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What do I miss from the retail times? Not much really, maybe mainly so that they weren't trying to push always-online DRM (sugar-coated with "social features") or micropayments to us back then, but then we did have Starforce, which was enough to make me stop buying new PC (retail) games at one point.

I still recall what a ruckus came from, was it Starcraft, which tried to "phone home" via internet to Blizzard, without asking for a permission from the user. I guess people were more alert about privacy back then, but partly it was because it was unexpected and Blizzard tried to do it secretly IIRC. A few days ago I read about a similar ruckus on some Android app which downloads user data (even though the app itself is not a social app) and sells it further. So people don't necessarily mind apps and games collecting data, as long as the app is open about it and doesn't try to do it secretly, and maybe even lets the end-user choose whether it can do it. (I think in this particular case the app might have asked for a permission to send data, but even if the user declined, it would send it anyway. So the app was actually lying to the customers.)

But finding the game you want today is certainly much easier than back when visiting lots of game stores or even trying to find the retail games online (even though that is IMHO already part of the digital age, ie. using internet to buy your games). But... I do kinda miss the excitement of going to visit some retail game stores, seeing some (usually console) games running there, spotting some rare PC game that only you knew was highly seeked by many, etc. Sometimes the store owners were surprised and interested to know why I picked and bought some old PC game from the shelf that no one else never even checked, and they were already ready to throw it to trashbin.

I don't really care for physical manuals, maps, dices, little tiny figurines etc. I never buy those Collector's Editions which come with some plastic dragon or the head of Predator, I have enough crap on my shelves already.

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FantasyNightmare: CRT Monitors
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jamyskis: You know what the funny thing is? If you're playing DOS, C64 or NES games, these games will always look better on a CRT monitor even today. It's a shame they're not readily available.
I still have a working CRT monitor, but I moved it to the storage room. Just as a backup monitor for my older desktop retro-PC, which is currently connected to a (bit older) flatscreen monitor.

But then I use even that retro-PC quite rarely, as I play basically all DOS games on DOSBox + Munt instead. Only some hard-to-run Win9x era games are run on my retro-PCs now. DOSBox (and console emulators) offers those different filters to smooth out the blocky graphics of old games.
Post edited December 18, 2013 by timppu
CRT monitors, because it's irreplaceable, qualitatively different technology. But nothing else. Even the new Pilot fountain pens are a good replacement for the old Wing Sung. And I take issue with people's attempts to be topical by bringing up new shit that sucks. There will always be new shit that sucks, that's how life works.
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timppu: I still have a working CRT monitor, but I moved it to the storage room. Just as a backup monitor for my older desktop retro-PC, which is currently connected to a (bit older) flatscreen monitor.

But then I use even that retro-PC quite rarely, as I play basically all DOS games on DOSBox + Munt instead. Only some hard-to-run Win9x era games are run on my retro-PCs now. DOSBox (and console emulators) offers those different filters to smooth out the blocky graphics of old games.
I keep meaning to build a retro PC for late 90s games - the ones that are Windows only but still kick up with modern hardware. Maybe when I finally get around to it, we'll have a decent low-level emulator for that era of games :)

I actually had three CRT monitors which I threw away when we moved to another city, and I really regret it now. A working CRT monitor is so hard to come by nowadays.
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jamyskis: I actually had three CRT monitors which I threw away when we moved to another city, and I really regret it now. A working CRT monitor is so hard to come by nowadays.
The actual reason for me to move the CRT to storage room was the space it took on my desktop. I could put two flatscreen monitors there when I removed the CRT.

Other than that, I think I would have even preferred keep using the CRT with the retro-PC, especially as one of those flatscreen monitors is one of those oddball 5:4 aspect ratio monitors which stretch vertically all 4:3 games.
- lost family members
- my youth
- my Amiga 500
Post edited December 18, 2013 by viperfdl
Not so much for PC gaming, but for a good while I missed the feel of swapping around game cartridges. After years of playing NES, SNES, and Genesis games on the original hardware (before a flood claimed them), swapping games for the Wii VC with a few clicks feels lazy. Then I got an Atari 7800 and could get my cartridge-swapping fix again.

Also, count me in amongst the CRT-lovers. I prefer CRTs as gaming monitors for their fast response times and light gun compatibility. But they're hard to find, especially if you want one with an HDMI input- especially annoying as the new consoles apart from the Wii U seem to have all gone HDMI-only.
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DalekMan: But they're hard to find, especially if you want one with an HDMI input- especially annoying as the new consoles apart from the Wii U seem to have all gone HDMI-only.
This might help you.
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jamyskis: So's the occasional bout of fresh air.
I'll open a window while I shop in my underwear >:D
What do I miss? Hmmmm.

-complex games
-that feel of going to the store and checking out the selection of games
-gaming as an outcast's hobby without the politics and agendas that people try to inject into it these days
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Tarm: Manuals big and heavy enough to kill a horse with!

When I buy a complicated RPG or strategy game now all I get is a tutorial, installation instructions and a couple pictures with arrows to buttons telling me what they do. :(
Well also a shitty edited pdf file that either doesn't really explain stuff that needs explaining or makes it stupidly hard to find everything related to something. Who the fuck makes all these lousy pdfs?
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amok: What I do like about the new games is that they are so intuitively designed and have so good in game explanation that you no longer need manuals big and heavy enough to kill a horse with :)
Not true for all games. When it comes to simulators or complex strategy games, those big horse killers would be quite handy.
Post edited December 18, 2013 by AFnord
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tinyE: NO FUCKING CELL PHONES!
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tomimt: I didn't know people having sex with their phones was that big issue these days.
I don't know how far the relationship goes as far as intercourse is concerned, but many people do seem to be married to their phones.
I wish I'd known CRT monitors would come in demand again. At the time I tried to get rid of mine, noone would have taken it for free and I had to throw it away, even though it was still working ok. :P

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JudasIscariot: -gaming as an outcast's hobby without the politics and agendas that people try to inject into it these days
Do you miss being an outcast, too? ;)
Post edited December 18, 2013 by Leroux
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tomimt: I didn't know people having sex with their phones was that big issue these days.
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AlKim: I don't know how far the relationship goes as far as intercourse is concerned, but many people do seem to be married to their phones.
Relevant.
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Leroux: I wish I'd known CRT monitors would come in demand again. At the time I tried to get rid of mine, noone would have taken it for free and I had to throw it away, even though it was still working ok. :P

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JudasIscariot: -gaming as an outcast's hobby without the politics and agendas that people try to inject into it these days
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Leroux: Do you miss being an outcast, too? ;)
Now I get to choose whether to be social or a hermit :P
I miss going into town to buy a new game on a Saturday, and then reading the manual while smoking a cigarette on the bus on the way home.