Hi,
As a 8-bit C64 game coder in eaarly 90ties and currently mostly FE-focused dev, decided to give a go to a simple retro game archive. This is purely fun project - so i decided to post it to HN, mayne it'll resonate :)
I remember playing a pretty simple Basic game on my Commodore+4 called "Kubusiowe Litery" or "Kubusiowe Literki", unfortunately my cassette with the game got damaged, and I cannot find a source of it anywhere.
I feel sad that the game may get lost in time like tears in rain. ;(
From a Czechoslovak video game archivist, well done! We have our own databases of video games and even a dedicated person reviewing every single public release on 8-bit micros, but no website with such a clear presentation. Inspiring!
It's Angular/nestjs/mysql combo, CMS kidna "works", but if Czech friends would like to use it to share it's own creations i'll surely willing to help :)
One thing that I don't miss about using Commodore 64 in 90s Poland was trying to decipher it without Internet :D.
I sure do miss the games and the sheer entertainment that it provided though. I wouldn't be here messing with software and cloud if it wasn't for that.
Mine came with a manual in German and some hardly readable photocopy of a translation written on a typewriter. That was a steep learning curve for a kid. Fortunately there were a lot of young and older folks who shared knowledge, engaged into demo scene or just played games. Later on I got a couple books and subscribed to the C&A magazine which helped me a lot with diving into graphics programming, extension ports, SID, etc.
The best part about C64 was it immediately booted into a Basic prompt that invited you to experiment with the hardware, like typing these magic POKE commands to set screen and text colors.
Awesome content. It's historical resource, because these are early days of polish game communities that along with demoscene gave grounds for polish game industry and projects like The Witcher
Very nice. Extra points for supporting light mode.
It may sound corny, but games from that era are a part of our cultural history, and they are part of the history of computing, which is still quite young. Keeping them around is a service to us all, so thank you.
I played commando libya as a kid (younger than 8). I had fun shooting the little pixel-men, even the ones on the wall. To me there was no connection to reality, it was just a toy. I had no understanding of global political issues or war, at all.
With all the new interest in point-and-click games — thanks to remasters of Grim Fandango, Day of the Tentacle, Monkey Island, … — Agent Mlíčňák (Teenagent) deserves a revival!
Great stuff. I always admire efforts like archive.org, textfiles.com and yours just fits well into that theme. The nature of today's Internet is that things disappear all too easy due to a simple redesign decision, people no longer care about "Cool URIs Don't Change" rule by Tim Berners-Lee. It's refreshing to see work like this and hope it will survive forever.
There was an old business game in text mode that I played on my Olivetti M24. I think it was named "Biznes" and was a super simple introduction to investing.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electro_Man
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GosPJVggVmI
As per burmistrz for c64, I remember playing a differently looking version, all mostly black? Maybe v1? http://www.gamebase64.com/game.php?id=20415&d=36&h=0