I’m 6-7. I’m at my grandparents house. He’s got one of those old-timey Pong consoles that you plug into the TV; it had like 5-6 different ‘sport’ modes (Tennis, Squash etc etc), but ultimately it was still a few pixels moving up and down or maybe left and right.
And it was amazing.
What’s your earliest gaming memory?
Seeing an Atari 2600, the original woodgrain model, at my cousin’s house and playing Space Invaders, Adventure and the one with cowboys.
I was convinced the cartridges contained reels of film, but I couldn’t figure out how to make that work with all the different possibilities. I was only 4 or 5 at the time.
My cousin opened up a cartridge and I was amazing to see the circuit board with a couple of chips on inside. Blew my mind.
first, some pong-like game on someone’s zx spectrum in early 80ties. it was brief and short but very first experience. later, karateka, tetris, games like that on my and others C64.
the first game i was hooked to was Elite on same C64. it was just wow. 3d, freedom, trading, pirating, leveling up. i played only Elite for long time, played it on Amiga and my first 386 later on. still stands as my first serious gaming memory.
I remember being in a friend’s house. He asks me if i knew what golden eye is. I said no, and so he takes me to his room. He turns on the tv, so I ask “oh we are going to watch a james bond movie?” He laughs and says no, and presses a button on a wierd plastic box that suddenly comes to life! The tv suddenly changes, and some wierd scene plays until we get to something that looks like a dvd menu. He then gives me a wierd ass controller.
I then spent the day figuring how to stop looking up while running away from my friend headshotting me repeatadly while giggling like a schoolgirl. I enjoyed every second of it. My brain was firing up and never have I felt so excited to even being aware of such an experience existing.
3-4 years old, my father was sitting down and I was leaning on him and played through Kirby’s Dream Land on the original Game Boy from start to finish.
I recall finding the hidden area in level 1-1 in Super Mario Bros 3. In it is a 3 made of coins. I remember going “look mom! That’s how old I am!”
I remember playing the Neverhood on our first family computer back when I was 4. The art direction and story were really oddly appealing as a kid. I still think it’s a very underrated art style.
I love claymation! Neverhood was fully hand-posed, and it’s an amazing style
My dad coming home with a ZX81. I played various games on it but the one I remember most fondly and load up occasionally today, was Forty Niner. We needed to get a 16K RAM Pack for it so it definitely wasn’t the first I played on that system.
Duke Nukem 3D
It’s either Sonic the hedgehog on the Megadrive or Tetris on the GameBoy. I don’t remember a time where I didn’t have them.
Playing Super Mario Bros. on my Dad’s NES. Probably in 89.
Pole vaulting in summer games!
My cousin had a bunch of Tiger Electronic and Game and Watch games just kinda tossed in a bag. I really did not like him as a kid but boy did I spend a lot of time at his house playing those games.
Finishing the first level of Doom II and thinking i had beat the whole game. hehehe
You’re already ahead of me. I’m 36 (almost) and I’ve never played any of those older DOOM games. I’ll hand it my gamer card at the next meet-up I guess.
Pong.
My first proper gaming memory was when I played Myst on my dad’s computer, I didn’t get it at the time, but later when me and my sister got our own computer I played it much more intently, then came Riven and The Journeyman Project 3: Legacy of Time, they were really cool.
My first genuine FPS experience was Half-Life, but I was too scared of all the monsters, so I turned on cheats, god mode, get all weappons and make monsters ignore you.
My first multiplayer gaming experience was when me and my class mates got the demo of UT99 running on the school computers and gamed after hours, I sucked, but it was really fun regardless.
Not my first memory but legacy of time was something I loved. The puzzles and bad fmv cutscenes. Good stuff