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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. :)
For my entry I present to you a Digital VT131 from 1982 which was left by the previous owner when my parents moved onto our farm in 1991. Even though this dumb terminal did not have have any specific gaming capabilities, it was where my brothers and I first drafted our action platform game Windys, something which we would later make into a full fledged free software title using GAMBAS. Although limited in its capabilities, the Digital VT131 did allows us to make our childhood visions come to life on screen, even if only as a still ASCII doodle.
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This is my Telejogo, (Telegame in Brazillian portuguese) created by Philco and Ford in 1977.

Only 3 games on it: Pong and 2 variations from it.

It was originally from my father. I first played it when i was 5 in 1996 and never had so much fun from a "simple" console, compared to what was in the market in that time.
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That's my new (I'm breaking the rules!) machine, Toshiba T3200SX from 1989. 16MHz Intel CPU, 1 MB RAM in 8 kgs of portability with an awesome monochrome plasma display. Got it last year, it had been imported to Russia from Finland. I am into retrocomputing and downgrade (and gog.com was one of the reasons behind it for sure), so I'm gonna put it to good use starting with this little GOG ANSI art.
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Interviewer: Tell us about your origin.

Dell “Chip” Pentium III: Back in ’99, I journeyed cross-country until some buff dude placed me on a doorstep. My owner took me in and fed me lots o’ disc-meals. I ate up loads o’ adventures: opening Baldur’s Gate, alleviating Torment in the Planescape, even questing with Wizards and Warriors.

Interviewer: And your appeal?

Dell: I was top o’ the line in ’99, ergonomically designed for deep dungeon delving sessions.

Interviewer: And in 2008?

Dell: Mr. I. Mac came to town, with his emulation nation!! What a simulacrum-bum!! Been lookin’ for work ever since…
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When I was a child I received an Intellivision for my birthday. I was really happy because it was my first console. I remember many hours playing Burgertime, AD&D (purple volcan level was really hard).

Good Old Times I think... So this is my Good Old Stuff... My Intellivision (with my cartridges), a portatil baseball game, my old Gravis gamepad and 2 of my favorite games Baldur's Gate and Neverwinter Nights.
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My first hurrah into gaming came on December 25th 1977. Yes SEVENTY-SEVEN..... it was an ancient "Grandstand" video games console! I still fondly remember the motorbike game (except for it's actual title :D) where you did races and stunts such as bus jumps etc. And ever since I've been a total game addict that has hated school, homework, college and fulltime work due to there curse of eating up valuable gaming time! :D

Sorry I've got no pics so can't really enter the comp - but thought it worth mentioning as it was as far back as 1977!

And GOG please get these forums sorted out - this is the fifth time I've had to try about 8 times to actually get a message to damn well post!
Post edited March 06, 2015 by JMayer70
This is how i discovered computers, gaming and RPGs. Good old games, in the pictures below every one of them should qualify. Sadly the 500k image limit makes it hard to show the dust on them, most probably older than most users reading this!

Hope you will enjoy a blast from the past
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This is actually a sad story about my Amiga 600. It was a replacement for my 500 which I spilled water on and ended up spending over $200 to try to repair twice. Neither repair attempt succeeded. The 600 never did run all of my games successfully because it came with a newer version of Kickstart. Included in my picture is the 600, an additional floppy drive, a joystick, and some my favorite games. As a bonus, I also found while digging around, a Commodore 64 tape drive and, of all things, one of the joysticks to my Colecovision!
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My father bought me this Apple IIe enhanced computer with 128k RAM, a Duo disk drive, joystick, and color monitor when I went off to college in 1985. I played Ultima IV & V, Bard's Tale 1 & 2, and Wizardry 3 among other games while at college. My wife wonders why I keep this computer in the back of my closet. The answer is obvious, until GOG completely backs up my collection I need a way to play my good old games (especially the ones I never had time to play in college).
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This is my TurboGrafx-16 Entertainment SuperSystem, made in 1987. It was the first console released in the 16-bit era, and the first system to utilize CD-ROM peripherals. Originally, my father bought this system at the Radio Shack electronics store, and brought my family into video gaming as we know it. Little did he know, I would spend countless hours after school perfecting my hand-eye coordination on this arcade type system, and more often than not, relentlessly beating my family in every multiplayer game. Though I’ve had many memories with it, it’s the only thing I have left of my father.
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This is my first computer I owned. It's a typical Commodore C64 with 1530 Datassette, joystick and ROM cartridge. The computer was bought in Austria in 1985 and then smuggled (covered with bananas) into what was then Yugoslavia. Datassette was bought locally. Strange that you could bought datassette legally, but not the computer. I guess that was socialist logic. And finally ROM cartridge was made inside Yugoslavia (Bosnia in fact) by some smart individuals.
I actually consider myself light years ahead from my friends which had "only" ZX Spectrum.
Oh, almost forget: I used it for GAMING (but got it on pretense that it's a great school accessory)
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Greetings everyone. Let me show you my device: it's a made in Russia replica of the ZX-Spectrum 48k. Actually it was bought for my elder brother in 1993 and became my first video-gaming experience. It's still fully operational (what I can't say about the tape recorder, which "died" more than 10 years ago). Some of the cable are replaced with custom-made cables long ago. Thanks to this computer I have met such legendary games like "Elite" and just wonderful like "Quazatron". Thank you for your attention.
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When my Microsoft Comfort Curve-keyboard broke down (mostly WASD wear&tear) about 6 months ago, I immediately pulled out my trusty IBM Model M (with PS/2 connector) and have been using it ever since. #clicketyclack

Featured above my trusty buckling-spring keyboard are the USB-version of the classic C64 Competition Pro joystick on the right, great for good old games. And on the left is the fabulous C64 Direct-to-TV (C64DTV) which contains the classic Commodore 64 homecomputer implemented in a single chip by hardware genius Jeri Ellsworth (Circuit Girl). #retro

These are only 3 of my gaming treasures!
:)
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The first TV I had, which eventually became the first TV I ever kept in my room.
I never had a console as a kid, I had to borrow a relative’s SNES. Much like the TV, it too was outdated; but I made some of my finest memories playing Secret of Mana on that thing.
It now resides in my basement; my parents have on several occasions attempted to throw it out, but I keep it because I know that someday I’m going to buy my own SNES with the same games, and then I’m going to relieve my childhood.
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This is the first gaming gear I ever saw, it was my dad’s, a Quickshot Warrior analog joystick. It was a real treat to play flight simulators or racing games using it. Those suction cups me and my brother were its only defence against gaming passions that overtook us at play. Speaking of passion, nothing could induce a fiercer fit than rolling one of the calibration wheels mid-play during a particularly fierce dogfight. I can still remember the feeling of controlling a Podracer in Star Wars Episode 1 Racer, like it was designed for it.
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