdie · · Score: 1

    Very cool game, shown at Assembly '05.

  314. Glest, for some open source RTS goodness by Gori · · Score: 1

    Put Glest on there as well ( http://www.glest.org/ ) Very polished looking RTS. From their website " Glest is a free 3D real-time strategy game, where you control the armies of two different factions: Tech, which is mainly composed of warriors and mechanical devices, and Magic, that prefers mages and summoned creatures in the battlefield. "

    It is available from Ubuntu repositories.

    --
    Complexity is a measure of our ignorance...
  315. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  316. gametap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's a bunch of free arcade and classic games available through gametap. the downside is that the computer has to be internet-connected to play as it is ad-supported.

  317. If you think Frozen Bubble is bad.. by RichiH · · Score: 2, Informative

    ..don't go for Crack Attack or Tetrinet.

  318. BlinkenSisters Jump'n'Run by cavac · · Score: 1

    Put the BlinkenSisters Jump'n'Run on it:

    http://www.blinkensisters.org/

    I'll be glad to give support via email if required :-)

    --
    Look, this thing is totally safe! Built it myself, you know. You just press that button like this and then turn that lev
  319. Harpooned by m0n0RAIL · · Score: 1

    Harpooned is the world's finest cetacean research simulator. It's free, runs on low spec machines and I made it.

  320. GTA 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    GTA 2 is freeware now. Its half decent and not as vulgar as some of the other titles under the GTA franchise.

  321. Elder Scrolls: Arena by Rangu+Nikorasu · · Score: 1

    Arena is one of the best games ever. You may need DosBox though...

    http://www.elderscrolls.com/downloads/downloads_games.htm/
    http://www.dosbox.com/download.php?main=1/

    --
    "Bellum est Pacis. Licentia est Servitus. Ignarus est Vires."
  322. Open source games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ubuntu already has a rather extensive seletion of very good educational games.

  323. Snood by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Snood

    http://www.womgames.com/games/index.php

  324. apt-get by mgiuca · · Score: 1

    The best thing about trying out free/open-source games on Ubuntu is that (like all programs) they're just one command away...

    sudo apt-get install

    Makes it so easy to try these things out.

  325. hardwood spades hearts euchre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Spades... get it at

    http://www.hardwoodspades.com/

    also have good version of Hearts and Euchre.

  326. Re:Freeciv is non-intuitive. Here are some others. by ghostis · · Score: 1

    I recently designed some new levels for Extreme Tux Racer. They a CC and designed to be longer and faster (~8 min and ~15 min).

    -Adam

    --


    Computer Science is all about trying to find the right wrench to bang in the right screw. -T.Cumbo?
  327. Re:SuperTux by asavage · · Score: 1

    SuperTuxKart is also a very good game with good music. It is similar to Mario Cart.

  328. Try to make it educational... by CodyRazor · · Score: 1
    --
    So Skulldilocks threw acid on the schoolchildrens' faces, cause somebody from the bible told her to do it!
  329. No need to bundle FPS's! by larryhl · · Score: 1

    I have to second or third or 500-th Wesnoth. Great RPG/strategy game. Frozen Bubble is great for those times when you really don't want to do anything else. I would check out http://game.giveawayoftheday.com/ also for great free games. I would recommend puzzle, word, RPG, and strategy games for children/teens. No need to actually offer FPS's to them; I am sure they will get them themselves if they want to play those.

  330. Keith Goes Painting! by DanDanger · · Score: 1

    Great little game.. that i wrote ^_^ http://www.download.com/Keith-Goes-Painting/3000-7433_4-10414827.html Requires java mind.

  331. Best free game: BZFlag by ekimminau · · Score: 1

    Check it out, http://bzflag.org/

    --
    Armaments, 2-9-21 And Saint Attila raised the hand grenade up on high, saying, 'O Lord, bless this Thy hand grenade' N
  332. Nifflas Games by dostert · · Score: 1

    Try out anything by Nifflas. Free games requiring little power. They have relatively unusual gameplay. Try out Within a Deep Forest and Knytt first:
    http://nifflas.ni2.se/,

  333. internet connections? by aeiah · · Score: 1

    i was gonna suggest teeworlds, enemy territory and subspace/continuum, but other people have mentioned the first two. but regardless, how many children from poor backgrounds will have parents who have the internet anyway? in the uk a lot of the working class prioritise sky tv over the internet and if these kids really are in need of charity, their parents probably cant afford both.

  334. Gunrox, free online game by leit · · Score: 1

    Gunrox is a free game, that you play online: http://www.gunrox.com/?ref=Late Its a lot like jagged alliance or ufo/xcom series, but you only play against human opponents, and your soldiers are always the same even if they die and you can improve their abilities every time you gain a level. With real money you can buy some handy stuff like more storage space but using real money is not required to compete against others and doing well.

  335. Tuxpaint + stamps by gosand · · Score: 1

    Deinitely Tuxpaint with all the stamps installed. My 3.5 year old loves it, and it's really very good.

    I am surprised a lot of posts are suggesting Linux-only games... I could have sworn that you were looking for games on XP. It sounds like Knoppix Game might not run well on the machines, or I'd suggest just including that. Maybe DosBox bootable CD?

    Other suggestions which you probably already know:
    Irfanview as the default image program
    OO.o (which you already mentioned)
    Firefox with AdBlock Plus
    GIMP and/or Picasa
    Google Earth

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    1. Re:Tuxpaint + stamps by griffjon · · Score: 1

      To be fair, Tux4Kids runs on Windows as well and Linux, and there's an OSX port as well. With Sugar, there are a ton of small sugarized logic games including an Amazing Machine port that are great as brain-engaging puzzle games.

      --
      Returned Peace Corps IT Volunteer
  336. Games I have used on PatchX computers by wilzon · · Score: 1

    I have been fixing up computers for kids and have a list of games and applications that were free. Check them out and join the cause at http://www.pachx.org/ brian

  337. Hail! Sauerbraten! by Hel+Toupee · · Score: 1

    Cube or Sauerbraten. Both are FOSS. Sauerbraten is a favorite of mine - a couple coworkers and I play it at work at lunchtime. It's very reminiscent of Quake III. There's supposed to be a decent single-player campaign, and there's an RPG based on the engine, also. I've only played multiplayer deathmatch.

    --
    PERL:
    All of the power of Voodoo with most of the understandibility!
  338. Entropia Universe by Svenguden · · Score: 1

    Hi, I think Entropia Universe would be a good alternative to ship with the computers if they have a internet connection, it is free to download , install and play. There aspects of the game that requires that you pay, however it can still be very entertaining without putting in a single dime. And most of all, if you play your cards right, you might actually earn some cash while having fun.

  339. Re:FP is like XP for Christmas. by clone53421 · · Score: 1

    I can't believe I'm going to agree with something Twitter said, but I have to admit, "free software games are better than XP games" is pretty accurate. Any number of free games would beat 3D Space Cadet Pinball hands-down (and Unreal Tournament's free demo would too, for that matter). Heck, the summary even assumes that better free games exist than the ones bundled with XP...

    XP games (notice we aren't talking about "games produced by Microsoft", we're talking about "games bundled with XP") are pretty bland: Minesweeper, various card games (solitaire, spider solitaire, hearts, spades, might be forgetting some here), pinball.

    Now, if we're talking about purchased games, yeah, Halo is a good game. So I'm not ragging on Microsoft at all, their bundled games just aren't that impressive.

    --
    Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
  340. A couple of freeware flight simulators for Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I recommend Flight Gear. http://www.flightgear.org/ If that's too involved, you could try something simpler like Ysflight. http://homepage3.nifty.com/ysflight/ysflight/e.html

  341. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by danieltdp · · Score: 1

    [citation needed]

    Not that I don't believe in you. But it would be nice if you provide nice links for us to play. Sorry. I mean, links to follow ;-)

    --
    -- dnl
  342. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by JohnSearle · · Score: 1

    Who modded this modded as insightful?

    My guess is that it was modded insightful because anyone in a checkers club be hesitant in admitting it.

    If you're a jock, confess your ties to football. If you're geek, admit to participation in chess or computer club. But under no circumstances should one ever admit to being in a checkers club.

    - John

  343. Install games? by Fozzyuw · · Score: 1

    Just put a URL shortcut on their desktop to Kongregate.com, AddictingGames.com, or whatever your favorite "web" game website may be.

    --
    "The past was erased, the erasure was forgotten, the lie became truth." ~1984 George Orwell
  344. RTS - Bos Wars - Spring Annihilation by nevermore94 · · Score: 1

    I think Bos Wars would be a great choice:
    http://www.boswars.org/

    Also Spring with its various mods is a great free game, but might be a bit much for the hardware:
    http://spring.clan-sy.com/

    --
    Nevermore.
  345. Flash Games by revjtanton · · Score: 1

    Just put a couple of bookmark links on the desktop to some of those free flash-game sites. I've got a decent gaming PC and a X-Box 360 and I still find myself playing some simple game where you move a box around for an hour just because its addictive!

  346. Go for Abandonware by Sabre+Runner · · Score: 1

    The oldies are goldies. Go up on Home of the Underdogs, if the title still sells, they say so.

    Other than that, there are some free goodies out there:

    Ur-Quan Masters and Alien Invasion, I second those. Still great fun to play.
    http://sc2.sourceforge.net/  http://ufoai.sourceforge.net/

    For a space simulator, I love Privateer, and always has. Now, they remade it with the Vega Strike engine and you can get the original with Righteous Fire with enhanced models and they call it Gemini Gold. And it's also cross-platform.
    http://priv.solsector.net/

    Dungeons Runners is a Diablo/WOW kind of Massive Multiplayer Action RPG and you can play it for free or pay for some extra stuff.
    http://www.dungeonrunners.com/

    Nexuiz is a Tron-style first person shooter which is open source and free.
    http://www.alientrap.org/nexuiz/

    --
    No one ever said being a Heretic was easy.
    Let us meet again in "Less Interesting Times"
  347. Knytt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Knytt (and it's sequel, Knytt Stories) is one of the best platforming games since the heyday of the SNES. It's extremely accessible to anyone who has played Super Mario Brothers at some point in their life and it's one of the best modern examples of "games as art"

    and the best part is it's free!

    http://nifflas.ni2.se

  348. Indie games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's several good free indie games out there.

    Knytt stories comes to mind (dont forget the level packs). It's a great platform game and will even allow the kids to make their own levels!
    http://nifflas.ni2.se/index.php?main=02Knytt_Stories

    You might also want to install the demo of world of goo. It's just the first few levels, but already a lot of fun in itself.
    http://2dboy.com/games.php

  349. D-Fend Reloaded packages by yakumo.unr · · Score: 1

    Check out all the free games packages with D-Fend reloaded, not exactly up-to-date but damn good fun nonetheless D-Fend Reloaded

  350. Re:Freeciv is non-intuitive. Here are some others. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Flipping through a copy of oh, say, Teen Vogue for example, would tend to indicate that girls are also interested in attractive women. Well, unless Teen Vogue was intented to be a magazine for boys. Which it wasn't, or last time I checked anyway.

  351. TES 1 Arena by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm being lazy and not checking your original post to see if you are talking about a linux PC or a windows PC.... but if it is windows (or if there is a decent DOS emu for linux) you can get Arena, which is the first game in the Elder Scrolls series for free from Bethesda Softworks.

    It's the first game I ever played and fell in love with. And probably the best in the series (either that or Daggerfall, but Daggerfall had more bugs than the Amazon)

  352. He, he he. Try this by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Challenge any gal you fancy to a chess game, that is a great ice breaker. Honestly.

    If the answer is "I don't know how to play" then the heaven of chess mentoring opens to you.

    "I don't wan to play!" then reply with "what would you like to play?"

    And so on. There is no chance that you will get no for an answer.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  353. You are joking. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Who carries proof of all the licences you should have?

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  354. The question is about games only. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why do you need to bring the "holier than thou give them something useful" nonsense if the poster is not asking about that?

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  355. Free and decent games by Madsy · · Score: 1

    Freeciv (Free and open version of Civilization) : http://freeciv.wikia.com/
    OpenTyrian (Free and open version of Tyrian) : http://code.google.com/p/opentyrian/
    The Ur-Quan Masters (Star Control 2) : http://sc2.sourceforge.net/
    Oolite (loosely based on Elite) : http://www.oolite.org/
    Command and Conquer 1 : http://www.gamespot.com/pc/strategy/commandconquer/download_6178099.html?tag=other-user-related-content;4

  356. Mother of All Games by Onuma · · Score: 1

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scorched_3D The Mother of All 3D Games.

    --
    What else can happen when an unstoppable force collides with an immovable object?
  357. Track Mania by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Track Mania! Great modern arcade racing game, released for free as part of the Electronic Sports World Cup

  358. Globulation by chkn0 · · Score: 1
  359. sauerbraten by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    sauerbraten is a free quake style fps for windows, linux and mac. It isn't too intensive, but does have very nice graphics if you up the settings.

    http://sauerbraten.org/

  360. Re:FP? by emjay88 · · Score: 1

    Robocode is a modern, Java version of this.

    --
    1178161 is prime...
  361. tremulous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    tremulous is a great networked fps game with elements of a real time stratergy game, making it unique and extremely fun.

  362. one way to do it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hi, good for you setting these up to help young people.

    some of the ones I install in this situation:

    games:

    enigma
    simon tathams puzzles
    supertux
    pang zero
    xmoto (press f9 for 'ugly' mode to run without 3d)

    more educational:

    anagramarama
    tux paint
    tux math
    childsplay (more for 3-9 age group)
    celestia(needs 3D drivers)
    stellarium(needs 3D drivers)

    these all (except xmoto) come from the osswin CD which is handy for setups like the one described.

    for details, google: "ttcs"

    see you and all the best with the setups (c:

  363. What I've got myself... by Bambi+Dee · · Score: 1

    Freespace II Source Code Project: Maybe one of the "total conversions" that do not require the original game data. Not sure the hardware can handle it, though

    Freedroid Classic: a remake of the addictive Commodore 64 classic Paradroid

    Vega Strike: a game in the Elite/Frontier/Freelancer tradition

    Oolite: Elite with textures, by the look of it

    Nethack, Slash'EM, or Vulture's Eye/Claw for graphical versions. Curiosity and a full manual required: I can't imagine anyone trying to #rub, #dip or #force "intuitively", or realizing what else can be read, eaten, written with, thrown, cast spells at, turned to flesh, ...

    Legerdemain: looks like an imaginative, even somewhat poetic roguelike RPG; needs Java

    Gargoyle: a sparse but "typographically attractive" interactive fiction interpreter for most of the relevant modern and historical systems from TADS 3 and Z-Code/Infocom to Magnetic Scrolls and Level 9. Include some of the top-rated games from http://ifdb.tads.org/ or http://www.wurb.com/if/ (I would advise against the "include everything" approach). Not sure the Windows version has a file-selector or front-end, might be best to throw one together yourself or at least prepare the relevant filetype associations

    Flight of the Amazon Queen, Beneath a Steel Sky, and other adventure games for the SCUMM VM

    The Mana World: console-style RPG

    1. Re:What I've got myself... by Bambi+Dee · · Score: 1

      Also, of course, The Ur-Quan Masters ~

  364. Vertris, Hedgewars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.vertris.com.ar/: a tetris clone
    Hedgewars: a Worms clone

  365. Man for fun and profit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Many a wife has thought they were getting a reward going on a new adventure with their man. And it works out well at first. But as time goes on man lacks its original promise and she finds there's no point if she doesn't get GUI. Man doesn't understand and seeks out new keystrokes.

  366. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For those of you who don't get the joke, in Cataan games you do a lot of trading of goods. You can offer to trade some "wood" goods for some "sheep" goods, and you can phrase it just so if you want to make an obvious joke that's been done before. (Of course, just because it's obvious and not new doesn't mean it's not funny.)

  367. Re:SuperTux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I second that!

    He forgot to mention it has a level editor... I think that's the best part!

  368. Freeware games! by Paaskonijn · · Score: 1

    Sorry to post so late, I can't believe I didn't think of this before.

    You'll find some excellent freeware games over at http://www.reloaded.org/ and http://www.freehare.com./

    A couple of gems to get you started: http://www.thewayoftheninja.org/n.html and http://autofish.net/clysm/art/video_games/seiklus/

  369. Fillets-ng by Benanov · · Score: 1

    Glad she likes it; I have no affiliation with the project.

    FYI it is freed Commercial-ware, hence the high production value.

  370. does free civ still exist ? by shnull · · Score: 0

    check out http://www.abandonware-paradise.fr/top100-english.html features downloads of best abandonware games (including Command & Conquer - Red Alert, Heroes Of Might And Magic II, theme hospital, warcraft 2 ... among others) that should be free enough i guess, hope i'm not too late

    --
    beware he who denies you access to information for in his mind, he already deems himself to be your master (SMAC-ish)
  371. Re:Why noone mentioned some of the classical games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For playing Catan online, I prefer this to Sea3D.

    Simple registration, no ads, great java interface, ranking. Also supports Seafarer and Cities. The only catch is that it's called Xplorers instead of Catan.