Playable for free in your browser
The next time you’re looking for a semi-mindless distraction on your computer, consider checking out the Internet Archive’s now-even-more-massive . The preservation website recently added 2,500 games to its already impressive roster.
This batch of titles was made possible in large part b🔯y , a🧸ccording to archivist Jason Scott.
“What makes the collection more than just a pile of old, now-playable games, is how it has to take head-on the problems of software preservation and history,” he explained. “Having an old executable and a scanned copy of the manual represents only the first few steps. DOS has remained consistent in some ways over the last (nearly) 40 years, but a lot has changed under the hood and programs were sometimes only written to work on very specific hardware and a very specific setup. They were released, sold some amount of copies, and then disappeared off the shelves, if not everyone’s memories. It is all these extra steps, under the hood, of acquisition and configuration, that represents the hardest work by the eXoDOS project, and I recognize that long-time and Herculean effort.”
Scott is careful to note that “not all games are enjoyable to play,” but really, that’s part of the fun. Once the novelty wears off, you can return to classics like , , and .
As before, you can right inside🐭 your web browser via the Internet Archive.
My first order of business is , a game I forgot existed until right this second. Its predecessors were ওclassic computer-lab fodde🧸r way back when. I love me some MECC.
[Internet Archive Blogs]
Published: Oct 15, 2019 12:00 pm