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I have so many gaming moments I could share, from the time me and one of my best friends spent an entire semester in high school making a side scrolling beat-em up game, to the days I'd spend playing runescape all day with my brother.

However, one of my fondest memories is of when I was much younger, from the age of 8 to the age of 12. I met a kid on my block nammed Sheldon. He didn't have any friends as none of the other kids around the block liked him. He also didn't have any gaming consoles except for a very old and slow desktop that he would spend all his time on playing minecraft and other kid games. I met him one day and invited him to my house. I showed him my favorite ps2 game of the time (and it still is :P). A game called Timesplitters: Future Perfect (I ended up getting the entire series afterwards but at the time I only had this one :P). None of my other friends would play this game with me. But, me and Sheldon would spend our entire weekends and also many hours after school playing this game. It was our favorite game and he soon became my closest friend. I spent almost all my free time with him and when we were not playing Timesplitters, we would talk about maps that we could make in the game's mapmaker so we could create new gamemodes. Unfortunately, when I was 12, I moved away. Neither of us had cell phones at the time so I was unable to stay in contact with him. To this day, I have not seen or spoken with Sheldon since. However, I will never forget the memories we created together while playing this game.
Doom 3 with the lights off, headphones on heart racing!
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PoppyAppletree: Rogue Squadron II: Rogue Leader.
Damn I loved that game. One of my favourite ever. Bespin was my favourite level, although Endor and the Death Star runs were excellent too.


Best gaming memories...

Here's a few;

Proudest Moment; My third (I think) run through of Final Fantasy V. I played and beat the game in 24 hours over a week (in fact I think it was less than that, I have a feeling I played 8 hours a day for three days), including annihilating both optional bosses.
My end party were doing 50k+ damage a turn. Still one of my greatest achievements in gaming.

Counterstrike LAN - there was a cyber cafe me and my brother used to go to in a place we went on holiday regularly and it's where we first played Counterstrike. Sitting in a room with 20 other people playing one of the best multiplayer games ever made was epic. There was one round that always sticks in my head, though I'm not sure I actually remember it right. Me and one other guy were left. I believe was counter terrorist and they had planted the bomb, so I went to diffuse it, but the other guy was sneaking up behind me as I did so. He wanted the glory of knifing me so he came right up behind me, but something told me he was there and I spun around and killed him before defusing the bomb.

Good times.
Another great video gaming memory that many of us probably have:

Noober. Or rather, Noober, and the challenge to role playing.

"Hiya"

"Kill any monsters yet?"

"I'm Noober"

"Most people run away from me"

***I'm playing a good character ... I'm playing a good character ... I'm playing a good character ***

ahhhh, fuck it.

Squish!
Post edited October 06, 2018 by hummer010
My fondest memory is the first time I booted up Stardew Valley. Until that point, I had fallen out of love with gaming and just wanted to recapture the memories of when I played the Harvest Moon game series (until it was no longer Harvest Moon in spirit). After googling where I could find it, I ended up discovering GOG!


I saw that it was DRM free and it made me relieved I didn't need to be connected to steam to play. I bought it and gave the game a run...and I have probably played more than 200 hours in total (both modded and vanilla).


If it hadn't been for me discovering GOG, I wouldn't had met such wonderful folks in the discord servers of GOG Café and Wings of GOG! It might not be an "in-game" moment, but I am thankful for Concerned Ape and GOG for bringing me so many laughs and awesome people to hang out and play fun games with!
There are many fond gaming memories, but I'll choose the one when my brother and I played the Star Trek: Starfleet Command demo in a way where one would be the "ensign" in front of the keyboard and the other would be the "captain" telling orders, interchangeably.
Post edited October 06, 2018 by Plokite_Wolf
move along.
Post edited October 10, 2018 by Tauto
high rated
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Panaias: Some years ago I created a game to propose to my then girlfriend (no engines used, my own c++ code!).
Do you still have the game?

Ok, my own story, hard to choose since I'm gamer since 1988 when my parents bought a broken C116 for 2,000 East German Marks (and my Step-Dad fixed it).
But that's not the story, after the fall of The Wall I bought a Commodore 64, later an Amiga. I loved both machines and still cherish many games of that time. Then I went to university and had to find out that my beloved Amiga just wouldn't cut it - incompatible to anything University offered. So I got my first PC. It was an AMD 486DX4 with 100 MHz, VESA graphics card running at 50 MHz bus speed. 4 Megabytes of RAM and a 540 MB HDD from Seagate. Cost me all my saved money and my parents actually gave some extra to make this happen. It ran DOS 6.2 and Windows 3.1 (which still was laughable compared to AmigaOS) but it also ran one game called DOOM.
DOOM made me live on Spaghetti and cheap tomato sauce so I could save money and buy another 4MB of RAM and a Soundblaster 16 soundcard. But that's still not the story. It starts now:

Ever since I was a kid I had a recurring nightmare. I was in some deserted place which resembles an old abandoned hospital or asylum. Green mouldy slabs, rusty wheelchairs and gurneys. Rotting stuff like syringes and "medical" pliers... The smell of decayed anti-sept...
And endless corridors leadng to stairwells which lead to more corridors. No way out - doors and windows barred. And I run, from someone. Some bad person who is going to hurt me and finally kill me. I run, I hide in corners, in old broken wardrobes. But he catches up... find me again. And I run more, more endless corridors, and even worse the staircases. Crumbling concrete steps, moss and mould on the walls. A bent rusty wheelchair in some corner. And somehow he always gets me... I never get a clear look, it's just a dark shadow finally looming over me, before I wake up panting and sweating.

I hate hospitals, I'm even afraid of hospitals. There's probably some fancy word for it too.

I'd had this nightmare since I was little. Every few months or weeks. It was an old "friend". But then there came the PC and with it came DOOM. I guess many can't imagine it nowadays, but when Doom came out it seemed so real! A first person 3D nightmare in your face. I was scared shitless when I first played it... but fascinating. I had never felt that much "inside the game" before, not even in Dungeon Master. So I conquered the game. I lost the fear of Imps and Shotgun guys, and even of Cyberdemons... I skipped "Hurt Me Plenty" and finished the game on "Ultra-Violence".

And then, one night, the nightmare struck again. I was alone in the student's dorm when I woke up panting and sweating from being hunted through old, decaying corridors and finally getting caught - like always, the moment the bad guy struck. And I thought "Enough!". And that night I dreamt myself "back" into the nightmare - but this time with the shotgun from DOOM. And I started to hunt that shadow...

I never got him, not even got a good look... but I heard him panting fleeing FROM ME. Since that night I never had that nightmare again. I defeated it, with the help from DOOM.
I'm still afraid of hospitals and asylums, they give me the creeps. But I can manage (at 17 I actually broke out from a hospital...). And I'm very convinced that games can have therapeutic effect on trauma.

Thanks for reading.

Edit: typos.
Edit2: more typos...
Post edited October 06, 2018 by toxicTom
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toxicTom: (awesome)
Holy shit. You and Panaias own this thread.
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foxworks: ...
That's a really cool story. Have you ever played Total Air War? This also had a lot of really good "emergent" situations. Although the crew thing is probably pretty unique in B-17.

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Plokite_Wolf: Holy shit. You and Panaias own this thread.
There's a lot of good stories here. And I think there'll be more.
Post edited October 06, 2018 by toxicTom
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foxworks: ...
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toxicTom: That's a really cool story. Have you ever played Total Air War? This also had a lot of really good "emergent" situations. Although the crew thing is probably pretty unique in B-17.

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Plokite_Wolf: Holy shit. You and Panaias own this thread.
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toxicTom: There's a lot of good stories here. And I think there'll be more.
Cheers! Total Air War....I haven't heard of it, but will certainly look into it. B17FF was a pretty unique game. While it had a successor, I didn't like it near as much.
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foxworks: Cheers! Total Air War....I haven't heard of it, but will certainly look into it. B17FF was a pretty unique game. While it had a successor, I didn't like it near as much.
There's a source port here: https://community.combatsim.com/topic/20202-f-22-total-air-war-230-final-released/
It's modern F22 stuff... with some really cynical campaigns too. But it has stuff like when I was gliding for hundreds of miles (high bombing, fuel tank shot up...) and barely made it into friendly territory and then realised gears won't work and I made a belly landing in the desert sand while the sun set... the way back alone was more than an hour of constantly balancing speed and altitude manually... when the wreck set down on the sand the mission was a success (although the plane counted as loss) my hand were shaking...
Yep, toxicTom's story takes second so far, but it'll be one hell of a feat for anyone to challenge Panaias.

Don't have anything epic, but there are a bunch that come to mind quickly. Not including moments scraping through by the skin of my teeth or beating something after dozens or hundreds of failures, have plenty of those, probably so many that they just crowd together and cancel each other out, and the frustration and feeling of accomplishment probably cancel each other out too. One I recall is one where that didn't happen because I hated the game so there was little enjoyment or accomplishment to speak of, was just stubborn to finish it if I was stubborn enough to struggle through - referring to the end of Diablo 2's expansion, when basically hitting meant dying, and I spent hours just doing that, go in, 1-2 hits, die, recover everything plus companion, repeat, and in between send annoyed messages to a then-friend about it, eventually managing to win just before running out of the money gathered carefully throughout the whole game.

But anyway, some of the more memorable ones. Sexual content warning for the first, in case anyone may be bothered. And first four aren't directly gaming events, but there are games involved.

- Me and my gf were from different cities, but before I moved in with her after a year and a bit (and her leaving almost 2 years after that ...), we'd be spending weeks at a time together, either me there or her here. And it was during such a time when she was here that I was playing Arcanum while she was in bed. At some point she starts to giggle, I turn to look and realize she had just, er, handled matters herself. I ask why did she do that and she said it seemed I was busy so she took care of herself. I asked if she considered telling me she was in the mood to see what I’d do before deciding I wouldn’t care and she said she just didn’t think it was the case. Lovely, ain't it? :))

- Also in that period, was trying to make a game in RPG Maker 2000. Had basically stopped adding to it by the time I moved in with her, but I took it with me on a CD and eventually decided to go through it carefully and start fixing bugs and things that didn't seem right. Spent some 2 months doing that, maybe not much at a time but quite clearly added up to over 100 hours, maybe well over... And one day there was a HDD failure, attempting to fix stuff only made it impossible to even recover data properly, and there went all my work, and I was left with just the CD with how the game was before all of that was done. Never touched it again, and then also lost it when ending up back here. Forgot about it when I packed, not that I was in any state to think of anything at the time, and when I told her about it when she was back there (complicated story) she sent me a box with probably every CD she could find not having been burned by her (drivers, pirated stuff, magazine disks, I think some of her mother's stuff too) except the one with that game. Not suspecting any ill intent, likely she didn't look one way or the other, just set aside what she knew was hers and sent everything else over, so either she mistook that one for one of hers or it got misplaced and didn't find it at all. But end result is that it remained lost.

- And last one from that period, was after I moved in but before I had my computer brought over as well, and we were alternating between having their computer in our room and in her brother's, and it was while it was in her brother's room that he was sleeping and I was there on the computer, I believe playing Materia Magica, though there's also a chance it was while I was fooling around in Counter Strike in the network there, lacking anything I actually cared to play for a while. Well, suddenly he sat right up, looked straight at me, cursed up a storm... then just went right back to sleep. Apparently had no memory of it the next day, but I was sitting there wondering what the heck did I do.

- Last one not actually about a game, I was little, and had Prehistorik 2 on a floppy, I guess dad had brought it after having somebody copy it from him or something, and it was in the drive since I kept playing it. But I was also poking around all over, and since the computer was running DOS with Norton Commander for interface, I was going through the menus and thought "format" sounded interesting. I mean, it sounded like it changed the format of something, to make it look different, right? So I clicked that and saw it had C preselected, by which I assumed that was the current format, so I changed it to the other option, which was A. Even proudly announced to my mother, who was none the wiser, that I'm trying to see what changing the format from C to A will make it look like. Realized as it was about 2/3 of the way through formatting the disk with the game what was actually happened, and yanked the disk right out, but of course that was it for my game.

- An actual gaming moment, the final battle from Escape from Monkey Island. [Spoiler] Now both monkey "mechs" are invincible, so there's no way to actually win, but I didn't know that and kept "fighting" away to the best of my ability for over 1h, wondering how long it'll take before what I assumed was "health" above what could be displayed on screen would be eroded and I'd start seeing "damage", until I just happened to draw a turn, not really on purpose... Noticed what happened, but still wasn't sure, so did a few more "correct" ones, but then drew again and realized I was on to something, so did it a third time and finally won. Sort of stood there after that thinking wait, I just needed 3 moves but instead I stood here for, if I remember correctly, 1h15m carefully fighting correctly move by move even though none of that actually did anything???

- Another one, in BroodWar. My strategy was turtling (one reason why I suck at RTSs and eventually gave up trying, since they tend to favor rushing and expansion), kick ass defense, occasional targeted attacks when possible but mainly just wait for the AI to drain the map of resources, then move forward. And there was one particular Zerg scenario when the map was really filled with enemies and I managed to make myself some elbow room but otherwise largely stayed in my corner and waited it out as wave after wave after wave broke before my defenses, then when it died out I also used every scrap of resources I still had to make over 100 units and went forward to smash through. Considering all the resources and time the AI had, don't think it was easy, but it sure made for some fighting I doubt the game was designed for. (I'll also add here that the BW disk I had gotten from someone was responsible for the one major infection I ever had on a computer I was the primary user of, with CIH. Fortunately noticed strange behavior and scanned and cleaned it all up... just days before it'd have triggered.)

- Last one, Transport Tycoon Deluxe. Played it a lot back in the day, but I only once got to the end of the timeline, in 2050, and that was when I just let it run when dad called me to dinner, so I went there for a bit, then passed in front of my room on my way to the bathroom, seeing a newspaper on the screen. So I assumed it was paused, since something like that had showed up, and didn't stop to actually look, coming back after eating to see the newspaper gone. Previous save was too distant and I didn't care to go back to it, and I never again got to that point, so before checking on YT (actually recently) I had no idea what that newspaper signified or said.

Oh, as for an experience that's in no way personal... The haunted hotel bit in Bloodlines played at night, in the dark, with headphones.
my favourite gaming moment was when witcher 3 was released. it was a real shock to learn that a triple A game could be drm-free, so fun to play and be so successful. since then dying light was released drm-free and that was awesome. i guess what i'm trying to say is even though gog does have its problems, it is actually bringing triple A games drm-free. every subsequent triple A game which is released such as saints row or Mafia, blows my mind. i don't have to login to my account, which is everything to me.

i was also able to play awesome indie games such as trine on gog but also very creative games like unravel on origin. they are easily some of my favorite games. both have amazing visuals, fluid controls and tons of fun.

the very first game i ever played was operation inner space. you go around collecting (or destroying) icons which exist on your computer. discovering icons was really cool. then there were 4 super powers to collect which happened from a random event. the random event could be played in space hospital as practice while you repaired your ship and increased your firepower!

not only that but i am lucky enough to own a very rare game! eurofighter typhoon by digital image design. i have never seen this anywhere including the version that exists on steam. it is much more fun than the steam version. a proper gem!
Post edited October 06, 2018 by timmy010
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foxworks: Cheers! Total Air War....I haven't heard of it, but will certainly look into it. B17FF was a pretty unique game. While it had a successor, I didn't like it near as much.
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toxicTom: There's a source port here: https://community.combatsim.com/topic/20202-f-22-total-air-war-230-final-released/
It's modern F22 stuff... with some really cynical campaigns too. But it has stuff like when I was gliding for hundreds of miles (high bombing, fuel tank shot up...) and barely made it into friendly territory and then realised gears won't work and I made a belly landing in the desert sand while the sun set... the way back alone was more than an hour of constantly balancing speed and altitude manually... when the wreck set down on the sand the mission was a success (although the plane counted as loss) my hand were shaking...
Now that IS fun! Cheers for the link. I've always enjoyed the challenge of bringing a plane "limping" back home. I recall hours of fun playing MS Flight Sim 5 (or thereabouts) adjusting the settings, causing things to randomly malfunction. Maybe because it's more challenging than setting auto pilot and go. There's nothing quite like having your engines a blaze, pitching the nose down, exceeding safety speeds to blow the fire out all while hearing the metal frame twist as you're about to come apart.

Also, I enjoyed reading your gaming story. Have you been able to "own" other dreams? I can count on one hand that ever happening to me. I liken it to playing in your own open world game. Fantastic stuff.