A Return to Old-School Gaming: Emulators and Retro Games

Mechner used video of his little brother to help create his animations in Prince of Persia.

Back in the early ’90s things were different and, in some ways, better. MC Hammer was lighting up MTV with inflatable pants, Compuserve 3.25″ diskettes were confusing households across the US, and my family’s 66 MHz Pentium PC was a $3500 fiery hellbeast that made the Pentagon as nervous as current-day Wikileaks.

And the video games…

Before the gaming behemoths swallowed up the industry during the console wars, many games were developed by small groups of programmers that emphasized gameplay and challenging puzzles over graphics. Heck, the original Prince of Persia (1989) was developed by a single guy, Jordan Mechner, who carefully crafted a game that required a keen sense of timing, problem-solving ability, and patience…because approximately 0% of this game was passable on the first attempt.

You’ll try. You’ll fail.

I miss those days, sitting in my basement with my brother playing our NES and SNES, trying to get past that ridiculous ‘speeder’ level in Battle Toads (seriously, I’ve never played a game that went from ‘easy’ to ‘impossible’ as quickly as Battle Toads). Final Fantasy, Tetris, SimTower, StarFox! I want them back!

There are a few ways you can once again enjoy these classic games, so dust off that Power Glove and your favorite Zubaz, things are about to get retro.

Retro Gaming Repositories

Praise the Lord for basement-dwelling nerds that love their retro gaming. Two of my favorite places on the internet are RGB Classic Games and Liberated Games, which are sites devoted to the free legal distribution of retro games from DOS, Windows, and even a few from OS/2. If you’re looking for titles including the original Grand Theft Auto, Wolfenstein 3D, Age of Empires (1 and 2), and Duke Nukem (1 through 3D), you’re in luck.

It’s not all fun and games though – this software isn’t always a piece of cake to get working on modern computers. With some titles you’ll have to install in Compatibility Mode to get them to work on Windows 7. When I was installing SimTower the other day, I had to ensure that it was running as “Windows XP compatible”. I guess you take the bad with the good.

To complicate things a bit more, some titles absolutely will not run on a 64-bit operating system. To help ease the stress of geeks around the world, Microsoft offers the freely downloadable Windows Virtual PC which can be run within the Windows 7 environment, and effectively emulates a 32-bit version of Windows XP. This can be a hefty download, but if you absolutely NEED to get in a round of the original Command & Conquer, a few hundred megabyte download won’t hold a candle to your turbo-nerd resolve.

Pro-tip: Before downloading your favorite classic titles, make sure that it is legal to download the game.

Console Emulators and ROMs

Try again…maybe prop it on its side with a book? There we go, that’s better. Ah crap, try blowing in it again.

Remember that trick with the NES where you’d take out the cartridge, blow into it, blow into the console, and then suddenly it would work? First of all, who invented that trick, and how did everybody find out about it? Second, wasn’t that Blinking Gray Screen Of Failure (BGSOF) depressing?

NES enthusiasts have helped to turn the system into something more reliable (and less susceptible to stray popcorn seeds) that can be played within your Windows or OS X environment. It’s pretty simple–people have written programs that essentially act as the console, and you can download “ROMS” which are the cartridges, single files that can be played by the emulator.

What are some popular emulators? For Windows 7 I use Nestopia (NES emulator) and ZSNES (SNES emulator). I’ve had great success with these programs, and very few problems. Some nice features include a built-in Game Genie (remember? That thing that destroyed your console two decades ago?) and the ability to interface with pretty much any USB gamepad ($10-30, depending on quality).

Have a Mac? No problem. Nestopia was originally developed for OS X and I’ve heard good things about  BSNES (SNES emulator for OS X).

Happy Days are here to stay

Modern games like Halo and Starcraft 2 are great, and a lot of fun because they offer fantastic multiplayer options that just weren’t available in years past. However, sometimes you just want to kick back and enjoy some 8-bit graphics and mono sound. If you’re compelled to indulge your inner child gamer, don’t fret…your options abound.

Happy gaming, geek,  and don’t forget:

↑, ↑, ↓, ↓, ←, →, ←, →, B, A, start.


Posted

in

, ,

by

Comments

6 responses to “A Return to Old-School Gaming: Emulators and Retro Games”

  1. agalma Avatar
    agalma

    OMG the Konami code!!!

    1. Brian Nelson Avatar
      Brian Nelson

      Haha… yep, back in the day that was the only way I could make any progress in Contra.

      1.  Avatar
        Anonymous

        I still firmly believe that it’s impossible to beat Contra without cheating.

  2. Elvis Julep Avatar
    Elvis Julep

    Perhaps I’m being picky, but there were no 3.25″ diskettes. There were 5.25″ diskettes back in the day, supplanted by 3.5″ (which is what AOL junk mailed to everyone, before they switched to CDs).

    I actually came across a box of 5.25″ diskettes (unused) the other day. In the 80s, such a box would go for $40. It was an odd feeling – holding something so utterly worthless in every sense of the word, yet feeling I had discovered an amazing treasure.

    1. Brian Nelson Avatar
      Brian Nelson

      Haha, certainly picky, but also correct– I have a 3.5″ AOL disk from 1997 that I use as a coaster on my computer desk. Drat.

      Hold on to those diskettes. I have a 5-pack of the same type still in the cellophane, with the hope that they’ll be worth lots of money some day. It’s better to be disappointed as a group.

  3. JBAlaska Avatar
    JBAlaska

    The game F19 Stealth Fighter started my career in computers. I actually wore out the 5.25 floppy on my commodore 64, and when it was released for the PC, I promptly bought a blazing fast (lol) Leading Edge 386SX-16 with 1MB of ram…holy crap 1MB! And then I went through a few days of “bad command or filename”, later I started my company in “The Valley” building 486DX-50’s for $3900.00us. They were the fastest boxes available and I sold a ton of them, the rest is history lol.

    Note: for us Linux users, DOSBOX works wonderfully for all the early PC abandon-ware games and programs, for most mainstream distro’s it should be in your repo’s.

    Thanks for the trip down memory lane!

Leave a Reply to Anonymous Cancel reply