sierra ❤️
also bill pogue
From video gaming to card games and stuff in between, if it's gaming you can probably discuss it here!
Please Note: Gaming memes are permitted to be posted on Meme Mondays, but will otherwise be removed in an effort to allow other discussions to take place.
See also Gaming's sister community Tabletop Gaming.
This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
Westwood studios. Command and conquer tiberian sun was my very first computer game, which I loved dearly (and still have on my computer since it’s freeware now and has been fan patched for modern systems)
Well and then came EA.
Lucas Arts
Are they still around? /j
Yep, some classic point and click games, like Full Throttle. It's from games like that that I learned Mark Hamill is an amazing voice actor.
Electronic Arts :(
Yeah... Gotta wonder what the original founders would say if you could tell them what they'd become.
Sierra On-Line
King's Quest is still one of my favorite series ever and the one they put out a few years ago was a great retelling. I cried at the end.
That's how I feel about Cyan and their Myst series!
Maxis was the one that came to mind for me, too! I played everything of theirs that I could get my hands on. Still playing The Sims after all these years!
Valve.
Not new management, but they definitely changed direction. From Portal 2 to Half-Life Alyx was a dark age of live service titles and hardware. Fortunately, it seems like they're finally getting back to their old selves?
Alyx was supposedly their re-entry into releasing games (hopeful that HLX is good), the Steam Deck caused them to go back and fix several of their titles (plus do the huge Half-Life update we just got), and while they're not exactly making their games as open as they used to, they're letting the community handle things like TF2 events and L4D2 patches.
So, I dunno, cautiously optimistic for their future. At least as long as Gabe is running the company.
Sierra entertainment! I was a big fan of the kings quest games, and Sierra online was my first experience with online gaming.
Microprose. Silent Service II and Special Forces were so good
C'mon can't leave X-COM out.
And Roller Coaster Tycoon! (although it was technically under Hasbro at that point)
Interplay, Microprobe, Sierra On-Line, Bullfrog, Dynamix, Origin, all long gone.
Activision is still around, but it's something completely different. Same with Atari (although theres a nostalgia brand now, so maybe back).
Of them all, I think is have to say I'm most nostalgic for Sierra On-Line, although Origin gives them a run for most nostalgic.
Westwood fits into that list.
I worked for Interplay back in the 90s. It was pretty great for me, launching my IT career. Working in QA did temporarily ruin my ability to play games for fun though.
Infocom.
Zork, Hitchhiker's Guide, Leather Goddesses of Phobos.
You are standing in an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door.
There is a small mailbox here.
>
Obvious exits are NORTH, SOUTH, and DENNIS.
>
Westwood I had fun with Red Alert 1 & 2 for a long time. Super casual player though.
Squaresoft, Bioware, and Bethesda are three companies whose logos I once considered a seal of quality. None of the three really exist anymore, although there are new much larger companies using their names.
Origin "We create worlds". They definitely did with the Wing Commander series. Played a lot of WC 3, 4 as well as Privateer.
I don't think anyone mentioned Lionhead Studios. Black and White was fun. Sadly it's in copyright limbo if I'm not mistaken.
Also played a lot of Civilization 1 from Microprose back in the day.
Westwood Studios, Sierra Online
I never played the classic "Quest" games that Sierra made, but they published a bunch of really good ones from other developers, too.
I remember their logo coming up before each of the Half-Life, SWAT, Tribes, and F.E.A.R. games. I was always like, "dang, someone there knows how to pick 'em."
Blizzard, boy was I fucking wrong.
Hey, nobody can predict the future. I loved the first few *Craft games.
Hard to pick but early to mid 90s era Maxis, Bullfrog, Bungie (Pathways/Marathon/Myth era), Blizzard, and SEGA all come to mind. All either gone or changed.
Apogee Software for Rise of the Triad, Blue Sky Productions for Última Underworld and Bullfrog Productions for Syndicate.
Psygnosis, later known as Studio Liverpool.
Sony shut them down a few years ago. Man seeing that old owl logo hits me hard in the nostalgia bone.
Rainbow Arts (Turrican on Amiga), Maxis (SimCity) and Digital Illusions (because of their pinball games)
All of them gone except Digital Illusions which became DICE.
As soon as I saw the title, I was gonna say Maxis, too. I like how they called their games “software toys”.
Humongous entertainment
The 3 Bs, baby. Blizzard, Bioware, and Bethesda.
Blizzards dead to me, Bioware fell off after dragon age 1, and Bethesda refuses to take its limiters off anymore (no drugs)
Bullfrog for Populous and Dungeon Keeper (ruined by EA).
Troika for Arcanum and Vampire the Masquerade: Bloodlines (ruined by Activision).
How has no on said this yet.
B U N G I E
Booting Halo was my go-to for like 10 years as the first three games came out. Literally 10s of thousands of hours.
Depends on people's age! I was beyond childhood when that came out, but it was a game changer for me getting to play a FPS that was couch co-op. All FPS games to that point were mostly (all?) multiplayer competitive. PvE was always a solo experience until then!
Neversoft, Rareware, Sega, Activision, EA, and Bethesda created a lot of great memories from my childhood. Neversoft is defunct, Sega still makes some decent stuff but nowhere near what they did in the 90s, EA is EA, and the rest are now owned by Microsoft... so...
Maxis, Bullfrog, Westwood, Origin... basically any studio that EA bought and destroyed.
Blizzard. Without Activision.
Interplay's Black Isle Studios, now Obsidian.
Frontier for Elite
Psygnosis for Lemmings and a bunch of other fun games on the Amiga.
Novalogic - Loved the earlier Delta Force games, and Tachyon: The Fringe
Infocom hands down. Pure escapism
Looking Glass Studios.