Filed under: Fun, Games, Time-Wasters
10 Ways To Game Like It's 1989 - Epic Time Waster

AbandoniaAbandonia is one of the biggest and best-known abandonware sites around. Abandonware is software the copyright holders don't support or distribute any more. Why does that matter? Well, it means that they mostly don't care whether someone like Abandonia distributes it for free (read Wikipedia for more).
And Abandonia is more than happy to redistribute forgotten classics. Their collection boasts such classics as Descent, Ghosts 'n' Goblins, Bad Street Brawler, Starflight, and Betrayal at Krondor. What's more, they have "extras" like boxshots, CD inserts, and printable maps for many of the titles.
The House of Games
While you can find most of their content at Abandonia (in a cleaner, more attractive layout) The House has some real gems that you might want to check out. Among them are classics like Ultima I, Erik the Viking, and Defender of the Crown.
They've also got excellent (and sometimes exhaustive) writeups of most of the games, as well as a utilities page which you may want to bookmark. It's got a great collection of machine emulators for everything from the Colecovision to the Amstrad.
Macintosh Garden
Maybe you were an old timey Apple fanboy and you had one of those sweet monochrome babies to game on. Well, you're not out of luck - all your favorite classics are available, too! Macintosh Garden has a massive selection. Tops on their list of popular games: Oregon Trail, what else?
You'll also find memorable titles like Leisure Suit Larry, Lemmings, and two games that kept me from completing many a high school essay: Dark Castle and Beyond Dark Castle. While you're there, check out the rest of the Underdogs site, they've got classic games out the wazoo.
Doom95
ID Software's classic FPS really got the ball rolling for the genre. At The Page of Doom you'll find Doom95, a launcher that allows Doom to run in a Window at double the original resolution (ok, so that's still only 640x480, but who cares?). They've also got a ton of "forgotten level" add-ons and a complete list of cheats - including iddqd for God mode, one of the only cheat codes I remember from a decade ago.
Abandonia ReloadedIf you've got any legal qualms about downloading abandonware, then Reloaded is for you. Abandonia's angelic sister site offers only freeware games - completely guilt and misdemeanor free!
You'll find sweet mashups like Worms Breakout and some fantastic old gems like At The Carnival and ZangbandTK, an awesome, graphical roguelike game. They also have some great fan-created VGA remakes of older games, like King's Quest I and Ghostbusters.

Sticking with the roguelike theme, I'd be remiss if I didn't mention Nethack. What is it? It's an ASCII-based dungeon exploration game. Old Mac Plus users might remember the Dungeons of Moria, but it's much harder to find. Nethack is still extremely popular and runs on just about anything - possibly even that old Amiga in your basement.
Mozart MUD
If you're not familiar with MUDs (Multi-User Dungeon), they were an early type of MMO - except with MUDs you had to read (they were text-based) and use your imagination. I bounced from server to server in university before winding up on Mozart, and it was the one that kept pulling me back in.
The things I liked about it: players dump a ton of swag in the donation rooms (making it easy for newbs to get some good gear) and there's no player killing. Those two things alone made Mozart easy to get in to - the massive world, smartly scripted mobs (enemies), and great admin crew made it addictive.
Grab a telnet client - or a dedicated MUD client like Mud Magic - and check it out.
MudConnector
Maybe Mozart didn't interest you. No worries, MudConnector has over 1,300 other MUDs for you to try out. This list has been around for ages, and is the one to bookmark. They've got listings for traditional text and newer graphical MUDs, player reviews, and a ridiculously advanced search feature.
GetBack.Com
The games section at Getback continues to grow, and there are some of my old favorites here - all playable in your web browser. River Raid and Armor Battle will take you way back, and the ability to fire up classic tunes while you play definitely adds to the whole experience.
Virtual Colecovision
Rounding out this episode of our classic gaming is the Virtual ColecoVision. Grab two downloads - the emulator and a games pack - and you're ready to play. Who can say no to the revolutionary isometrics of Zaxxon or the pub fun of Tapper? It's hard to believe how addictive these games were - and still are - but after you play them, you'll understand.





With Halloween fast approaching, it's a great time to get in some practice defending your territory against zombies. In Graveyard Shift, you take aim at zombies and other creepy-crawlies, blasting them into splatters of cartoony green guts. It's a casual first-person shooter, and it's very easy to get the hang of - use the mouse to aim, click to fire. Graveyard Shift has at least 15 levels, and it might even have some secret stages I haven't unlocked yet.
They key to getting good at Graveyard Shift is learning to use ...

Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
James said 11:24AM on 8-15-2008
There was an online ActiveX Apple ][ (+/e/gs) emulator with pretty much every piece of Apple software I've ever even heard of available, but the bookmark is at home and I'm at work. I think Google is telling me "virtualapple.org"... yeah, that's the ticket. I don't know how it handles saving changes to disk (e.g. in Wasteland, etc.), but you can always download the disk images and run them on a desktop emulator.
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James said 11:43AM on 8-15-2008
While on the subject, I'd be remiss not to mention JPC:
http://www-jpc.physics.ox.ac.uk/
It's sort of like DOSBox, but the "emulation" is actually a complete DOS system (with soundcard!) in Java. It'll run right in your browser. Again, I'm not sure how saving works (or doesn't), but I'm simply amazed at how well it works.
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Fish said 12:02PM on 8-15-2008
There was a game I used to play on my old TI machine. It was called Jump Joe. I think other implementations of the game were called Janitor Joe, or something like that. Anyone know where I can find that?
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jfherring said 12:13PM on 8-15-2008
Correction, it wasn't on the TI, it was on the Tandy... wow.
Marty Plumbo said 12:51PM on 8-15-2008
I prefer playing the claissc games on emulators (i.e. Atari800Win, MAME). This way, you play the actual code and the real game - not an interpretation by some 20-something Flashcoder, no offense to 20-something-Flashcoders.
For one thing, the whole game is there, warts and all, just as it was. Plus, there's something artistic and even existentially spcial about playing the actual bits that Dani Bunten or Bill Williams lovingly coded and debugged.
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Marty Plumbo said 12:56PM on 8-15-2008
I prefer playing the claissc games on emulators (i.e. Atari800Win, MAME). This way, you play the actual code and the real game - not an interpretation by some 20-something Flashcoder, no offense to 20-something-Flashcoders.
For one thing, the whole game is there, warts and all, just as it was. Plus, there's something artistic and even existentially spcial about playing the actual bits that Dani Bunten or Bill Williams lovingly coded and debugged.
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emmzee said 1:26PM on 8-15-2008
I guess I'll plug my own site ... DOSGames.com offers 500+ freeware/shareware DOS games, with no registration or popups or anything like that. It's been running almost 10 years now. :)
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Raj said 2:40PM on 8-15-2008
Getback is my fav one.
Played so many times
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Banquo said 3:25PM on 8-15-2008
Just a nitpick but the title should say 1982 if you're going to show a ColecoVision. :P
Anyway an Xbox and a free softmod is the ultimate classic gaming system. There are emulators for just about every old console and even many old computers, and you never have to leave your couch.
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Sir Loin said 5:37PM on 8-18-2008
Awesome post! Another old-school gamer here, started in the 70's with an original Apple ][ and a 2600, also had several Atari computers during the 80's...how awesome were those times? The 2600 and cartridges still work, too.
It's great to see these awesome games still being played and updated for modern systems, thanks for this amazing list...I plan on losing a few hours to these after work, heh.
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Christina Clark said 12:21AM on 8-19-2008
Thanks, now I won't get any DLS posting done for tomorrow. I almost flunked out of college playing LooneyMUD. As for old school gaming, I still have my Atari and about 30 games, though I seem to have worn out Pac-Man...
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Led said 3:46AM on 8-22-2008
Nice article. :)
A few notes about Doom: Don't bother with Doom95. Compared to more modern source ports/front-ends, it's buggy and underpowered, and doesn't always run well under modern OSes.
For a classic-Doom experience on modern PCs I'd suggest Chocolate Doom or PrBoom.
http://www.chocolate-doom.org/wiki/index.php/Chocolate_Doom
http://prboom.sourceforge.net/about.html
And for all your old-school Doom needs:
ClassicDOOM.com
Cheers. :)
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