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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. :)
*** This is not my official entry ***

This is outside the rules, as this computer was never mine and the attached photo is of a similar computer (and was taken a few years ago). Anyway, this is a data-entry machine that was sold in Brazil as a computer and I had it all to myself when I was an intern, back in 1979. Up to eight terminals were controlled by an 8080 processor with 64K. Fancy programs could be written in a COBOL dialect.

The game connection: back in 1980 Byte magazine published the code for Adventure International's Pirate Adventure for the TRS-80. Somehow I translated the code from BASIC to Cobol and had it running in this oddball computer!
Attachments:
cobra400.jpg (14 Kb)
I kept an old vt100 (aside from the obvious Commodore and Atari stuff that everyone had) for a long time, used to play MUDs on it, unfortunately I have zero old gear laying around to join in here.

I think the only one I really never got in on was the Virtual Boy, and that's only because I had a chance to use one before buying it.
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mistermumbles: Not sure I'll make onto either 'winning' list, but what the hey! Here goes nothing:

Behold my mighty CH Flightstick Pro; bought from Amazon years ago to relive the glory of ye olde flight sims and even discover other new to me games like Freespace. Whether hunting space kittens, defending from rebel incursions, or countering alien invasions it couldn't be accomplished without it. The GOG release of Wing Commander Privateer was the tipping point of me acquiring it. Keyboard and/or mouse only just won't do for such a great game. Privateer may have aged considerably but remains my favorite in the entire genre. Still a blast! Take that, nostalgia, you (oftentimes) harsh mistress!
Sir, you rock. Rock, a lot!!
More pics, please!
More games, please!

I LOVED that joystick! :)
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vicklemos: snip
Thanks, but I don't think there is much to show beyond that really. I doubt anyone else would be excited by pics of my GOG flight sims. Heh. I do love that stick though.
I'm going to show not the oldest of my gear, but the one I love most: SX-64 from 1984 - this is the machine I learned to program on. It is the first mobile device with inbuild color CRT (5") and has a floppy drive. Here to see running Wizard of War and Ghost & Goblins. Still using it today. SN: 8088. Competes with my Arcade Cabinet (Wonderboy in Monsterland) for the first place in my heart. Normaly it is used on a 1084 CRT as the screen is a little tiny.
Commodore forever!


wtf? I rotated the pics before saving them so they had the right orientation and now they still stand heads down? MS-PAINT, I hate you :/
Attachments:
sx64_1.jpg (428 Kb)
sx64_2.jpg (386 Kb)
Post edited February 27, 2015 by Klingenlaeufer
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Klingenlaeufer: I'm going to show not the oldest of my gear, but the one I love most: SX-64 from 1984 - this is the machine I learned to program on. It is the first mobile device with inbuild color CRT (5") and has a floppy drive. Here to see running Wizard of War and Ghost & Goblins. Still using it today. SN: 8088. Competes with my Arcade Cabinet (Wonderboy in Monsterland) for the first place in my heart. Normaly it is used on a 1084 CRT as the screen is a little tiny.
Commodore forever!
Is this some kind of Commodore 64? Could you please rotate the picture, cause it`s upside down?!?
wtf 2, this should've been a secondary post no edit. I guess I'm out now. Sh** happens.
I think about posting a picture of my (real) Commandos box.
Yes... I am from Germany.

Stop censoring !
Shure , here are the rotated pics (on my desktop they stand now head down. Don't understand this one. And as my comment was counted as Edit I'm out anyways. :/

Yes, this one was the carryable Version of the Commodore 64. Not very common as it was very expensive (about 3k bucks iirc)
Attachments:
sx64_1.jpg (434 Kb)
sx64_2.jpg (386 Kb)
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vicklemos: snip
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mistermumbles: Thanks, but I don't think there is much to show beyond that really. I doubt anyone else would be excited by pics of my GOG flight sims. Heh. I do love that stick though.
okay then
;(
Here's a 486 Compaq Contura laptop that really helped my fiancee when she got ill after a car accident and had to stay in a place where the real world zombies live: In the neurological department of a large hospital. This old laptop showed her, that she could still have a good time, even though her other hand wouldn't work properly.

That's pretty good from a laptop purchased with a chocolate bar from our old neighbor!

The old LCD isn't good for any games that have a lot of movement, but turn-based strategy games like Master of Magic work nicely.
Attachments:
contura.jpg (337 Kb)
The speccy was a significant part of my youth made all that much better by the fact that playing games on the speccy was an enthusiasm shared by my father. My father gifted me the first 48 k as well as the lion share of everything else you can see in the pics. Great times, great memories.
Attachments:
speccy_1.jpg (370 Kb)
speccy_2.jpg (353 Kb)
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sikakraa: Here's a 486 Compaq Contura laptop that really helped my fiancee when she got ill after a car accident and had to stay in a place where the real world zombies live: In the neurological department of a large hospital. This old laptop showed her, that she could still have a good time, even though her other hand wouldn't work properly.

That's pretty good from a laptop purchased with a chocolate bar from our old neighbor!

The old LCD isn't good for any games that have a lot of movement, but turn-based strategy games like Master of Magic work nicely.
You have my vote, especially because of the story.
I also had to stay there (though in my own home town, mind you) for some tests because of the epilepsy I've had.
It did net me a cool high resolution CAT scan print of my own head.
Did she fully recover?
Post edited February 27, 2015 by jorlin
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shmargin: This is my original 1972 Magnavox Odyssey. [ ... ]
WINNAR!!!

It looks like you've taken excellent care of it.
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catpower1980: In the picture lies my dear 21 year old mousepad that I still use. In 1994, it came bundled with a Compaq Presario (486 SX with CD drive and 8Mo RAM). From Doom 2 to Divinity Original Sin, it has followed me during 2 decades of PC gaming. Won't trade it for a Roccat mousepad ;)
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mistermumbles: I doubt anyone will beat you in the longest use of a single mouse pad.
I think I can beat it. I have a "Cool Friends of NewTek" mousepad, circa 1989, back when the NewTek Video Toaster was a thing. It's sitting under a 3M mouse mat, but it's still in daily use.

EDIT: Actually it's probably closer to 1991, since the Video Toaster was released in 1990.
Post edited February 27, 2015 by ewhac
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jorlin: You have my vote, especially because of the story.
I also had to stay there (though in my own home town, mind you) for some tests because of the epilepsy I've had.
It did net me a cool high resolution CAT scan print of my own head.
Did she fully recover?
Thanks. She's much better, although still doesn't walk without help. But recovery from neurological things is a long process.

I though this was a cool opportunity to dig up the old laptop and see if it works. It still does. :)