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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. :)
My old Gameboy Colour. This got me through some very boring days when I was away at boarding school.

And my Pokémon games too. If I didn't 100% the Gen 1 Pokédex then I came pretty damn close. I remember I had to use a second Gameboy to transfer some starters over from Blue or Red to Yellow because I just could not beat the first gym with Pikachu.

And I learned not to rename characters in a game because I'll only end up forgetting who's who.
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gameboy.jpg (287 Kb)
Old Amiga 4000DT (1994) lately built in new LIAN LI PC-600B case. Contains amazing 6 internal floppy drives, 2 SATA SSDs, 3 CPUs (PPC, 060 and 030), SCSI-3, Mediator busboard, LAN+USBs, Radeon 9200 256MB PCI and Terratec PCI. I use PC and Amiga for gaming. Got a collection of boxed C64, Amiga and PC titles (relay.pp.fi/images/GAMES/Gamecollection.JPG). For Amiga my best memory for was to complete to E-L-I-T-E status in Amiga Elite. For PC my best memories are co-op games I used to host like this: relay.pp.fi/gamehistory.html

2nd picture presents my first Prof Competition joystick from 1985. It still works.
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Here are my top 3 wow moments from left 2 right:

Atari 130 XE: The machine that started it all for me. Had some nice games (Spindizzy, Archeron ...)

Amiga Mouse: Do you remember your first time, when you spend the whole night in front of your Computer? I do. It was spring '89 and I got an A500. Oh boy. Colors...Sound... It was amazing!

Game Gear: Ah Sega.. I miss you so much as a hardware vendor. This behemoth of a portable was rather heavy, but it had colors and backlit display! Take that Gameboy! :P

Rest is to be told another time ;)
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A lot of awesome entries here, and sadly my Spectrum and NES clones, and the 1 or 2 one-game (Game & Watch maybe?) handhelds, were thrown away over the years, and either the same happened with the few old calculators (including a TI older than me, with way too many buttons for my young self at the time) or either way I can't find them anymore. But what the heck, my current setup is also "old", if on a different scale, so why not? :)

Description: Current rig built and with most components still from seven years ago. TV tuner (internal, but can see the remote) is ten, switch nine, monitor eight, keyboard about the same. On the pad (detail shot), Logitech MX518, which served me well for 8.5 years and still works, bar one button, next to its very recent ROCCAT Kone XTD replacement... Which (ahem!) needed replacing under warranty after a month (yep, scroll wheel). For added flavor, games and 12 y/o phone, which I still use. Shots taken with 9 y/o camera, which sadly couldn't be included in frame for that reason.
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rig.jpg (443 Kb)
mice.jpg (263 Kb)
Here's my Atari collection, including an Atari 2600 console, 2 standard joysticks, 3 paddle controllers, 2 Spectravideo joysticks, 2 Competition Pro Joysticks and 48 games. Still in working condition, though I need a television that takes analogue signal to run it. As I have space for another photo, I've also included some mega drive games I own. Unfortunately my Mega Drive II console and Gameboy (original black and white brick) are in storage somewhere and I couldn't dig them up in time for this competition.
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atari.jpg (433 Kb)
Hi,
Here is my old ATARI 800 XL. It’s a complete set, and what’s best in it, every part still works perfectly, as you can see on the image. We got it as a Christmas gift from our grandfather when I was a kid. I was playing games of course, classics like Joust, Boulder Dash and others too, but also programming in LOGO. On the left you can see ATARI 1050, a disk drive (instead of cassettes) which loads a game in minute or two. Listings printed in magazines behind a drive, can be retyped and run as game.
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Official Entry:

When I was three years old, I held my first NES controller. That was the beginning. Twenty-eight years later, my love of video games is going strong. Though I'm also into computer gaming, Nintendo will always hold a special place in my heart, not only because it started it all, but because I have the best memories of time with my family, gathered around a Nintendo console. My husband and I are the original owners of all the systems in the picture, most of which were gifts for birthdays and Christmases over the years. All are still played regularly!

http://i.imgur.com/U8DItdz.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/H1M4xcp.jpg

*The links are for larger versions of my two photos - makes it easier to see some of the smaller items.
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Awesome contest GOG! You made me bring my old love back to life!
20150301_161920 is my first videogame console (still working) and my favorite games I played on it - Terminator 7 Super Design Ending-Man BS-500 AS, clone of Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), popular here during the 90s, before the real NES got imported. I remember my parents gifted it to me for Christmas and I spend countless enjoyable hours during 4 or 5 years.
20150301_181505 my first handheld - an old Russian Электроника ИМ-02 with game Ну, погоди! That involved wolf gathering eggs from the screen corners.
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My Commodore 64, Apple IIe, Macintosh 512k, and my Osborne1 from a computer swap in the 90s. Fond memories of coding on similar hardware in my youth. Also included is my old Pacman handheld game which I modded when I was 12 years old with a headphone jack, volume ripped out of a radio, and a homemade chickenwire/hotglue/hockeytape joystick port to connect an Atari Joystick using a woodburner to solder.
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My Atari 2600, sitting on top of my Space Invaders arcade machine. It makes an awesome table.

I've had the Atari my entire life, have about 150-ish games for it. The Space Invaders table was a gift from a coworker.

My son and I have had a lot of fun with this stuff.
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retro.jpg (366 Kb)
Did this close yet?
I would, but I'm afraid a court order might be obtained, ordering me never to do so again.
avatar
leon30: Awesome contest GOG! You made me bring my old love back to life!
20150301_161920 is my first videogame console (still working) and my favorite games I played on it - Terminator 7 Super Design Ending-Man BS-500 AS, clone of Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), popular here during the 90s, before the real NES got imported. I remember my parents gifted it to me for Christmas and I spend countless enjoyable hours during 4 or 5 years.
20150301_181505 my first handheld - an old Russian Электроника ИМ-02 with game Ну, погоди! That involved wolf gathering eggs from the screen corners.
i cant believe it, i had the ending man also, i am from argentina hahaha could not be further away, the magic of imports haha
While I have many items that would git this bill; my original Amiga 2000 with RGB monitor, the Epyx 500XJ joystick, or even the 1x SCSI CD-ROM drive (with cartridge)... Nothing will compare to:
The first generation Sound Blaster!
Behold all of it's 8-bit glory. Notice the analog wheel next to the head phone jack that was used to manually adjust the volume. How advanced it was by putting the drivers on both 5 1/4 AND 3 1/2 floppy disks. If I didn't lower the image size you can clearly make out the $116 unit price on the receipt.

Yes, this is truly my prize possession. With the Sound Blaster installed, it ushered in a whole new era of gaming. No longer were we stuck with just the buzzes and boops of the internal speaker. We could have digitized voices and FM quality sound.

As the box says, "The all-in-one sound card with all the great features you dreamt of"
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Hi!
Is it over?

Thanks! :)