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Show off your (old) gear, win shiny new (ROCCAT) gear!

As you know, the GOG.com catalog spans many titles dating back as far as 1980 (, we're looking at you!), in times when computers kind of looked like modern-day [url=http://prepare.icttrends.com/images/2012/06/IBM_PC.jpg]microwaves sat on top of a console, and the first portable computer, the Osborne I, was put on the market in all the glory of its 24 pounds of weight and a steep $1,795 price tag.

We don't expect you to have gear that's quite as old, but we are curious as to what treasures you might be keeping in a box stored away in the basement or deep in an attic drawer. So show us your oldest gear and be greatly rewarded with the some of the newest on the market, courtesy of gaming gear creator and producer ROCCAT!

THE RULES:

- Your entry should consist of 1 or 2 pictures of your old gear and a description of up to 100 words telling us what it is, where you got it, what you used it for or any other fond memories you have with it. Maybe it was your first joystick? Maybe an old Atari controller you kept as a memento? We want to hear about it!
- You can only post one entry per person. If you post more, only the first one will be counted.
- You may not edit your post.
- Use your own photos of your own gear - we do know how to do a reverse image search!

Post your entry in the comments below before the deadline - you have a week, until March 6th, at 1:59 PM GMT. We aim to judge your entries and pick winners by Thursday, March 12th - we'll announce them in the contest forum thread and via PM to the winners themselves.

THE PRIZES:

1st place prize: a ROCCAT Isku, gaming keyboard with blue-tinted illumination, secondary programmable Shift function, and Thumbster Macro Keys below the spacebar to maximise gaming effectiveness

2nd place prize: a ROCCAT Savu, mid-size hybrid gaming mouse with an adjustable, 400-4000 DPI optical sensor, secondary programmable function, customizable illumination, and a powerful driver suite

3rd place prize: a ROCCAT Sense, mousepad with friction-reducing microcrystalline coating for greater mouse speed and precision

All winners will also get GOG.com gift codes to use on games of their choice to test out their new gear!

Honorable mentions: We expect there to be many great-quality entries, so we're reserving the right to give out honorable mentions to all those we find did a brilliant job, but didn't quite make the podium cut. They'll get GOG.com gift codes to use on titles available in our catalog.

Should you be one of our top three winners, we will need some mailing data (name, address, phone number) to ship your prize to you. If the ROCCAT Marketing Team ends up sending the prizes directly to you, we will need to share your mailing information with them. We will not share it with anyone that doesn't need it!

Please note that this contest is also being held on the French and German GOG.com forum - winners will be chosen, regardless of language, from across all three contest topics. :)
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jackster79: That got me thinking... wonder how many people jumped onto the Zip drive craze? Or even recall what a Zip drive is? :-D
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Maighstir: I did, I even have two of them (should still have, at least, as well as 7 or 8 disks), my first Zip drive was a parallel-port one that thus didn't work with my Mac (it, of course, had a SCSI port that looked exactly the same as a parallel port), but I later got a SCSI drive that worked. They are 100MB drives/disks, and I never acquired any 250MB or 750MB drives though I did want them (the prices of CD-R/RW discs and recorders were sinking so I eventually saved up to get one of those instead).
I had an external parallel port Zip drive and an internal ATA Zip drive. The recent Godzila movie had the Zip drives and media (in the beginning set in 1999 and later on in 2014 when Dr. Serizawa was going over Joe Brody's research materials). I was like, "OMGWTFBBQ, Zip disks!" xD

I never had anything above 100 MB either due to the storage tech changing so fast.
This is my keyboard. There are many keyboards like it. But this one is mine.

My father brought it for me with my first machine back when I was 12. In 2001. The first game I played was Homeworld. Since then my keyboard survived three computers and countless games. It was there when I brought Rome down as Hannibal. It was there when I wrote my master thesis. And now. After 15 years it will help me to once more lead the Exiles to their home. This is my keyboard. There are many keyboards like it. But this one is mine.
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Maighstir: I did, I even have two of them (should still have, at least, as well as 7 or 8 disks), my first Zip drive was a parallel-port one that thus didn't work with my Mac (it, of course, had a SCSI port that looked exactly the same as a parallel port), but I later got a SCSI drive that worked. They are 100MB drives/disks, and I never acquired any 250MB or 750MB drives though I did want them (the prices of CD-R/RW discs and recorders were sinking so I eventually saved up to get one of those instead).
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ServantsOfTwilight: I had an external parallel port Zip drive and an internal ATA Zip drive. The recent Godzila movie had the Zip drives and media (in the beginning set in 1999 and later on in 2014 when Dr. Serizawa was going over Joe Brody's research materials). I was like, "OMGWTFBBQ, Zip disks!" xD

I never had anything above 100 MB either due to the storage tech changing so fast.
I don't know if this was the case with every sold drive, but except the floppies with basic drivers, both of my drives came with a Zip disk that had utilities for both Windows and Mac on it - but it was in some kind of "Schrödinger's cat" state, if you mounted the disk on a Macintosh, the Windows utilities were removed, and vice versa. You couldn't use the tools disk on both systems, but had to download the tools for whatever system you didn't use it on first.

Of course, few Windows machines had a SCSI port and no Mac had PPT ports, so it didn't much matter because the different systems likely couldn't share a drive anyway, but I found it a curious idea (and still do).
Hi all! Most of my old stuff went down the drain after I divorced, something I regret a lot (just for the stuff, not my ex-wife). Of course, I have my Speccy next to my gaming PC, but they're plenty of those. Just for the sake of getting a code, I share with you some of the oldest software I still keep. No prizes for guessing I am a f/sim enthusiast: there's SU25 Stormovik, F15 Combat Pilot and F15 Strike Eagle II. On the darker side, there's DeLuxe Strip Poker 2 (on 3'5 disks) and Volfiev for PC (5 1/4 floppy version). A Speccy Load'n'Run cassette tape closes this humble exhibition. Keep gaming, and never forget our beginnings. I'll do. Greetings!
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Dang. Would love to participate if I had access to my attic which on the opposite side of the world.
is a playstation one is a gift from parents 15 years ago used to play Crash Bandicoot hours strung of course and other games but no more than this and this genius mouse mouse ps / 2170
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This is my arcade machine. Was found in a real state so I spent the summer a few years ago bringing it back from the dead. Now, its the centre of late night gaming and drinking with the incredible woman who saw its potential and bought it for my 30th birthday.
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15 years ago I tried two games, M1 Tank platoon and Mechwarrior 2 on my first pc.

I wondered why the graphics didn`t look like on the game box.

So next pay day, I paid as much as I could and got a VOODOO 3/2000- for £200! , My first ever graphics card!

I installed the card, then the Drivers and started M1 and WOW! the tanks looked glorious! There was even fog! It was even faster!

Mechwarrior 2 and DOUBLE WOW! It was incredible! Laser beams and cannons, explosions everywhere and Mechs blasting each other!
Good memories!
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How about the old FlightStick? Used to be my dad's for a flight simulator game he got back in 1995 before being handed down to me. Can't even use it now on my new rig because the installation files are on an old floppy disk(yes, you read that correctly) that I've lost.
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In 1983 I purchased a Kaypro II, a CP/M "luggable" computer nicknamed "Darth Vader's lunchbox." I was in college and spent one summer teaching myself Pascal and programming a tool that would entirely automate creating characters for the pen and paper roleplaying game Traveller by GDW.

The picture is of the only copy of the results. GDW wasn't interested in it, I didn't have a license to use their intellectual property and thus couldn't sell it on my own. Dig the One Sided Double Density floppy it fit on and the two tone hand made label and diskette sleeve of my prototype!
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The first picture is, if I remember correctly, my first keyboard. Is mechanical keyboard!!
Excuse the dirt but has used very much besides me.
The keyboard is the Acer brand and has metal structure. And it works smoothly.

The second photo is an inkjet printer Epson Stylus 400, this printer has printed many documents and photos, in fact still works. Although recently the injectors are much obstructed, we have to clean them.

Despite its age these two gears work as I have said.

In store room of my house I have much older computer equipment, but I find it very difficult to find. Although if you ask me to find it then I will find in my store room.

Regards
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Revan5678: [...] This was the first time that Tevion Erazer Joystick really got important for me. It is a terrible Joystick but was used houndrets of hours by me. :) [...]
Hey, I had this joystick, too - I played through "Freespace 1" with it :)
Post edited February 28, 2015 by andhar
Me playing Mario Brothers on an original Apple II+ made in 1982 using a Gravis BlackHawk analog joystick, circa 1992. The joystick is for PC, but has been hacked to work with the Apple. The computer was broken when it was given to me by a friend, and I am restoring it in order to play the classic games that I never got a chance to play when I was a kid. Even has two floppy drives, but I am waiting for the floppy discs to arrive that I ordered from eBay (it is hard to find 5-1/4 floppies locally).
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No friday weekend deals? Pisser =(
My Mouse and Mousepad given to me by my younger brother as a Birthday gift... A Cheap local brand Mouse and a very cheap mousepad' The mouse is only worth 100 pesos and a mousepad is 25 pesos' I know the price since he give it to me with a pricetag attached and Its been more than a year and it still working fine :).. He give it to me because he see Im playing RTS games mostly SC2 using only touchpad. Apology for my mousepad because I attached it on my desk because its cloth only remains.
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