I have signed up as a volunteer reviewer for the Centre for Computing History wesbite so will be going back and playing a fair few of these games. I have started with my favourites, a lot of which aren't considered classics by any means. I guess we made the most of what we had back then. The game I still go back to is Action Biker on the C64. A simple £1.99 game based around Clumsy Colin from KP Skips but I still love playing it. One guy on a retro games podcast I listen to loves it as well but gets a lot of stick from everyone else. I guess with no endless freemium games to move to, we persevered with whatever we had bought.
PC: World of Warcraft (up to Pandaria);
Xbox: Can't decide between Halo 3 and Fallout 3 - Both amazing games that I sank way too much time into;
Tablet: Hearthstone
I'm currently loving PUBG on the Xbox but don't get anywhere near the time to play I used to sadly.
I think if you presented kids today with these systems/games, they'd just look with confusion and disdain - their loss!
Anyone remember a game called Powermonger? It was ace.
Spectrum games from my yoof that I loved:
Manic Minor
Monty Mole
PC: World of Warcraft (up to Pandaria);
Xbox: Can't decide between Halo 3 and Fallout 3 - Both amazing games that I sank way too much time into;
Tablet: Hearthstone
I'm currently loving PUBG on the Xbox but don't get anywhere near the time to play I used to sadly.
Gauntlet 2 - Amstrad CPC 6128
Sonic 2 - Mega Drive
BBC micro - jet pack
Another BBC classic or 2, Chuckie Egg, and Repton.
Grand theft auto all of them but especially the original on ps 1
&
Gta vice city
& gta V was epic
Gauntlet 2 - Amstrad CPC 6128. Amazing game, but took about 40 mins to load. We'd stick it in, go for a kick about come back and what felt like 80% of the time it had failed to load with a memory error. The arcade 4 player version could be one of the best arcade machines ever