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Show off your (old) gear, win shiny new (ROCCAT) gear!

As you know, the GOG.com catalog spans many titles dating back as far as 1980 (Akalabeth, we're looking at you!), in times when computers kind of looked like modern-day microwaves sat on top of a console, and the first portable computer, the Osborne I, was put on the market in all the glory of its 24 pounds of weight and a steep $1,795 price tag.

We don't expect you to have gear that's quite as old, but we are curious as to what treasures you might be keeping in a box stored away in the basement or deep in an attic drawer. So show us your oldest gear and be greatly rewarded with the some of the newest on the market, courtesy of gaming gear creator and producer ROCCAT!

THE RULES:

- Your entry should consist of 1 or 2 pictures of your old gear and a description of up to 100 words telling us what it is, where you got it, what you used it for or any other fond memories you have with it. Maybe it was your first joystick? Maybe an old Atari controller you kept as a memento? We want to hear about it!
- You can only post one entry per person. If you post more, only the first one will be counted.
- You may not edit your post.
- Use your own photos of your own gear - we do know how to do a reverse image search!

Post your entry in the comments below before the deadline - you have a week, until March 6th, at 1:59 PM GMT. We aim to judge your entries and pick winners by Thursday, March 12th - we'll announce them in the contest forum thread and via PM to the winners themselves.

THE PRIZES:

1st place prize: a ROCCAT Isku, gaming keyboard with blue-tinted illumination, secondary programmable Shift function, and Thumbster Macro Keys below the spacebar to maximise gaming effectiveness

2nd place prize: a ROCCAT Savu, mid-size hybrid gaming mouse with an adjustable, 400-4000 DPI optical sensor, secondary programmable function, customizable illumination, and a powerful driver suite

3rd place prize: a ROCCAT Sense, mousepad with friction-reducing microcrystalline coating for greater mouse speed and precision

All winners will also get GOG.com gift codes to use on games of their choice to test out their new gear!

Honorable mentions: We expect there to be many great-quality entries, so we're reserving the right to give out honorable mentions to all those we find did a brilliant job, but didn't quite make the podium cut. They'll get GOG.com gift codes to use on titles available in our catalog.

Should you be one of our top three winners, we will need some mailing data (name, address, phone number) to ship your prize to you. If the ROCCAT Marketing Team ends up sending the prizes directly to you, we will need to share your mailing information with them. We will not share it with anyone that doesn't need it!

Please note that this contest is also being held on the French and German GOG.com forum - winners will be chosen, regardless of language, from across all three contest topics. :)
Hello I still have my Coco it was an 128k computer that used cartridges until they came out with the multipak interface then you could use rf232 cables and hook modems, mfm / rll hard drives, and floppy drives up to it I had a 10 MB hard drive boy was that a lot of disk space back then LOL
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Oh good heavens. I don't know whether to show the TRS-80, the PC XT with monochrome monitor, the PDP-11, the Sun2/170, the Sony MagicLink, the Apple Newton, the Vadem Clio, the Nintendo VirtualBoy, the Poquet PC... I guess I'll go into my basement and find the first thing that still boots up.
My Atari paddle controllers are the oldest left, and the console still worked when I gave it away. Or if you believe in prequels, maybe my Pipboy. How did you get yours? I had to build mine! Actually called it the Niteboy, since it was only inspired by the Pipboy, so if there's a "huge nerd" category maybe I have a shot lol. You may have wanted only the oldest, but like others I couldn't resist sharing a bit more...
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This is my beloved joystick, the Quickshot, QS-113. I got it as a kid in early ninetees and I still instantly recall playing X-Wing, Wing Commander 2 and Privateer with it... The plug got broken (stepped on it) and was replaced by my dad. The cable got broken and functioned only when knicked together (this knick is still held in place by a 15 years old piece of tape). The joystick broke as well once and again it was patienly glued together by my dad. It's my best analogue joystick ever. It's my childhood.
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shmargin: This is my original 1972 Magnavox Odyssey. [ ... ]
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ewhac: WINNAR!!!

It looks like you've taken excellent care of it.
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mistermumbles: I doubt anyone will beat you in the longest use of a single mouse pad.
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ewhac: I think I can beat it. I have a "Cool Friends of NewTek" mousepad, circa 1989, back when the NewTek Video Toaster was a thing. It's sitting under a 3M mouse mat, but it's still in daily use.

EDIT: Actually it's probably closer to 1991, since the Video Toaster was released in 1990.
I don't know if I can beat a "Cool Friends of Newtek" mousepad, but I do have an autographed picture of Kiki Stockhammer. She's still sitting on my desk -- the picture, not Kiki -- but oh, how I wish...
Hullo!

Attached is my Atari Mega STE! I've had it since I was a kid. This is not my oldest; as I also have a functioning 1040ST, but this is a little more rare so I chose this for the photo!

Included are some of my collectible peripherals and some of the better quality games. Shown here is the Mega STE and SC1224 color monitor with a Speedmouse. To the right of the monitor is the Monitor Master, for switching between this and the high-res monochrome monitor (not shown), and the UltraSatan Hard Drive. The small handhold is the device is the Atari Portfolio, a MS-DOS 2.0 compatible PDA. To the left is the Magic Sack Macintosh emulator cartridge and an Ethernet-enabled cartridge, the Atari Lynx 2 (with Rygar playing) and an Atari brand wireless joystick!
Underneath is a boxed 1200 baud modem, not currently in use.

Some of the rarer games shown, * indicates still in original shrinkwrap:

California Games *
Golden Axe *
Balance of Power
Major Motion *
Time Bandit *
Star Wars *
Rogue (the original roguelike?)
Atari Planetarium *
Atari DB Master One *
Atari NEOChrome *
Atari BattleZone *
Atari Star Raiders *
Atari Moon Patrol *
Sierra's Gold Rush
King's Quest I, II, III, IV
Manhunter I * and II *
Mixed Up Mother Goose *
Hoyle I * and II *
Heroe's Quest * (Before the licensing conflict made them call it Quest for Glory!)
ZORK I *
Police Quest I and II *
Space Quest I *, II *, and III*
The Black Cauldron
Degas Elite
Carrier Command (with cassette, shown playing)
Flight Simulator II *
Red Storm Rising *
Silent Service *
Hitchhiker's Guide the Galaxy
Star Trek: The Rebel Universe

The system works fine and gets use almost daily! Long live Atari!

Thanks for looking, I was very happy to share this with everyone.

Cheers,

The Last Atarian
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This 5.25" floppy drive is the piece of hardware responsible for my lifetime affinity for gaming and computer hardware. At seven years old I learned that you could put a floppy black disk into this device and play amazing games. On my Dad’s IBM 386 I learned DOS so I could play Ninja, Shogun, Striker, Spacewar, Police Quest, Space Quest, King’s Quest, Sopwith, Maniac Mansion, Pango, Xonix, Thexder, Janitor Joe, Q*Bert, Mickey’s Space Adventure, and a host of other obscure games. This nostalgic piece of hardware is why I’m a GOG fan.
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In 1989 I installed my first serial port card and mouse – a Logitech S9. It took multiple hours to figure out how to do it, but that setup still works to this day. The computer has long since been retired to the attic, but the mousepad that came with the S9 has lived through seven mice, six gaming pcs, two servers, thousands of lan parties, and countless games. It is still used on my gaming PC to this day – I have to keep it in the family with a Logitech M100.
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Questarjazz: In 1980 Father Christmas delivered an Atari CX2600 and changed my life.
Being a complete hoarder here is the full system complete with games, both controller types, the original packaging and one very confused son.
Had hoped to show it working but think the transformer has finally gone.
35 years later and still a retro gamer at heart, I am the proud owner of 1156 computer games from the Atari, Spectrum, Mega Drive, PC and Xbox family, all still owned and stored safely away. [413 from GOG]
Pure escapism has saved my life many times in the past.
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Maxvorstadt: This is the original Atari console, my uncle still owns one. He also had a trackball for this console, so there were not two but three controller types: joystick, paddles (I think they were called paddles) and trackball. I used to play Decathlon with the trackball, it was much easier than to play this game with a joystick, espiacially the 1500-meter race was a lot easier with it.
Ah, my good friend, I still have all my old VCS gear, and there were actually more than 3 controller types. In addition, there was also: The free-spinning driving controller used only on the Indy 500 cartridge (looks like a paddle, but there are no end-stops when you turn it. Also doesn't work on any other game.). The 12-button keypads used for Codebreaker, or 2 were locked together to form the 24-button keyboard used with the Basic Programming cartridge. And the Video Touch Pad, an auxiliary 12-button keypad for the "ship's computer" functions in Star Raiders. There may be more, but I include only "genuine" controllers that were produced and sold by Atari.
Hi All,

I’m a big retro computer fan and still program in 6502 assembler on these machines today. My goal is to create an entire game in 6502 assembler, which is something I have always wanted to do.

The first picture is of my current computers in use, a Commodore 128 and a BBC Master 128 Turbo. I’ve got a 1541-Ultimate II attached to the 128 and a retro clinic and two programmable EPROM cartridges and 5.25 inch floppy drive attached to the BBC, which has a 6502 co-processor installed. Behind that you can see two MiST FPGA boxes running Amiga and ST FPGA cores. Two machines just out of shot are an Amiga 4000T with 060 co-processor and an Atari TT030.

The second picture shows part of my additional collection (I swap out active machines all the time) consisting of (from the top) an Amiga 1200 with 060 accelerator, Acorn Archimedes A3020, Atari 4160STE, Commodore 128, BBC Master 128 with an ARM co-processor, Commodore 64, three Commodore 128D’s and an Amiga 2000 with an 030 accelerator.

I also have tons of other machines including an Amstrad CPC464 and 6128, Sinclair ZX Spectrum, Spectrum +2 and Spectrum +3, Atari 800 and 130XL plus more Amiga’s. I also have a Firebee, which is a modern interpretation of an Atari TOS machine running on a Coldfire processor.

I use all of these machines throughout the year to play games on and to also code on.

Cheers

Mark
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I can't partecipate in this one :S
Here is 2 from my retro collection that I have restored. First up is an Atari STe 520, with 4 megs of Ram fitted and a HxC floppy drive emulator with built in green LCD screen and manual control buttons on the case. Build thread over on Amibay here.

Second picture shows a test build of my Amiga A4000. Present spec includes 70 gig SCSI hd, 100 megs of Ram, Pioneer slot loading SCSI DvD, 2 floppys, SD card reader, Cyberstorm MkIII 060 (@60MHz) and Cybervision graphics card. Mega build thread here also on Amibay.
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I have built a Retro PC for Windows 98SE and XP!
Dual Pentium III 800MHZ SLOT 1
768MB SDRAM PC133
ASUS P2B-DS Motherboard
3DFX Voodoo Banshee AGP 16MB (Swap out for newer games with Geforce 4 TI4800 128MB AGP)
Soundblaster AWE64 32MB ISA
Soundblaster Audigy1 PCI
2x 120GB EIDE WD HDD for Windows and Storage
1x Compatct Flash 32GB to IDE HDD for Windows XP
1x Compact Flash 4GB to IDE HDD for PC-DOS + XTGOLD
16x DVDROM IDE
Windows 98SE Custom Service pack mods
Windows XP SP3 Stock
PC-DOS 7.1 + XTGOLD
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This is my first joystick, literally, I never knew what it's called until I googled it based on the print on it's bottom, apparently it's called a Cobra, My father bought me this along with my first PC, I played MicroProse's F-15 Strike Eagle and F-19(1990ish), Lucasarts rebel assault,and all the X-wing/TIE fighter series, it broke somewhere along Wing Commander 2 I guess, I remember putting this broken Cobra to a box when we move to the new house, apparently it's still sitting there until I read this post...
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Good old Gears :)