MS paint used to have a spray paint tool. I spent a lot of time using that tool to fill the entire canvas.
I just had a happy flashback into my pst of playing that pinball a lot.
I had totally forgotten that.
Thanks for triggering this memory :)
I had internet, I used all those a bunch…
I loved that game so much.
You can still play it
https://flathub.org/apps/com.github.k4zmu2a.spacecadetpinball
Loved. Past tense.
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I’m not a nostalgic one, but Space Cadet got me with all the good feels.
Not many people owned a PC before the internet blew up
But in my neck of the woods plenty of people owned a PC before Windows networking AND ISPs were reliable lol
Like yes I had Internet at home, but sometimes it didn’t work very well, sometimes it was really slow, etc.
For years, it was almost normal in a small town to have an ethernet cable routed from your neighbour’s house to yours, share a connection. Guess what, it’ll be slow as shit when they’re using it too. Or if the router needs to be restarted for some reason and they’re not home? Welp.
Why did we have that setup? Estonia over 20 years ago was still pretty poor. This whole ADSL thing was pretty new too, it cost quite a bit. I found an article from that period and turns out in 2003 there were three main providers. Starman at 149 EEK per month, Eesti Telefon at 345 and Uninet at 800. I have no idea about Uninet, but Starman was only available in a couple of cities and even in those cities I think it was mostly just apartment buildings. Minimum monthly salary BEFORE tax was 2160 EEK. First 1000 EEK per month was income tax free, on the other 1160 EEK you’d be taxed 26% so 301 EEK. The remaining 1859 EEK, and this is with only income tax deducted, nothing else, is equivalent to 119.16 euros. 345 EEK for internet is 22 euros and change. Imagine spending 18% of your income on an Internet connection!
Still, a computer was becoming necessary for schoolwork. Researching subjects online, printing out homework, etc. If you didn’t have one at home, you’d need to use computer class at the end of the day, or go to the library. Having one at home got me into gaming and tinkering with software and the tinkering got me into programming at the age of ~13 and you can guess what I do for a living now.
US here. I got my first “home computer” a TRS-80 CoCo (16k RAM) sometime around 1981 before PCs were a thing. The internet existed but cost around $7 US per hour plus it was a long distance call to Compuserve the only ISP which would have cost around 50 cents a minute (on a 1200 baud dial up modem). I still have an advertisement somewhere. Also i have a thin book of websites. You had to type in the IP address because domain names didn’t exist yet. I couldn’t afford any of this so I visited BBS’s though I did fumble around with the internet on public library computers. The Macintosh and PCs came out a few years later but few homes had one because they were expensive and you couldn’t do much with them besides play games. Businesses of course had them because they were useful. It wasn’t until the mid 90’s did everyone buy one after the internet got popular.
Whenever people mention Space Cadet pinball, I HAVE to recommend the reverse engineered open source version on github (source ports for almost every type of platform).
It’s also available on flathub.“Reverse engineered open source” isn’t a thing. You can decompile a program and look at the source code all you want, but that’s not the same as having the legal right to modify and redistribute it. Open Source specifically means the latter.
What you’ve linked to there is just some pirated proprietary-licensed source code that, frankly, I’m a little surprised Microsoft hasn’t taken down yet.
(Also, I don’t like the term “open source” for exactly the reason that it leads to this sort of confusion. According to both the OSI and FSF it means the same thing as “Free Software,” so folks should use the term Free Software instead since it emphasizes the four freedoms.)
If you want a pinball game that’s actually Free Software, check out Vector Pinball. I recommend installing it via F-Droid.
That’s great. Fun memories! Simple but exciting
Thanks for the Linux link! Where is that on the git
I assume you ask where in the Git mention the Flathub link since Flathub deems it unverified? It’s on On Linux section of the ReadMe
Ahh, my nostalgia. Thanks!
Are there revese engineered open source version of the other games?
I unfortunately don’t know of any other games on top of my head. I know Lego Island is close to 100% reverse engineered, but I’m not certain it’ll get released as an open source game like Space Cadet.
Ski free was available as an HTML 5 game years ago, so probably
In paint be sure to make a bunch of random lines and then use the fill bucket to fill in random colors in the spaces.
Oooh I totally forgot that I did play with MS Paint! I invented cities, countries, or I just did what you described. Fun times!
I used pixel-level zoom and drew top-down Star Wars starfighters and then copied and pasted them to have battles.
How do you know?!?! This is one of the most laser precise call out to my childhood ive ever seen in an internet comment.
I’d fill the whole screen, then use the freestyle cutting and go wild with the mouse, then delete the selection, leaving a weirdly neat 2-color mosaic
Em spaint was always fun.
I would do that with the spray paint, then select two colors on the bucket and fill them in alternating back and forth, slowly progressing outward, until the entire picture was one color. Good times.
All I see is four badass apps with no ads and no dark patterns.
I got a Minesweeper app for my phone a few months ago with no ads. It’s amazing.
In general, get stuff like that from F-Droid. Ads and other enshittification basically isn’t allowed.
Shoutout to Breezy Weather on Fdroid.
For Linux, Mac, and Windows (sorry bsds)
I also recomnend Libremines https://bollos00.github.io/LibreMines/
Kids and their fancy winders machines…
That doesn’t look like GORILLAS.BAS
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It’s nice to know that even without internet, they still had Balatro ❤️
You didn’t have diskettes or CDs in your neck of the woods?
500 games on 10 CD-ROMs 👌
(485 of them are shareware demos you can only play for 15 minutes at a time, but still)
I was going to say, I didn’t have Internet until college we still had CD-ROMs, game consoles, and of course the public library for Internet when needed. Not that these options aren’t excellent free entertainment.
What about winamp and windows media center audio visualizers. Trippy patterns
Have I got good news for you.
How would you acquire winamp without the internet?
It was bundled with the computer, my father won at a lottery.
I played the hell put of Freecell back in the day. Started going through the seeds in order, and over the course of about 2 years I made it through 1500 or so.
I should pick that up again. Only got about 30000 or so games left to finish the whole thing…