lasermink wrote:
metalangel wrote:
my friend did have an Odyssey2
Sold as the Philips Videopac G7000 in Europe. I knew at least two people who had one (in Denmark) so it must have been reasonably popular. Had a spiffing Pacman clone called Munchkin which was famously the target of a successful lawsuit by Atari (who had the US console rights for Pacman but would not be ready to publish the game for another year) despite not copying any art and even being different gameplay wise in some ways (for example, there were far fewer dots and they moved about).
Yeah, the games that stuck out in my mind are:
-K.C's Crazy Chase (sequel to Munchkin) because of the rather gawky way K.C. would laugh when he'd eaten all the dots
-Air-Sea-War Battle, which I was terrible at
-Race, which was horrendously rudimentary and only stands out in my mind because you died by being squashed by another car. We (my friend had managed to convince our teacher to let him bring it to school as there were a few educational games) declared this state of unbeing, "Mashed Potatoes on the Road". This later became "Mashed Aunt Pettitoes On The Road" when we read some Beatrix Potter books.
-Skiing, which I could just about manage
-the aforementioned educational game (whose name escapes me) where you alternated between being educated and blasting the crap out of things. The voice module mangled 'That is correct' into 'let this kernet', again producing a group of laughing eight year old children.
It also produced a rather memorable moment and early lesson for me in futility when the friend started using the keyboard and programming book to do one of the exercises. He became completely absorbed in this and stayed long after school was over, determined to finish this program (as he couldn't save his work thus far) which he was convinced would be totally awesome. In the end, the program was complete, and he ran it. His reward? A row of eight stickmen on the screen moving their arms up and down while white noise blared from the speakers.