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Lost Online Games From the Pre-Web Era

harrymcc writes "Long before the Web came along, people were playing online games — on BBSes, on services such as Prodigy and CompuServe, and elsewhere. Gaming historian Benj Edwards has rounded up a dozen RPGs, MUDs, and other fascinating curiosities from the 1970s, 1980s, and early 1990s — and the cool part is: they're all playable on the Web today." What old games were good enough for you to watch them scroll by on your 300 baud modem?

8 of 186 comments (clear)

  1. Oh, if I could get the hours lost back by symbolset · · Score: 5, Informative

    If I could get the hours lost back from Barren Realms Elite, I'd be young again. It was just an evolution of a game called Hamurabi for the IBM Model 5150 I learned to write machine code, Basic and APL on, but the addition of online opponents and leagues made it cool. We also had a Star Trek game, and football with random-generated game events and leagues and computer generated text play-by-play.

    And then there was LORD (Legend of the Red Dragon), Solar Realms Elite, Trade Wars, and the other door games.

    Ah, old times. Kids these days think games began with Quake.

    /onion, belt, off my lawn and so on.

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    1. Re:Oh, if I could get the hours lost back by OnePumpChump · · Score: 2, Informative

      SRE was so much better than BRE. Every BRE game played out the same way: If you got in on the first day, and you played all your turns every day, you had a chance of winning. If you did not, you might as well not play, you would be completely dominated. SRE was far less clear-cut.

      Also, did you never play Exitilus? Like LORD, but MORE.

      And there was this BBS for the Mac which was almost exactly like WWIV...it had, or could run, a door game which was like Tradewars, but IMO, better.

      I think my favorite door game, though, was The Pit. Gladiatorial combat, in ANSI graphics.

    2. Re:Oh, if I could get the hours lost back by darkpixel2k · · Score: 4, Informative

      If I could get the hours lost back from Barren Realms Elite, I'd be young again. It was just an evolution of a game called Hamurabi for the IBM Model 5150 I learned to write machine code, Basic and APL on, but the addition of online opponents and leagues made it cool. We also had a Star Trek game, and football with random-generated game events and leagues and computer generated text play-by-play.

      And then there was LORD (Legend of the Red Dragon), Solar Realms Elite, Trade Wars, and the other door games.

      Ah, old times. Kids these days think games began with Quake.

      /onion, belt, off my lawn and so on.

      Every time I see these pop up, people fail to mention LOD (Land of Devastation) by Scott M(?) Baker. That game was hands-down the best. Roam the wastelands of post-atomic earth and fight monsters while trying to recover stolen parts to the puritron(?) that will help clean up the radiation. After years of playing, you slowly uncover the dark secret that an alien badass tampered with the nuclear launch systems and nuked earth so he could take over. Then you go kill him.

      Am I the only one who played LOD? Am I the only one that thought it was awesome?

      Wildcat 4.11 forever.

      --
      There's no place like ::1 (I've completed my transition to IPv6)
    3. Re:Oh, if I could get the hours lost back by Brobock · · Score: 3, Informative

      Here's a wonderful little piece of trivia about Solar Realms Elite:

      The author of SRE, Amit Patel, went on to work at Google, and is one of two people credited with devising their "Don't Be Evil" motto.

      and that he lost the source code to SRE due to a hard drive crash.

  2. MUD's, the first MMO's by MstrFool · · Score: 4, Informative

    Heh, I remember getting into MUSH's and MUD's back when 2400 bps was a good speed. Spent more time on those games then a full time job. Folks said I had no life, but they were wrong. I had a lot of them. So what if they were all virtual? These days I can't spend as much time on them, but I still play a few MU*s. To me it's like reading a book rather then seeing a movie. I don't need some one to show flashy graphics. My mind can fill that in on it's own from a bit of text. Heh, I feel like I should be making a comment about how we had to use raw telnet, up hill, both ways, and we liked it. Heh. Gods, I'm getting old... And get off my lawn...

    --
    Question reality.
  3. Interesting take... by IorDMUX · · Score: 3, Informative

    Hmm...

    First off, since when is Nethack "forgotten"? Most people I know who still play it, do so on a centralized server like alt.org (mentioned in the article). There are even annual tournaments over at /dev/null/network.

    Also, where is the MUD/MMORPG GemStone? (Gemstone II came out in 1988, though Gemstone III gained big popularity in the mid 90's.) Gemstone II predates The Realm, mentioned in the article as "one of the Internet's first MMORPG's", by nearly a decade.

    --
    >> Standing on head makes smile of frown, but rest of face also upside down.
  4. Re:XvT by BlueBlade · · Score: 3, Informative

    LucasArts actually made a sequel in the same genre as XvT, called X-Wing Alliance. It will run fine on modern Windows systems (it uses Direct 3D), and you can even download fan-made high resolution texture packs for it to make it look better on newer systems. You only get to play the alliance side (at least in single player), but the campain is even longer than XvT's. There are also more varied ships than just fighers (Correlian Transports, shuttles, etc).

    The game follows the story of the Azameen family shorty after the evacuation from Hoth. You'll be playing several family missions, eventually joining the Rebel Alliance. From there you'll be staging Alliance missions, stationed in a variety of capital ships as the story progresses. There are also still family-related missions when you take leaves from the Alliance, which makes thing even more interesting.

    If you liked XvT, you'll love X-Wing Alliance. I wish they would make another of those games so much, but they are too complex to fit in today's "shoot everything that moves" paradigm.

    --
    Religion is the best example of mass psychosis
  5. Re:Wow.. i feel old. by echucker · · Score: 2, Informative

    LoRD probably reset at midnight as well. It still exists in a slightly changed for as LotGD - classic server can be found at http://www.lotgd.net/