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The Ultimate Games
Collection for PC
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20
Brilliant Pacman Variants on One CD -
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Including
these and more!
- PAC-MAN
- SUPER
PACMAN
- PAC-O-MANIA
- 3D
PACMAN
- MS
PACMAN
- GRANDPA
PACMAN
- GOBSTOPPER
GOBBLER
- PAC-CHAP
- PACMAN
2000
- PAC-MAN
WORLDS
- YUMMI
- PAC-MANHATTAN
- PAC-MANIC
- PACMANIA
2D
- and
many more...
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THE
ULTIMATE PAC-MAN
COLLECTION
FOR YOUR PC
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If you've
been living on planet Zyfoid
for the past 20 years your probably thinking "what is pacman?" Well
basically it is a maze game were you have to pickup pills and dodge the
ghosts -
Simple
but very addictive..
Are
you mad about Pacman? well Pacman FrEnZy features
20 FULL Pac-man games or
variants. Everything from a near perfect conversion of the original
arcade game to the many graphically enhanced versions!
Simply
to use CD, Simply Insert and the CD auto-boots to an easy to use menu.
A
perfect Addition to your Games Collection!
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Remember the good old days of gaming, when
there were only 5 pixels
in the protagonist and your imagination could turn them into a heroic
figure of Schwarzenegger proportions? When the enemies and the heroes
were distinguished by colour and you only needed one button on the
joystick? Well times have changed and technology has moved on. Pulling
my old Commodore 64 or Atari out of the back of the cupboard and
setting them up often takes more time than the nostalgic pang lasts.
I’ve also noticed that some of my old disks are starting to age
and
become corrupted. Enter the Internet.
The wonderfully
technologically gifted and giving Internet populace is out in force in
their attempts to preserve the older side of gaming. Remakes and
Emulators for almost any old machine can be found around the Internet.
Emulators act as a layer between old software and new hardware allowing
modern PCs to run programs that such hardware was never meant to see.
Commodore 64, Amiga, NES, Master System, Arcade Machines and more have
all been emulated and the necessary programs placed online for
download, usually for free.
Emulation is not a new idea. I had a
hardware emulator for the VIC20 that plugged into the back of my
Commodore 64 and allowed the use of the older VIC20 cartridges with the
new hardware (I never actually owned a VIC20 or any programs for it but
that’s another issue). Emulator popularity has been fading in and
out
for many years, only coming into many people’s attention with the
release of Bleem!, a Playstation emulator for PC that was released
while the PSOne still held a dominant share of the video game market.
Bleemcast (a Playstation emulator for the Sega Dreamcast) soon followed
causing one of the more interesting video game legal battles as Sony
fought to have the emulator shut down. However, the emulators have a
strong following and very active user base.
Emulators are easy to
find and download. Simply search for the system you want and add the
word emulator to the end (e.g. “SNES Emulator”) and
you’ll probably
come up with a lot of hits. Be slightly wary as some emulator sites
will either be false links or may contain pornographic ads. Setting the
emulators up to run is usually fairly straightforward and there’s
a
fair chance that you’ll be able to find some documentation and
help.
Some of the newer systems require a BIOS image to be installed with the
emulator. This is to get around the legal issues raised by Sony in the
Bleem! legal battles by requiring you to be in possession of a
Playstation BIOS (and hence, presumably, a Playstation) in order to
play the games on your computer. Making a BIOS image to load into your
computer will most likely be beyond your technical expertise, but a
quick check of your console’s case will reveal the file you need
to get
and then it’s as simple as searching the internet for a BIOS
image that
matches the BIOS you already own.
Of interest are the PC
emulators now available. Windows no longer has very good support for
older DOS-based games so there are a few emulators out there now to
emulate the DOS environment. DOSBox (http://dosbox.sourceforge.net/) is
probably the best known of the crop. There are also game-specific
emulators such as ScummVM (www.scummvm.org) or DOOM Legacy
(http://legacy.newdoom.com/) that focus specifically on certain games
and hence are able to improve the experience for those particular
titles.
Once you have yourself an emulator
you’ll need to get
yourself some programs to run with it. These programs are called
‘ROMs’
and are images of the original storage device that the program came on
(be it a cartridge, tape, floppy or other). The process of creating a
ROM is probably far too technical for the vast majority of computer
users so you’re probably going to have to find a
‘backup’ from
somewhere to download. This is where the venture gets slightly foggy.
Basically the deal is that you can only have a program ROM if you own
the original program. So if you have boxes of old Amiga disks, NES
cartridges, or other old gaming programs stored away somewhere,
you’re
in luck, otherwise you’re treading on legally shifty ground.
While it
can easily be argued that the downloading of a 1987 computer game is of
no real consequence to the company that has in all likelihood closed
down, copyright doesn’t actually expire for 50 years and computer
games
just haven’t been around that long.
Online ‘emulation’ is a new
area now being explored. The idea is that you simply play the game in
your browser through a Java applet or Flash application. These might
not always strictly be emulated programs but many remakes are feature
perfect with the originals. The graphics, sounds, and game play remain
intact. One excellent place to look for online games is Every Video
Game (http://www.everyvideogame.com). While the site does not in fact
contain ‘every video game’ it does have a very large list
of old games
from the arcades, GameBoy, NES, and Master System all playable through
your browser. Many remakes can also be found at Shockwave’s site
(http://www.shockwave.com/sw/actiongames/arcade_classics/).
Some
of the old games have even been remade and updated for this modern
world we now live in. Try doing a search for remakes of a game title
you particularly enjoyed and you may be surprised at what you find.
There are games that have been updated to be 3D, such as some old
favourites of mine: Pac man
(http://www.caiman.us/scripts/fw/f1292.html) and Barbarian
(http://www.dgdevteam.tk/), and while these might not always be
brilliant games or remakes in their own right, the thought and effort
put in often leads to an enjoyable diversion. There are also more
traditional versions of games that have just updated the code as well
as possibly the graphics so that they can still be run.
So if
you’re feeling nostalgic or just can’t get the hang of
these
new-fangled games that require you to push fifty buttons in a precise
configuration just to jump, you may like to check out the emulation and
remake scene. It’s surprisingly entertaining to go back in time
to when
games were simple yet fun.
Daniel Punch
M6.Net Web Helpers
http://www.m6.net
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Daniel_Punch
Item
is
Supplied in SEALED DVD CASE - ALL images are for illustraion only. All
Trademarks Acknowledged.
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