Our new Indie Games subforum is now open for business in G&T. Go and check it out, you might land a code for a free game. If you're developing an indie game and want to post about it,
follow these directions. If you don't, he'll break your legs! Hahaha! Seriously though.
Our rules have been updated and given
their own forum. Go and look at them! They are nice, and there may be new ones that you didn't know about! Hooray for rules! Hooray for The System! Hooray for Conforming!
I just got an Amiga 500, and I know damn near nothing about it
Posts
Second most famous cheat code in the history of video games!
Ok, I need to quit this thread now and get back to work...
P1 IS JUICED!
PSN:RevDrGalactus/Steam
I've been having a blast with this system, this is such a cool computer. I was always much more of a console gamer than a computer gamer, although I certainly had an MSDos computer, and later a 486, so I played some early PC games. But this amiga is way cooler - it's basically a disk based console. I love that you can pop in a floppy and boot straight to it without typing anything in. I have it sitting next to my SMS on my shelf and I personally consider it a lost 16-bit console, in my mind.
I finally figured out why I had such a low opinion of euro-computers for so long - it's because every shovelware shitty B-game platformer from the 16-bit era was an amiga port, which tainted my perception of the platform. Shit like Soccer Kid or Bubba and Squeak or all the james pond shit - the stuff which seemed like it was ported to a million systems. I understand some people hold nostalgic opinions about these games, much the same way I do with shitty SMS games like Lord of the Sword, but I have no nostalgia for them, and I think they're pretty terrible. I thought all amiga games were like that, and damn I was wrong.
Why did they port crap games like Aquatic games to every system but leave awesome stuff like Lionheart and Ruff n Tumble exclusive to the system? Talk about terrible choices in porting.
In my auction, I won a copy of MK2 and Street Fighter 2 - I had no fucking clue those games got Amiga ports. How the hell do you play either of those fighting games with 1 button?
With difficulty.
Also I hope you don't mind swapping disks between fights.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O8biwhjXvjo
Truly horrible.
I just, like, can't figure out any way to map 6 buttons to 1. Shit, even if they limited to just punch and kick, that's still gonna be tough, when every single direction on the stick is mapped to something else.
Is it like one press = punch, two press = kick? Because that would fuck up both games in a variety of ways.
EDIT: Watching that video, that port of SF2 is horrendous. Never mind the controls, the gameplay looks like a cheap rip off of the real SF2. Ken's dragon punch is entirely vertical.
I just saw a video of the MK2 port - it looks like the genesis port was actually based off of this amiga version, which wouldn't surprise me since they use the same processor. It looks substantially better than that SF2 port.
Looking on lemon amiga, it seems SSF2Turbo was ported to the Amiga 1200, I wonder if that's as good as the Dos port. Because the dos port was literally arcade perfect.
block: away + button
high punch: button repeatedly
low punch: forward+button repeatedly
high kick: button once
low kick: forward+button once
sweep: down, away
roundhouse: away + high kick (lol)
holy crap that sounds bad. And the moves are all different too. Like sub-zero's slide, it's Block, button, button, button.
lol, I feel bad for people in europe for playing fighting games this way. Holy crap.
amiga/st were at the ends of their lives more or less, and the games were pretty much cashins. like sf4 for iphone
But the games I have look legit. I assume those are pirated games? Are there ANY legit games for the system? Or was piracy hyper rampant?
And if so, why the hell would anyone make games for this thing if I have literally not seen a single non-pirated game?
Let me put it this way; I owned an Amiga in the early 90s, and you literally could not buy games in stores.
But I still had like 200 games. Weren't really a lot of options back then, you got new games by sharing with your friends and their friends and their friends' friends. That's just the way things were. At least in Denmark.
Edit:
Yeah, cracking is mostly for cheats/trainer purposes. There was barely any need for it with regard to piracy, since the only copy protection that existed at the time was physical, i.e. code wheels for Monkey Island.
Call me dumbfounded. Next thing you'll be telling me they ported XTReme Racing to the SNES.
PSN:RevDrGalactus/Steam
Don't be mean, this was my only way to play MK2 and I still loved it
Body Blows Galactic was the other one, it was pretty shitty but fun.
Shadow Fighter:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=taCR8R4_7Po&feature=related
Body Blows:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_A31jV3nElY
These were the only fighters I had access to
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vf7yyTvvUXw
Oh, oh! One I forgot, the CD32 launched with one called Dangerous Streets, it was AWFUL. Like, makes the SF2 port look amazing, kind of awful.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kH0gnPQndEI
-sob-
PSN: SirGrinchX
Xbox Live: SirGrinch X
Well, that basically killed Amiga in mid-90's. Here is fun statistical example. Soccer Kid (a.k.a. Kid Kleets) was released in 1993, and it was damn popular game. It was estimated that over two million Amiga 500 owners in UK had played it. Unfortunately, sales were around 20 000. So yeah, you might say that piracy did get little out of hands. :lol:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-aSztV1QLo
That doesn't impress me. At all. It's basically a mini-atx computer powered by a notebook cpu housed inside a similar-but not identical to C64 keyboard. If they put a c64-on-a-chip style hardware emulator and allowed you to switch between PC functionality and c64 functionality, that'd be pretty cool.
If you want a c64, you can buy those used. http://shop.ebay.com/i.html?_nkw=commodore+64&_frs=1&_trksid=p3286.c0.m359
If you just wanted an emulator, I guess you could find one of those too, without overpaying for a fake c64 keyboard. http://www.commodoreusa.net/CUSA_OS.aspx
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PGf5xpaRIx8
You do know that Stunt Car Racer was also released on PC?
If I recall correctly the PC version would not do split-screen but it would do multi-player if you had two PC's (This was when a PC sound card could cost $500 and most PC's would not do more than 16 colours). I think it's abandonware today so if you look you may be playing in seconds from now 8-)
Since the C64 has been brought up I feel the need to mention something about that platform vs the ZX Spectrum. I do this knowing I may start up a long forgotten war but to me the games on the ZX Spectrum were just better. The C64 had more memory and better sound chips but the CPU in the ZX Spectrum was more advanced and the games one were often more original as opposed to the C64 which had more console conversions/copies plus the best selling ZX Spectrum games were often converted to is as well.
(My pre-PC computer story: ZX81, ZX Spectrum, VIC20, C64, Amiga 1000, Amiga 500 and Atari ST1040)
Some great ZX Spectrum games:
Manic Miner, Jet Set Willy, Alien 8, Underworld, Sabre Wulf, The Hobbit, LYNX...
Sod off... C64 for lyfe!
I seem to recall the Amiga version being considerably better. You could also play multi on the amiga over a null modem cable.
Someone mentioned Alien Breed, did anyone see:
a) The awful (which I thought was cool at the time) intro for Tower Assault?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uJ_HOWPje4k
b) Alien Breed 3D, one of few games you almost HAD to have an upgraded Amiga for, unless you wanted to play in a small window.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z7L5yFKMaWo
It was very fun though, and being I took my time getting a pc it was the only thing doom-like I could play. That and the other Amiga 'clones' (Gloom, Fear etc. Gloom was impressive for the time for having a split screen mode).
PSN: SirGrinchX
Xbox Live: SirGrinch X
USA too. There used to be straight-up computer game stores. They sold hardware too, but had the walls just covered in retail game boxes. Like a Gamestop but all PC/Amiga/C64 titles. All my friends at the time had DOS PCs and were "Amiga whu?" so retail & mail-order were my only sources.
lmao thats bad. Like, worse than most Sega CD FMV.
I still love my CD32, Commodore's only Console.
PSN: SirGrinchX
Xbox Live: SirGrinch X