Do you remember the first computer game you ever bought?

Apocalypse for the ZX81

Global thermonuclear war game. It required at least a 16k RAM module.

The first game I bought was probably Earl Weaver Baseball. After that it was probably JNSE Golf and Baldur’s Gate. I have the BG version with the maps and 6-disk sleeve.

In this case it would probably be one of a bunch of games I bought during the school year 89-90 for my Amiga. My older brothers had moved away and my piracy pipeline had been cut off so I bought a lot of stuff.

Blood Money
Shadow of the Beast
Journey (Infocom)
Strider
Death Bringer (a first person CRPG that I think almost nobody actually remembers)

First game bought was for the TRS-80 and I think it was a Scott Adams all text game, maybe Adventureland. My first console game bought was Asteroids for an Atari 2600. That game was the bomb back then. I remember thinking, “it’s just like the arcade!!” Nope, not really.

Now the very first computer game I played was Shamus on my friend’s VIC-20.

Late 1980 I bought a Atari 1040ST and bought Pirates. This began my slow decent into madness!

My first PC game purchase was Twilight 2000 and then XCOM.

Ah, you silly people starting with buying a single game. Obviously it was far more efficient to buy a collection of the two of the greatest sports games ever made, plus Summer Games:

(But on the C64; not on a CPC).

I’m pretty sure it was Return to Pirate’s Isle on my TI-99 4A. Later I had a few games on cassette tape, but I remember the pirate’s game coming on a cartridge.

I had that game! Blast from the past, it taught me the words “urosalpinx cinerea.”

King’s Quest III.

Wizardry was a gift so that doesn’t count but it was the first game we actually purchased that I remember. We had a bunch of stuff that was copied at my step fathers work like Pac-man and Space Invaders knockoffs along with some basic dungeon-ish stuff including Adventure and maybe Apashi. Might have bought Jumpman or Chop Lifter on my own. I know Ultima 3 was my own purchase. And I recall calling one of like two software stores in San Antonio asking if they had Adventure Construction Set for PC (or Apple, not sure if we had switched from Apple to IBM by then).

That is… disturbing… box art.

The boardgame of this was also very fun. (It is Risk with Nukes basically)

Is that the Telenet game? First person RPG makes it sound like it is. I had no idea it got a Western release, let alone for the Amiga!

I guess so – here’s a Mobygames link, does that look like the same game?

Ah, it appears they are completely unrelated. Here is the one I am familiar with, on the same site.

1989, the Death Bringer year.

Two unrelated 1989 first-person RPGs named Death Bringer in which you fight an evil wizard.

What are the odds??? Actually, not that low, probably.

My father is a computer programmer. I first got into gaming around age six or seven, when he started bringing home a variety of pc games his co-workers “shared” with him, even though he has never had the slightest interest in videogames. They were mostly clones of arcade games like Mario and Pong.

I know it’s a bit of a cheat, but I really want to start with the first game that I picked for myself, at 9 years old, as a combined end of the schoolyear and birthday gift : Warlords

220px-Warlords_cover

This was the start of my love for turn-based strategy and tactics games. Even almost 30 years later, I still think of the map of Illuria with its 80 cities (). I can remember the city, close to the Orcs of Kor starting location, that produced wolf-riders a turn faster than usual, the joy of flying around the map with a hero stack full of dragons and other flying units, the despair of having my best hero slain by a demon while exploring a ruin. I can’t find a screenshot of it, but the image of heads in pikes that followed your decision to refuse the surrender of your rivals really impressed me.

I played a lot of Warlords 2 and even more of Warlords 3 DLR - both better games in every aspect - but I will always look back fondly on the first game.

As for the first game I bought for myself, it was actually a bundle of Sierra games :

s-l300

Rise of the Dragon: I never really got into this game. I think an early puzzle stumped me so I put it aside. When I came back to it, one of the floppies was corrupted so I couldn’t install it. I eventually played it through a few years ago during an abandonware phase and found it ok, but I’ve never been a great fan of adventure games. The mixing-in of the sidescrolling action parts was an interesting touch though.

King’s Quest 5: This game, along with the Québec-dubbed version of The Simpsons, is what helped me become bilingual, eventually leading me to my career in the translation field. My grasp of English was limited and my parents quickly tired of being pestered to translate every other sentence, so they bought me a French-English dictionary. Over a few months, that allowed me to play the game mostly on my own, with only the occasional help needed.

Many puzzles were garbage and I only finished it years later with the help of a walkthrough, but I loved the mix of various fantasy environments and the game had a huge effect on my language skills.

Red Baron: This is THE game of my childhood. Just the manual was amazing. I say manual, but it was a history of the Great War and of the birth of aviation as well as a treatise on the physics of flight all in one. I threw out most of my game boxes and manuals years ago, but my beat-up Red Baron manual is one of the very few things I kept. I must have read it through dozens of time on my long school bus rides. Reading about Immelmann, von Richtofen, Guynemer, Bishop and all the other aces and the flying alongside or against them was a magical feeling. The whole character-progression system was amazing : getting medals and promotions, getting shot down and rotting in a p.o.w. camp, moving to different squadrons and eventually getting to customize your own plane. I still remember how proud I was when I reached 82 victories with one of my pilots.

I went on to play many flight sims during the following years, including Red Baron 3D and SWOTL, but the more technically detailed the genre got, the more I drifted away. The last game of this kind that I really loved was Crimson Skies.

Man this makes me so happy. This was one of the quintessential games for me as well, and one of my first Pc gaming experiences.

Still have my copy of the game too.

Hmm, yeah. Does the C64 count? If so, probably the first, true blue legit copy of a computer* game I bought – there was so much pirating back then – was a used copy of Sid Meier’s Pirates from an acquaintance.

For an actual PC:

Man, I was so impressed by the shattering glass and the fact that you could set trees on fire.

*non-computer was Super Mario Land for the GameBoy