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Earl Green

You control an early-thirty-something television writer whose goals in life seem
to be collecting things that remind him of the good old days. Decent points can
be scored for snatching up vintage Star
Wars toys and rare music from the maze-like playing field, but major bonus
points are accrued for rescuing pieces of classic video game history, whether
they're old Odyssey2 cartridges, vintage arcade game
marquees, or assorted merchandise related to old games. You can only advance to
the next screen by achieving total happiness: move your listless
older-than-Generation-X-er through a relentless onslaught of dull television writing assignments, bill payments, tornado warnings and premature mid-life
crises to reach the safety of home and friendly bonus kitties at the end of the
level.
(Mr. & Mrs. Green [under license from Bally/Midway],
sometime in the early 70s)

I don't know if you've been able to tell or not, but I love old video
games. With the revelation that my eyesight would keep me from ever becoming an
astronaut or, for that matter, a Jedi Knight, my youthful dreams were dashed
into dust. Enter Pac-Man. Enter the Odyssey2. Suddenly, I had
a new obsession. Not that I cared any less for space travel, fictional and
otherwise, but here was something that would bring me about as close to that
dream as I was likely to get.
It's impossible to underestimate the effect that video games had on my life.
I suddenly wanted to learn how to program my own games...and the
Odyssey2's Computer Intro! cartridge was hardly
up to the task, so the begging for a computer began. I had originally beseeched
my parents to get me a Commodore 64, since this was what everyone else had, but
they wisely got a one-ton, Apple-compatible Franklin Ace
1000. I loved that thing. (I still have it, and it still works!) And while I
did make quite a bit of headway into game design, I was distracted by other
things: a growing fascincation with writing and computer graphics, and an
obsession with the possibilities offered by a newfangled gadget called a modem.
By this point, we had also gotten a Franklin Ace 2200. I was screamin' along
at 300 baud back then, running my own BBS on the old Ace 1000 (with one floppy
drive, no less) and having a blast.
In an only slightly indirect way, you have Pac-Man to thank for this
web site. And I have Pac-Man to thank for my career track. Pretty
weird, huh?
Earl's Cool Stuff
See my game room
See my collection
How to run your games through a VCR
Drop me a line
Add a Phosphor Dot Fossils link to your web site
If you're still morbidly curious, I have a more in-depth bio here.
Rating:
Two quarters - worth playing, but could use some more work.
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