View Full Version : Why did you first play an Adventure Game?
crabapple
01-31-2005, 04:55 PM
This is the evil twin of that other poll.
Why did you first play an Adventure Game?
1. Saw a friend playing one. Got interested.
2. Saw parents or other relatives playing one. Got interested.
3. Saw an ad in a movie, comic book, on TV - someplace other than a game shop.
4. Saw one in a non-game shop like Staples, Walmart, etc. and bought it out of curiosity.
5. Saw one in a game shop when looking for a different game.
6. Got one free with computer hardware.
7. Other.
Royal Fool
01-31-2005, 05:33 PM
My dad introduced me to them, he's also a gamer.
SamNMax
01-31-2005, 05:41 PM
My uncle sent my brother Monkey Island 1-3. Got interested.
Dragonrose
01-31-2005, 06:26 PM
My family played adventures together since I was born. I'd be in a baby carrier thing on the computer table, my sister in either my mom or dad's lap, with my parents taking turns reading the messages and typing. At least, this is what they tell me. I obviously don't remember.
reno6
01-31-2005, 07:33 PM
My dad and half-brother used to play Sierra games all the time. They started with Space Quest I, and that sparked a huge interest that lasted them through nearly every mainstream Sierra title. This got me involved at a very young age -- I can very clearly remember Dad letting me type in the names of his saved games, hitting Enter after typing in text commands, and even my first adventure gaming experience. I was six years old, and after Dad was done playing King's Quest 6 for the night, I asked if I could play and he let me. He even let me save my own game!! I was ecstatic!
Ironically, these days, it's me that turns HIM on to new adventures. I've branched him out into LucasArts and some underground adventures (namely the King's Quest remakes and Fatman), and when he visits every week, we generally end up talking about Sierra games and the company's history.
So why did I start? Because it looked fun. I took the 'family tradition' on when I became old enough to really understand the complexity of the games, and plan on forcefeeding Roger Wilco down my son's throat when I become a father.
With my luck, though, he'll be more interested in asking me if I ever played Halo. :rolleyes:
artwking4
01-31-2005, 07:53 PM
I was introduced to adventure games a short time ago, when I had broken into the LucasArts main office and in a safe I saw thousand's of adventure games, including a finished version of Sam & Max 2 and like seventeen more sequels on top of that. They had made and completed these games, but never released them because they thought no one would ever buy them.
And I've loved adventure games ever since.;)
I'm lying of course.:devil: Except about loving adventure games. Just seeing if anyone was reading this. I think I was ten or twelve and my dad brought some home after either borrowing/buying them from a friend at work. I remember a Space Quest game, either the 2nd or 3rd one, and also Quest for Glory 1 (although it back then it was called Hero's Quest). And also the first Leisure Suit Larry, but I didn't get to play that. I think they let me watch for a very short section when there wasn't any naughty bits happening.
LauraMac
01-31-2005, 08:21 PM
we had a prototype MAC that we were testing some early graphic applications on for them and it had a few games loaded. There was this great game involving the Murmansk base and submarines and was sort of a atari looking strategy game. The other was Zork. :)
Maquisard
01-31-2005, 09:07 PM
I saw my big bro playing Secret of Monkey Island. I must've been like 9 or 10. Shortly afterwards, I played through it using a walkthrough (they used to print these in gaming mags). I'm not sure what exactly appealed to me...the beatiful graphics? I probably understood nothing of the humor, or even very little of the language back then. For some reason though, I was hooked. Must be, as Jake had mentioned in a different thread, the way it reminded me of cartoons (which are another way I started learning English early on)
ConcreteRancor
01-31-2005, 09:13 PM
I saw some friends of mine playing an early beta version of The Secret of Monkey Island and was fascinated. (Their mom's law firm was apparently working with LEC at the time, so they got to test out the games. Lucky bastards.) I did actually play a bit of the game myself, but I don't count that as playing my first adventure game since I only got about fifteen minutes into the game. You couldn't save your game either, since it was such an early test of the game.
Later on, when we got our first computer with CD-ROM, my dad bought us Myst to go with it. And I was hooked.
Antoinetta
01-31-2005, 11:24 PM
"My first game was a charming, although tough little gem called Altered Destiny. This was back in '92, when I was 40 years old. The game came on six or seven 3.5 inch floppies. I didn't even have a computer then, but my neighbour had a 386 and introduced me not only to the game, but to computer gaming as well. Altered Destiny has a score-counter, like the Gabriel Knight games, and as I recall we got about a third of the way through the game. The game was part point and click and part text, you had a text-bar with a cursor as well as the mouse cursor. You would move your character via point and click, then type in various questions/commands when you had moved the character (this dude that gets transported into an alternate universe by being sucked into a TV set he is watching) to where you wanted to perform the action. Usually, these were simple commands like "take sword" or "grab vine", but the game's vocabulary wasn't that extensive, and there were some frustrating times trying to come up with the exactly proper wording.
Then, one day in the latter part of 1993, we forgot about Altered Destiny pretty much for good. My friend, Jan came over and asked me to come down and look at what she had up on her machine which by now I believe, had been upgraded to a 486. I went over, and I stared when I saw, in all its colour and crystal-clarity, Achenar's bedroom in the original 256 colour version of Myst. So we plugged away at Myst for about two years, making good progress, but not finishing the game. All this, of course, was before you could just jump online for a moment to snag a walk-thru when you get stuck. But then Jan moved away, and I didn't play any games until I got my first "real" computer, a Pentium II laptop early in 2000. And the first game I played then, that I bought at the same time I bought the computer, was Gabriel Knight III......and a year or so after that, I went back and finally finished Myst."
I posted the above on another thread, but it is applicable here as well. While Altered Destiny was cute and fun, I don't think it would have got me hooked. No, it was the blowaway graphics and general surrealistic quality of Myst that got me addicted. Prior to the Pentium II laptop, I had in 1998 aquired an antique Compaq with Windows 3.1 and no CD-ROM drive. This was sufficient for my work, but ever since my friend had moved away, I HAD to finish Myst, so as soon as I could afford it, I bought the Pentium II, with its CD-ROM drive. A chance observation of the name "Rennes-le-Chateau" on the Gabriel Knight III box (I had recently finished reading "The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail" by Baigent, Leigh and Lincoln) caused Gabriel to be the first game I completed, but then after finishing Myst, there was Riven....and yes, I was hooked.
Antoinetta
Ninth
02-01-2005, 12:41 AM
A friend of mine received Planete Aventure 4 for his birthday. It was a box with Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Maniac Mansion, Explora 2 and Les portes du Temps (dunno their english names).
We tried playing Indy, and we were floored.
Supreme Goddess
02-01-2005, 02:43 AM
Our kids killed the old 286 so we upgraded in 1995 to a sleek black IBM with a split cd rom which could be closed. Ha. Had them fooled for the better part of a year.
Starfleet Academy came free but I sucked at it big time. The shop assistant suggested Timelapse - a puzzle game and I've been looking for similar stuff ever since.
Wormsie
02-01-2005, 03:42 AM
I first played Loom when I got it as a present from my American pen pal. Then I read a review of The Curse of Monkey Island and bought the game. The Loom experience actually had very little to do with that - I bought CMI mostly because of the pretty hand-drawn graphics, and also because the reviewer praised the game to heavens. I loved CMI, and thought that the first two games were probably good, too, so I bought them. And then Grim was reviewed by the same person and I bought it, too. At this time I had already discovered Mixnmojo, Scummbar and AG. Back then adventure games were just another genre for me - I also played Red Alert, Worms 2, Battlezone (3D) and XCOM3. Later on I found DOTT and Sam and Max on an abandonware site...
So I voted Other.
stepurhan
02-01-2005, 04:51 AM
I went for other. Started gaming generally on the Commodore 64 and I'd just give any game I could get my hands on a go really. Adventure games hooked me because, unlike other games, there always seemed to be such a variety of things to do. With most other genres, going further just meant you had more of the same, only harder. Adventure games meant bouncing on beds wearing a colander one minute and repairing a map with a glue made from toast the next. :D
ragnar
02-01-2005, 07:41 AM
Trough a review in a gaming magazine I think (well, it was a very long time ago, so I can't remember everything) or perhaps it was a game of my brothers/dad.
colpet
02-01-2005, 09:10 AM
I voted for other.
I always loved to do puzzles. We got a hand me down computer in 1994, and I found out about playing games like solitaire and tetris. In 1997, someone told me that people were playing more involved games on the computer, and one of them was Riven. At that time, we got a new computer at work, so I got the game and dabbled. In 2000, we got a new home computer, and the rest is history. Perhaps that's why I still prefer puzzles driven adventures over the Lucas Arts type games.
Zanthia
02-01-2005, 12:58 PM
Befor I got a comp I used to play games on my cousins' comp. One of them was MI2.
Risingson
02-01-2005, 03:23 PM
I should answer "why not?". I've always been open to any kind of computer games.
100ja a.k.a. mr_mitja
02-01-2005, 04:37 PM
other: my dad bought me a bunch of games for c64 when I was a kid, one of them was a Spiderman adventure (so technically this is the first), but never liked it (never figured it out) cause it was text based (I don't get them even now :) ) . I was actually hooked when I played Larry 1 with my friend a bit (but then again, it probably had nothing to do with it being an adventure game either :D ).
crabapple
02-01-2005, 05:54 PM
It looks like we've got 14 "others."
Of those who posted, most people were either introduced to them through friends or family, including a couple who said they voted for "other."
A couple of people said they'd try any game.
One said they tried one after reading a review.
But what about the other "others?"
kitzingmarko
02-02-2005, 03:13 AM
The brothers of my former girl friend were playing Monkey Island 1 on a shiny new 286 with 16MHz and a turbo button to switch between 8 and 16Mhz :) . I wanted one too and so my carrier as a gamer started... (we were playing Prince of Persia at school at that time too)
Fairygdmther
02-02-2005, 10:04 AM
I got my first PC in 1986, and got Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy soon after. I had no idea this was based on a book, and had no clue what I was doing, but I laughed a lot trying this. Fast forward to 2001, I'd moved in with this guy I knew, and happened to come across Beyond Atlantis in a Staples store. It was cheap, and looked interesting, so I bought it. I thought it was gorgeous, but I had no idea how to play it. This guy and I sat down one night and played it together for about 5 hours, then another night for about 3 more hours. I thought this was heaven! He got me copies of one of the LSL games, and Eric the Unready, which were fun, but not my thing, really. Then he got me TLJ, and I was hooked for good!
FGM
Jazhara7
02-02-2005, 10:48 AM
I found "The Secret of Monkey Island", Monkey Island 2, and Monkey Island 3 at my cousin's house.
I just played them, because the boxes looked interesting (I didn't play any specific genre back then), and I liked the game.
Of course, when that happened, I didn't know that I had 'played' "The Secret of Monkey Island" years before, without knowing the game title, or genre.
- :) :) :) :) :) :) :)
Kolzig
02-02-2005, 11:58 AM
I watched as my brother played Secret of Monkey Island and/or Zak MacKracken.
Crypto
02-03-2005, 11:06 AM
My uncle was addicted, so he spread the disease...
Those moments on the Amiga 500, please insert Monkey Island 2 disk 12... :9~
AFGNCAAP
02-04-2005, 01:28 PM
Saw a friend playing three. Got interested.
I think I may have posted it before, but anyway: my friend and - at the time - neighbour had this technological wonder called Amiga. I've seen him playing plenty of games and even were allowed to play on my own sometimes (you see, I was maybe 8 and he was whole three years older, so he seemed almost adult to me). He played a variety of games - but the ones that really sparkled my imagination were few that were based mainly on talking and solving puzzles: today I remember only Sam and Max, Goblins 3 (not sure about this one, but it started on a playing ship) and Nippon Safes. I instantly knew that's what I want to play when I get my own computer - whenever that comes.
"That" happened when I was thirteen and a half. The (same) friend lent me some games to try, of which I installed the one that had "adventure" printed on the cover (Blade Runner). Adventuring turned out just as good as I had remembered and the rest is history... Never got to complete any of the games that originally got me hooked, though.
AFGNCAAP
02-04-2005, 02:09 PM
Les portes du Temps (dunno their english names).
Time Gate (http://www.the-underdogs.org/game.php?id=2509)?
Tramboi
02-04-2005, 03:06 PM
Time Gate (http://www.the-underdogs.org/game.php?id=2509)?
Nope, "Les Portes du Temps" is a much older french text game, with graphics where you travelled in time at 4 periods (including prehistory, feudal Japan...)!
It was pretty nice if I remember well, but my standards have changed (because of my increased lazyness :) )
Tobbe
02-05-2005, 01:25 AM
Hey Guys!! Back from the military for a short period of time..I´m on "vacation" this weekend..I´ve really missed you guys!
But back on the subject..My first introduction to adventure games when a friend borrowed me an copy of Indiana Jones And The Fate Of Atlantis..That game really impressed my and from that time forward I was "in love" with adventure games..
Elton28
02-05-2005, 04:23 AM
"Other"
Why?
Because although I am an Unreal Tournament/RPG junkie I needed something whereby I could use my brain, and really get my teeth into something. Besides, I love the feeling of playing these games as I would love to just go on my own little adventure someday; you know, just pack my gear and walk out the door and go wherever me feet take me.
The only thing I dont like about them is the frustration sometimes of spending ages to figure something out eg: the Marble Puzzle on Riven seemed to take me forever!!
I am glad I got into them as now I cant stop playing them!!! :D
JHousequake
02-05-2005, 03:54 PM
My friend showed me a demo of Sam N' Max on a PC Format Gold CD back around 1994. I didn't really go looking for adventure games after that but I was particularly more intrested in playing those if I came across them.
Strawberry Gashes
02-06-2005, 04:43 AM
I was interested by Broken Sword for the Game Boy Advance..and eventually I ended up playing it and falling in love with it.
Simon
02-06-2005, 06:21 AM
In the early 90s, my dad introduced me to The Secret Of Monkey Island. My brother and I had our own savegames, and always wanted to get on the computer to continue playing. I must admit it was slightly competitive too. I guess we both wanted to finish first. I distinctly remember my dad coming home with the Monkey Island 2 box a few months later, and thinking the cover was one of the coolest things I'd ever seen. He said we couldn't play it until we finished the first game, and I'm grateful for that - MI2 was all the more sweet when I finally got to it after the hours of puzzling on Monkey Island (sometimes tough for an eight-year-old). Good times.
So SoMI was my first adventure game, though I didn't think in 'genres' til a few years later. I think my first game of any genre was Prince Of Persia, a little while before.
Captain Blondebeard
02-06-2005, 11:01 PM
My uncle gave me Monkey Island 1 when I was just a squirt and I fell in love. My friend and I used to have sleep overs and beat the games in one night. My friend has since died from childrens lucemia so the old LA and Sierra games that we played have a very special place in my heart.
jenny
02-12-2005, 06:53 PM
I watched my brother play adventure games and a new adventure lover was born :P
ADVENTURE-RAIDER
02-14-2005, 10:17 AM
Other: basically I suck in any other type of games that require quick reflexes. Adventure games and a little RPG's are my bread and butter.
pawsey
02-14-2005, 10:28 AM
It began with Colossal Cave, but I really got going when I played Myst. Seem to play adventures in the main. About to begin "Sentinel: Descentants..."
Stalker
02-14-2005, 11:01 AM
Other. We had just gotten a C64 in the middle of the 80's. My mom saw Zork while shopping, thought it would be something I'd like because of the freaky skeleton thing on the cover, and bought it for me. Now, she didn't know that the game was text only, and at that age, I didn't know too much english. I think back then, I only got to the troll before I gave up. The next adventure I played was Maniac Mansion. The review for it was a bit confusing, but the game itself was great AND featured german on-screen text... I played it so much that when Zak McKracken was soon to be released, I went to the mall nearly every day after school to see whether it was already out. In the end, my mom bought that one for me too when she saw it on the way home in another part of the city.
Oh, as for Zork - I bought the Lost Treasures of Infocom for the Amiga seven or eight years later, and then I finally completed Zork. Does that set some kind of record like "Game that took you longest to complete"?
Edit: Wow, I just noticed that it is pretty hard to find a scan of the cover... anyway, I'm talking about this one. (http://www.commodore64.hu/cover/cover_z/zork1co.jpg)
Trunkyo
02-15-2005, 07:12 AM
Say, does anyone else remember those "awesome" :D classic adventures Mummies Curse (yes, that was the spelling, beats me) and Transylvania for the Apple II on 5 1/4-inch floppies??? I didn't think so. :shifty: ;)
It was my uncle's computer in 1985, and my sister and I always wanted to play on it when we visited him and my grandparents! Other games included Critical Mass, Masquerade, The Tracer Sanction, Death in the Caribbean, Dallas Quest (!)... (Hey, this post could go into the "When did you first play?" thread too!)
I missed these games so much that I wound up downloading an Apple II emulator just to replay all of these and tons more!
Now, I'm continuing the tradition (not that it was a tradition to begin with :rolleyes: ) by introducing adventure games to my younger cousin! I started him on the Myst games a few years ago when he was ten (with minimal hints from me!) and then we moved on to The Crystal Key (oops, bad choice :o ), the Monkey Island games and Grim Fandango, and more recently, the Simon the Sorcerer games, Flight of the Amazon Queen and Beneath a Steel Sky (both on ScummVM) and just last weekend, Zork: Grand Inquisitor! He prefers the 3rd-person, inventory-based point & click games over the 1st-person puzzle games like Alida and RHEM, but I'm trying to change that! :devil:
DemonFox
02-19-2005, 02:38 PM
Umm... How DID I get into adventure games? It's not so long ago...
Well I remember downloading Kyrandia without knowing what it was and deleting it because I found it kinda... weird. That was my very first adventure game (without knowing it was an adventure game). The first adventure game that I really played was Myst. I've read somewhere that Myst is a MUST for every gamer so I got a copy of the Masterpiece Edition. When looking for better hints than the ones in-game on google I found adventure game sites. On those sites I've read about third person adventure games, became intrested, downloaded some amateur games and liked them.
RLacey
02-19-2005, 02:50 PM
Monkey Island 2 came with my Soundblaster card.
wassup
02-19-2005, 11:23 PM
I saw my brothers playing Police Quest 1 when I was five and thus began a beautiful relationship.
ianrace
02-20-2005, 06:39 AM
I was at a computer show and sale with my folks about ten years ago when I saw The Beast Within on one of the tables. I didn't realize it was an adventure game when I picked it up, just thought it looked like a cool game to play. What an eye opening experience that was.
Siedler
02-20-2005, 06:40 AM
I bought a game package which included Broken Sword 1 in -98 or so and I was amazed. :D
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