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Got a C64?Follow

#1 Jan 17 2007 at 7:29 AM Rating: Good
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Recently I've been sorting through some old things in my Grandparents old house, tossing things that are junk (they had a lot of it) and packing away things that might have value, sentimental or otherwise. While going through one of the filing cabinets I came across a bunch of my old C64 games that they bought for me when I was a kid. Among them was an original version of Sid Meyer's PIRATES!, with all of the original docs and disks, and the map too!

/sigh...they just don't make games like they used.

*nostalgic gaze*
#2 Jan 17 2007 at 7:31 AM Rating: Good
I play the updated version of Pirates, which came with the original as well. The updated version is just as good as the old one.
#3 Jan 17 2007 at 7:32 AM Rating: Good
Imaginary Friend
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Smiley: grin




Smiley: bowdown LOAD "*" ,8,1
____________________________
With the receiver in my hand..
#4 Jan 17 2007 at 7:40 AM Rating: Good
I still have a C64 modded with a reset switch and I have the special "adult game unlocking clip", the special clip that converts your floppy drives to a different mode to allow full sector copying of disks -AND- about 3000 games (including Pirates!) . Thing still purrs like a kitten. RACK old computer systems!
#5 Jan 17 2007 at 7:42 AM Rating: Good
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Kelvyquayo the Irrelevant wrote:
Smiley: grin




Smiley: bowdown LOAD "*" ,8,1


Smiley: lol

They even had great commercials. Man I loved that thing.
#6 Jan 17 2007 at 7:44 AM Rating: Good
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You think your Commodore 64 is really neato...
What kinda chip you got in there, a dorito?
____________________________
With the receiver in my hand..
#7 Jan 17 2007 at 7:46 AM Rating: Good
Jacobsdeception wrote:
Kelvyquayo the Irrelevant wrote:
Smiley: grin




Smiley: bowdown LOAD "*" ,8,1


Smiley: lol

They even had great commercials. Man I loved that thing.
Did you ever experience loading from multi drives?

Load "*",8,2

or change the addressign scheme via the dipswitches?

Load "*",7,1

or load the directory list?

Load "$",8,1

or change the background colours?

poke 53281,0 (black)


or change the border colours?

poke 53280,3 (red)


Those were the days...
#8 Jan 17 2007 at 7:49 AM Rating: Decent
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2,501 posts
I used to have a 64...but on one of my many moves, it was lost. I think I still have my VIC-20 though...at least I can still play Gorf.
#9 Jan 17 2007 at 7:53 AM Rating: Good
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I think 1987 was one of my favourite years.

C64
STNG
Married With Children
Simpsons
Pogoball
Photon

That was the year we got cable too.

I wore airwalks, jams, and other assorted skating and surf gear... even though I had never been on a skateboard or surfed in my life Smiley: lol

lol@4th grade
____________________________
With the receiver in my hand..
#10 Jan 17 2007 at 7:54 AM Rating: Good
Kelvyquayo the Irrelevant wrote:
I think 1987 was one of my favourite years.

C64
STNG
Married With Children
Simpsons
Pogoball
Photon

That was the year we got cable too.

I wore airwalks, jams, and other assorted skating and surf gear... even though I had never been on a skateboard or surfed in my life Smiley: lol

lol@4th grade
That was a great year. You forgot Max Headroom.

I met my wife that year.

Edited, Jan 17th 2007 10:44am by Elderon
#11 Jan 17 2007 at 7:56 AM Rating: Good
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3,118 posts
[quote]
I wore airwalks, jams, and other assorted skating and surf gear... even though I had never been on a skateboard or surfed in my life

lol@4th ****************** I'd still wear airwalks if I could find them. I actually used to skate so I was legit, not some poser-*** wannabe. Smiley: tongue Been having to settle for Sketchers or Converse now for a while. =(

PS ~ Jams f'uckin' rocked!
#12 Jan 17 2007 at 8:02 AM Rating: Good
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hey, I was in KARATE!!!

and Mad and Cracked magazines and Garbage Pail Kids were definatly in that year too.




trying to think of the music then... I think it sucked.. Bob Jovi? Livin On a Prayer?
I dunno, I hung out with a lot of black people... LL Cool Jay and the like

____________________________
With the receiver in my hand..
#13 Jan 17 2007 at 8:03 AM Rating: Excellent
Liberal Conspiracy
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Rrwar!
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Belkira wrote:
Wow. Regular ol' Joph fan club in here.
#14 Jan 17 2007 at 8:06 AM Rating: Good
Jophiel wrote:


You were sporting that tard when I first came to this site. I was tickled pink.


Kelvy wrote:
and Mad and Cracked magazines and Garbage Pail Kids were definatly in that year too.


Speaking of which, on my way to work today I was contemplating selling a few of my collections, which included the entire set of WWF wrestling cards from 1987 and a M.A.D. magazine collection from 1960-1994.

Think I could get bank for those?




Edited, Jan 17th 2007 10:56am by Elderon
#15 Jan 17 2007 at 8:08 AM Rating: Good
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Quote:
M.A.D. magazine collection from 1960-1994.

Think I could get bank for those?



no.


I'll buy those for $100
____________________________
With the receiver in my hand..
#16 Jan 17 2007 at 8:11 AM Rating: Good
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3,118 posts
Quote:

Think I could get bank for those?

So long as it still has all the back covers intact and none of the Spy Vs. Spy pages are damaged, I'd say "F'uck Yeah!".

I remember back when WWF was actually cool. George the Animal Steel and Jimmy the Superfly Snuka were the shiznat. None of this retarded *** **** they do on TV nowadays.
#17 Jan 17 2007 at 8:12 AM Rating: Default
I think it was Steven Spielberg's Amazing Stories that had one episode where a guy saved all his comic book colletor junk, baseball cards, etc., driving around with them in a beater as a bum, until finally in the end, as an old man, he sold his stuff for millions and donned a tux with some babe by his side.

Found the episode, "Gather ye Acorns":

http://www.markhamill.com/tv/gather.htm

Quote:
Gather Ye Acorns
(First aired: 1987)

Gather ‘round all ye avid collectors, and enjoy Gather Ye Acorns, a delightful episode of Steven Spielberg’s Amazing Stories. If ever you feel the need to justify your crazy desire to save every Kid’s Meal toy, baseball card, comic book, cereal box, action figure (etc. etc. etc.) that you can get your hands on – this is the show for you!! :)

In 1932, Jonathan Quick is a young boy who is constantly harangued by his parents to quit being such a dreamer. He loves to listen to the radio and read the funny papers, but his parents want him to grow up to be a doctor, and to be more hardworking. One day, after Jonathan’s mother forces him to go outdoors and read a medical book, Jonathan is visited by a strange and wild-looking little troll. The troll advises Jonathan to cling to the child in you as long as you possibly can. He also counsels Jonathan to first, get a car, and then hold on to those things nearest and dearest to your heart, and to never throw away anything you love, even if your mother tells you to, because there’s treasures galore in there.As the troll leaves Jonathan, he tells him that the world needs more dreamers, advice which Jonathan takes completely to heart.

When next we see Jonathan, he is fresh out of high school and is working hard at two jobs, which pleases his parents immensely as they believe he is saving up for medical school. Their pleasure turns to anger and disappointment when they discover that Jonathan has worked so hard not to save up for medical school but to buy a fancy car. After buying the car, Jonathan stops working altogether and spends all his time lavishing attention on his car, and collecting junk. His parents become so enraged by their son’s behavior that they finally kick him out of the house. Jonathan drives off with his car loaded down with childhood treasures, vowing to show his parents that he’ll do just fine.

More than twenty years go by before we see Jonathan again. He is a grungy hermit living in a shanty in the desert, surrounded by his collection of junk. After being told that a resort is going to be built on the land that Jonathan lives on, and that he must leave, Jonathan plaintively asks himself, Where am I supposed to go? Before he can figure out an answer to this question he is once again visited by the little troll. Jonathan has a terrible argument with the troll and blames the troll for the fact that Jonathan has no family or friends, and is not rich like the troll had promised he would be. The troll tells Jonathan that rich is a relative term, and reminds him that you still have your treasures. Jonathan finally calms down when he realizes that he truly has lived his life the way he wanted to. He packs all his junk into his car, and leaves the shanty as bulldozers raze it to the ground.

More years pass, and we see an elderly and disheveled (but still spunky) Jonathan in a gas station, down to his last few pennies and intent on filling up the car with one last tank of gas so that he can drive it, with himself and all of his junk, off a cliff. A richly dressed lady, who is sitting in a limousine parked next to Jonathan’s car, excitedly spots the mug of pennies that Jonathan is holding and tells him that she has been collecting mugs like his since she was a little girl. She promptly offers him ten for the mug, an offer which Jonathan accepts, but then reels in disbelief when he realizes she means ten **thousand** dollars, not ten dollars, for the mug. Later, he drives to a comic book store and the owners, after reverently () examining a few of the comic books and toys in his car, immediately offer him a quarter of a million dollars for the items. Jonathan’s collection of junk really IS treasure!

In the end, we see a finely dressed and dapper looking Jonathan attending an auction of the Jonathan Quick Collection, where he sees the troll once again. As Jonathan tries to thank the troll by saying, at the least, I owe you a drink, the little man disappears, which leads the lovely lady sitting near Jonathan to believe that he is talking to her instead. She graciously accepts Jonathan’s offer, and we see them walk off together, arm in arm. It seems that all the troll’s promises have come true, as not only is Jonathan indeed a rich man, he apparently is going to have love enter his life, too.


Edited, Jan 17th 2007 11:18am by MonxDoT
#18 Jan 17 2007 at 8:16 AM Rating: Good
Jacobsdeception wrote:
Quote:

Think I could get bank for those?

So long as it still has all the back covers intact and none of the Spy Vs. Spy pages are damaged, I'd say "F'uck Yeah!".

I remember back when WWF was actually cool. George the Animal Steel and Jimmy the Superfly Snuka were the shiznat. None of this retarded *** sh*t they do on TV nowadays.
I'll scan those cards and post links tonight just to give you a nice sense of nostalgia if you like.
#19 Jan 17 2007 at 8:30 AM Rating: Decent
Elderon wrote:
Jacobsdeception wrote:
Quote:

Think I could get bank for those?

So long as it still has all the back covers intact and none of the Spy Vs. Spy pages are damaged, I'd say "F'uck Yeah!".

I remember back when WWF was actually cool. George the Animal Steel and Jimmy the Superfly Snuka were the shiznat. None of this retarded *** sh*t they do on TV nowadays.
I'll scan those cards and post links tonight just to give you a nice sense of nostalgia if you like.



Andre the Giant. Smiley: frown
#20 Jan 19 2007 at 11:37 AM Rating: Decent
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503 posts
My first computer was a C64... I remember that we use to save programs on a cassette tape (!). Wow, thank god technology has progressed since then.

The C64 was also the only computer I have ever had that had smoke come out of it before it quit.
#21 Jan 19 2007 at 12:12 PM Rating: Good
Anyon ever play Bard's Tale? or DnD Pool of Radiance? Those might have been on my 128 though. Alchamohol has made those memories fuzzy. Warm but fuzzy.
#22 Jan 19 2007 at 12:26 PM Rating: Good
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Bard's Tale 2 was the first fanstasy video game I ever played and is what started it for me.
Then Ultima, Bard's Tale 3, Might and Magic, ect... Wasteland, Sim City, Pirates, Legacy of the Ancients...


They were actually my mother's fiance's games. He was an original computer dork.
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#23 Jan 19 2007 at 12:33 PM Rating: Excellent
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Master Shogen wrote:
DnD Pool of Radiance?
Pool of Radiance was cool but I liked Curse of the Azure Bonds better when it came out. Better plot and the interface was improved (things like the "fix" command). Secret of the Silver Blades was the last Forgotten Realms one I played though -- those god damned long-*** canyons full of random griffon/ice giant encounters bored the hell out of me.

The Krynn ones were fun through. I liked those.
____________________________
Belkira wrote:
Wow. Regular ol' Joph fan club in here.
#24 Jan 19 2007 at 12:45 PM Rating: Good
Ahh yes Curse of the Azure bonds was fun. Those were my first RPG games as well. We played with the dice some too.
#25 Jan 20 2007 at 7:29 AM Rating: Decent
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4,126 posts
C64 was fun never owned one personally. This however is what started it off for me.

I've been a gamer my whole life. Both were hand me downs from my dad. I have been playing since I could wrap my fingers around a controller.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atari_2600

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ColecoVision

#26 Jan 20 2007 at 8:36 AM Rating: Decent
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86 posts
The Bard's Tale
Wasteland
Summer/Winter Games
Silent Service
ELITE
Pirates!
Ultima IV

Ah, the sweet memories...




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