Do your parents like adventure games?
Now there are times where parents are into video games, however it would depend on which one of course. But does anyone have parents that like adventure games? This is going for outside the box of Telltale's games of course. I know my dad did enjoyed Playing Myst and The Dig once.
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My dad actually got me into computer gaming in general. He used to play them all the time. Always was buying the newest thing that was a hit. He loved adventures but also early FPS's. We never had consoles in our house for the longest time because there was no need. We had all our games on the 486. This led me to experimenting with the first few emulators out there like Genecyst, ZSNES, and Nesticle in DOS. I geeked out over just the possibility of that stuff. I remember the days when we got our first sound card, our first CD-ROM drive, and our first VGA card and heard games with voices talking to us. What a fantastic experience.
My mother?
She's so out of touch and clueless when it comes to games that she bought a Wii.
The Wii isn't bad- it all depends on what games she owns for said Wii.
*or a MacDuff, as I call it. Duff sounds like the Hebrew word for page, and I guess you know what prefix Apple used before they began with the iFever. MacDuff is a character from MacBeth, by the way.
Now he plays pretty much whatever games I put on my PC, except the adventure games. He played Portal 2, Assassin's Creed games, Fallout games, etc.
Ooohhh... you mean to say that I'm not the only one with a 50ft squirrel guarding my computer?!
Do they talk to the mouse?
Uh, computer? Ah, computer?
Use the damn keyboard!
Right...
What?! No! Don't be absurd, I'm literally referring to a 50ft squirrel that guards my computer from nine till five. I don't even have any parents, the squirrel ate them ages ago. I guess I'm the only one with this problem, I called an exterminator once but the squirrel ate him too. What am I to do?!
Kind of gets my inner girl flustered...Kinky stuff...
My sister aint no gamer either.
That's tragic ... Well, At least the squirrel is cute and cuddly OK, Speaking of sisters, My sister is a gamer. I mean, Was, She doesn't have time to get around to it anymore.
But she wasn't an adveture fan ... She used to play a platformer called Super Giana Sisters on our old Commodore128.
The game was basically a straight rip-off of the Super Mario Brothers. All the levels were the same, But the character was a girl! I always asked her "Why don't you play the Original?" and she always replied "I like this one better!"
I guess her only problem with Mario was the fact that the main character was a man!
Pfft... that's what my parents said just moments before they were consumed by the over-sized rodent (R.o.U.S).
Ah yes, The Hamstergeddon ... I heard the news ... It must have been horrible ... I mean cute and figully duuguuly muugully chuuu!
You've just reminded me of the one game that my dad enjoyed playing with myself and that game was PGA European Tour on the PC. We had many a good round with those digital golfers *weepy sigh*. Alcoremortis, our memories combined would probably be the cause of a rift through time and space, due to the sheer overload of irony.
P.S. I tell a lie! I also had many a good gaming session with my Dad whilst playing Point Blank on the Playstation, using the G-Con45 guns.
... you know what? I guess my Father had far more respect for gaming than even he or I had ever previously realised!
Actually, I think I might even have a copy of one of the PGA Tour games. It was one of the few games that my mother ever bought me in the vain hope that I would become a golf fanatic after playing as digital Tiger Woods.
It didn't work.
Do with that answer what you may.
My parents were much the same. In fact, following my parent's gift of a set of colf clubs; I actually went on a one-on-one training course with the professional and famous golfer; Nick Faldo, via the winning of a Weetabix competition. Imagine my parents faces when they realised their sons disdain at this potential gift of a life time.
Heck, even Nick Faldo himself seemed a bit miffed when this un-enthusiastic 11 year old boy turned up for training... although I must say that he was an absolute gentleman. True story by the way, I swear on mine, my parent's and my cat' life to that.
Nongolfers Unite! Aside from the PGA video game, my parents just buy me clubs and drag me off to the course all the time. As long as I make sure to bring a book, it's all good.
So no, I had to discover adventure games through an entirely different route, when a friend introduced me to The Curse of Monkey Island in 1997.