Your first shooter?
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silvergunner
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Konami's Scramble was the first game i played in an arcade, let alone first shmup.
My first home console shooter compy was Snoopy and The Red Baron on the VCS - but that Christmas (1983) i'd also got Defender, Asteroids and Imagic's Demon Attack.
On the computer side of things Firetrack was the first - although i owned an Aquarius before a VCS - that didn't sport a shooter (and Night Hunter doesn't count IMO)
My first home console shooter compy was Snoopy and The Red Baron on the VCS - but that Christmas (1983) i'd also got Defender, Asteroids and Imagic's Demon Attack.
On the computer side of things Firetrack was the first - although i owned an Aquarius before a VCS - that didn't sport a shooter (and Night Hunter doesn't count IMO)
Yup, the good old SC-3000H distributed by John Sands electronics here in Australia. Ahh, the memories... I still remember the day my dad walked in the door with that thing, and how my mum went off at him for "wasting" all that money on a toy (only 30 days later the woman would be hooked on some Dungeons and Dragons game... HAHAHA).Ed Oscuro wrote:You had a -H? Lucky...Tape? Maybe not so lucky...
Heck, I could've just checked your infobox to see where you were from. I hadn't thought much about it before, but SC-3000 let me know you were Australian (or maybe NZ'der). Interesting. I've got a 3000 myself, just the crummy chiclet keyboard model...no tape drive either, so far.
Tape was bloody awful, but I haven't found anyone who had Vortex Blaster on cartridge, nor are there any dumps of it anywhere on the net. Only thing I could find was a guy in NZ who has a wav file dump of the tape (which I can use to re-record now that my tape is stuffed).

In 1986, when I was 6, my father bought a Commodore 64 for christmas, with pole position, other games I don't remember, and a clone of space invaders, with very simple graphics, in black'n'white, no protective barriers, very simple gameplay: I don't remind the title, but it was my first shooter ever 

Back in the 80's at the arcade in Meijers, I recall playing some Defender (liked it), Space Invaders (hated it), and Zaxxon (ok).
I realized that I liked the genre when I had my NES and played Gradius and Zanac. These titles were difficult (I was 12) and just found my self trying harder and having fun doing it. A few years later I would get a TG-16 and shortly after I would shell out $70 for R-type and that was all she wrote. I literally spent a whole weekend spanning around 30 hours playing R-type using the every bit of the 21 credits over and over just to get better at it.
I realized that I liked the genre when I had my NES and played Gradius and Zanac. These titles were difficult (I was 12) and just found my self trying harder and having fun doing it. A few years later I would get a TG-16 and shortly after I would shell out $70 for R-type and that was all she wrote. I literally spent a whole weekend spanning around 30 hours playing R-type using the every bit of the 21 credits over and over just to get better at it.
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zero.otaku
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The first shooter I ever played was either River Raid or Space Invaders for the Atari 2600 when I was about three. River Raid was my all-time favorite game for about two years until I got an NES, so I think that's where my love of the shooting genre was born. After that, I didn't really play them fanatically or anything, I liked Life Force and Guardian Legend and Super R-Type was the second SNES game I bought (the pack-in Super Mario World being my first). I didn't really get hardcore into shooters until I got my Japanese Saturn and Radiant Silvergun. After that, I was hopelessly addicted and remain so to this day, though I still completely suck at 'em.
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RoninBuddha
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I'll have to check out that game. Right now I've got Borderline, which is...eh. When I was in Australia I had wanted to find one of the John Sands models; perhaps it's best I didn't due to the different video standard.elvis wrote:Yup, the good old SC-3000H distributed by John Sands electronics here in Australia. Ahh, the memories... I still remember the day my dad walked in the door with that thing, and how my mum went off at him for "wasting" all that money on a toy (only 30 days later the woman would be hooked on some Dungeons and Dragons game... HAHAHA).Ed Oscuro wrote:You had a -H? Lucky...Tape? Maybe not so lucky... :lol:
Heck, I could've just checked your infobox to see where you were from. I hadn't thought much about it before, but SC-3000 let me know you were Australian (or maybe NZ'der). Interesting. I've got a 3000 myself, just the crummy chiclet keyboard model...no tape drive either, so far.
Tape was bloody awful, but I haven't found anyone who had Vortex Blaster on cartridge, nor are there any dumps of it anywhere on the net. Only thing I could find was a guy in NZ who has a wav file dump of the tape (which I can use to re-record now that my tape is stuffed). :)
I'm mostly happy because I have a Card Catcher and some of the better card games: Zoom 909, H.E.R.O., and something else.
Need the power supply though.
i could say a few 2600 games, but honestly i give r-type on the master system that award as my 1st shooter
Damn Tim, you know there are quite a few Americans out there who still lives in tents due to this shitty economy, and you're dropping loads on a single game which only last 20 min. Do you think it's fair? How much did you spend this time?
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Monk 0 Nuggets
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What first sparked my interest was U.N. Squadron for the SNES. That was when I was about 10 years old probably. My bro rented it and I played it briefly and thought it was just... the bees fucking knees. Years later I bought the cartridge from a local game shop.
That game really introduced me to how good a shmup can be.
Years pass and I get into Raiden Fighters Jet at the arcade. I really get into it. RFJET has rekindled a new fondness for shmups, and has brought me here. And consequently, I am now diving into Mushihime-sama... what a fascinating level of gameplay. I'm pretty convinced at this point that shmups are freaking awesome.
That game really introduced me to how good a shmup can be.
Years pass and I get into Raiden Fighters Jet at the arcade. I really get into it. RFJET has rekindled a new fondness for shmups, and has brought me here. And consequently, I am now diving into Mushihime-sama... what a fascinating level of gameplay. I'm pretty convinced at this point that shmups are freaking awesome.
STG Weekly!, 1cc's, twitch, XBL: DJ Aquazition
The in-game papers prove that being the paperboy is actually a position of the greatest importance,
ranking alongside top elected officials for notoriety. -Ed Oscuro
The in-game papers prove that being the paperboy is actually a position of the greatest importance,
ranking alongside top elected officials for notoriety. -Ed Oscuro