Honour is just their excuse, of course - it's really just about controlling women. These weak fuckers feel their control slipping and their go-to is murder.
I'm pretty sure that was the year I was mostly playing Populous, on the Amiga IIRC, or maybe spectrum. I think my little brother may have had a copy of this though. There were some good games back then, the late 80s were when they really started to branch out into genres that we still see today.
I kinda feel like I should finish the games that I start, but I often don't. I don't get a lot of screen time so if a game becomes hard work or I lose interest - I move on to something else. Feel a bit bad about leaving it unfinished tho.
WTF did I just read? Fuckin weirdos. That is uncomfortable on so many levels. Poor kid. I remain traumatised from the time I had to remove all the malware from my dad's computer. That was twenty years ago, he's dead now, but I still carry the abominable image of him in his wheelchair, pulling his decrepit knob to Thai ladyboys, with the dogs lined up on the sofa watching. Ignorance is bliss. Ho hum, conservatives eh?
I think that was kinda the idea - war production meant steel was in great demand, and this seemed like a really cheap way to make ships. I wouldn't want to try sailing one round the Caribbean, but they might have been okay in the north sea, for example. They didn't work out though, can't recall why but it's not impossible that melting may have been a factor!
So, i started gaming as a kid on the Sinclair spectrum. Though I had a Tandy trs80 before that and a zx81, iirc they both had 1k ram so weren't really able to do much other than pong. The spectrum, though, had 48k, the BBC b had 32, and they could load and save files to a cassette tape. You could do so much more with them, and on the BBC at least you could code both basic and assembly. Anyway, I really enjoyed gaming on both of them - the graphics were either 8 bit ASCII or basic line drawing, but that didn't detract from the enjoyment. And I didn't know that a better visual experience would ever be possible, I was just delighted that games existed.
Later on, I got more into coding and later still into stuff that wasn't computer related. I had a PS2 for a while but didn't use it much. Fairly recently I picked up a steam deck and have started playing games again, I've got a few decades worth of stuff that I missed - played bioshock for the first time a few months ago! I'm entranced by how much the experience has broadened and deepened from those early platformers on the spectrum - it's incredible progress.
But I don't get a lot of screen time so I'm cherry picking - a lot of my wishlist comes from recommendations on here actually.
And yeah, I've noticed that some of those recommendations are for games with retro style graphics. I understand that it's maybe easier for smaller developers - but developers can surely manage 2D without that blocky 8bit look, I think they choose not to and I think it's a fashion choice. Same goes for sound. I guess if you live long enough, your childhood stuff really does become cool again.
I've not played any of the games you mentioned - maybe I'm missing out, but there's plenty of stuff I find visually pleasing, I'm unlikely ever to run out.
Otherwise, though, I'm happy - albeit slightly perplexed - to see that the pixelated look is somewhat en vogue. Maybe it'll help the games I so enjoyed as a kid to survive and even find new audiences. It's just not my thing, not anymore. Personally, I enjoyed games like that when they were all that was available but now my eyes have been opened, I've seen the future, and have no desire to go back to my pixelated past!
Just to add that I did buy shotgun king and I'm enjoying it. But it's not plain chess, and that's what I am looking for!