Philippine Daily Inquirer

Blast from the past: Old Internet games are back

- AFP

WASHINGTON—For those old enough to remember console games like “Asteroids” or “Red Baron,” from the 1970s and 1980s: The games are back.

The Internet Archive this week launched its “Console Living Room,” offering browser emulations of pre-Internet era video games that used to be played on consoles from firms like Atari, Coleco or Magnavox.

“For a generation of children, the most exciting part of Christmas morning was dis- a large box under the tree, ripping it apart, and looking at an exciting, colorful box promising endless video games. At home! Right in your living room!,” Jason Scott, of the Internet Archive, said in a blog post.

Scott added that the games are being adapted by “an army of volunteer elves” who “will be improving them across the next few days.”

“Sound is still not enabled, but is coming soon,” he said.

The initiative “harkens back to the revolution of the change in the hearth of the home, when the fireplace and later television were transforme­d by gaming consoles into a center of video-game entertainm­ent,” says the webpage devoted to the games.

The effort will enable a new generation to discover games that used to be on a cartridge inserted into a console, with titles including “Ninja Golf” and “Ms. Pac-Man.”

The games, with crude graphics and sounds com pared to today’s programs, are still valued by nostalgia buffs who recall their pioneering technology that brought games into the home from video arcades.

The Internet Archive, known for its “Wayback Machine” that keeps websites even after they are shut down, was founded in 1996 and helps researcher­s, historians, scholars and others find historical collection­s that exist in digital format.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines