Posted December 20, 2012
As an old fogey, I can recall the days where you had to take real handwritten notes, and possibly even draw maps, when playing CRPG games. I was reading a post on the Ultima 4+5+6 game card where a guy still has his notes from playing Ultima 5 back in the "good old days".
I still have a few spiral-bound notebooks around here with game notes, and even a whole bunch of maps on graph paper from when I played Buck Rogers: Countdown to Doomsday. But I can remember playing Ultima 6 and using a DOS program called "Tornado Notes" to make notes while I played. You needed to load TN and U6 both into memory at the same time (Tornado was a TSR "terminate and stay ready" program that resided in the background of your computer). As you would play U6, you could hit a certain hot-key and U6 would swap out, and Tornado Notes would swap-in, and you created "stacks" of notes, like little 3M Post-It Notes, with your game info on them. It was a great program, and you could almost instantly find any old note just by typing "g" (for "get") and then a couple letters of the word. Similar to the way Google suggests words as you type. I can't seem to find my old Tornado Notes stacks any more, though.
Anyway, I'm sure there are some other interesting and creative ways people used to make RPG notes and I just wanted to hear some! Nowadays most games keep "journals" and "quest logs" of your gameplay, and maps are fully annotated.
But it seems like you could play the old RPG games in a "window" on your desktop, and have full access to any other program you want! What "other program" do people use to take game notes for old games these days?
I still have a few spiral-bound notebooks around here with game notes, and even a whole bunch of maps on graph paper from when I played Buck Rogers: Countdown to Doomsday. But I can remember playing Ultima 6 and using a DOS program called "Tornado Notes" to make notes while I played. You needed to load TN and U6 both into memory at the same time (Tornado was a TSR "terminate and stay ready" program that resided in the background of your computer). As you would play U6, you could hit a certain hot-key and U6 would swap out, and Tornado Notes would swap-in, and you created "stacks" of notes, like little 3M Post-It Notes, with your game info on them. It was a great program, and you could almost instantly find any old note just by typing "g" (for "get") and then a couple letters of the word. Similar to the way Google suggests words as you type. I can't seem to find my old Tornado Notes stacks any more, though.
Anyway, I'm sure there are some other interesting and creative ways people used to make RPG notes and I just wanted to hear some! Nowadays most games keep "journals" and "quest logs" of your gameplay, and maps are fully annotated.
But it seems like you could play the old RPG games in a "window" on your desktop, and have full access to any other program you want! What "other program" do people use to take game notes for old games these days?