Posted September 02, 2020
I recently watched an older TV show, and I suddenly realised that people were doing things, everyday "iconic" movements which were familiar to every one back in the day, which my kids have never done and probably never will do.
One example would be to actually dial a number on a phone. Or to slot a coin into a payphone.
So I was thinking about gaming related moves and actions which for us oldies are still familiar, but which have since died out. So far I've come with:
Handling, switching, flipping floppy disks
You know... the satisfying click when the 3.5" disk locked into place. The grip on the side of the Amiga to find to button to extract it ("Please insert disk 9" on the screen...). Even better the lock mechanism of 5.25" drives (when floppy disks were still floppy). Related to that: Punching notches in the sides of 5.25" disks to make them double-sided...
The joystick grip
While consoles started early with controllers, home computers like the C64 and Amiga used joysticks for almost every game which was not point and click (and the C64 even for those). Gripping that big joystick (Quickshot Pro?) with anticipation while the game loads...
I still have a HOTAS unit for special games which I rarely use, but it's not the same feeling. Who still has a regularly uses a joystick?
And now you: What else can you come up with? :-)
One example would be to actually dial a number on a phone. Or to slot a coin into a payphone.
So I was thinking about gaming related moves and actions which for us oldies are still familiar, but which have since died out. So far I've come with:
Handling, switching, flipping floppy disks
You know... the satisfying click when the 3.5" disk locked into place. The grip on the side of the Amiga to find to button to extract it ("Please insert disk 9" on the screen...). Even better the lock mechanism of 5.25" drives (when floppy disks were still floppy). Related to that: Punching notches in the sides of 5.25" disks to make them double-sided...
The joystick grip
While consoles started early with controllers, home computers like the C64 and Amiga used joysticks for almost every game which was not point and click (and the C64 even for those). Gripping that big joystick (Quickshot Pro?) with anticipation while the game loads...
I still have a HOTAS unit for special games which I rarely use, but it's not the same feeling. Who still has a regularly uses a joystick?
And now you: What else can you come up with? :-)