Classicamiga Forum Retro Edition
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Thread: Any former Spectrum users on this board?
Ghost 04:03 24th August 2007
Hello all,

Years ago when my brother still lived at my parents' home he used to have a Spectrum computer with several games.
Once in a while I was allowed to play on it, one of my favorite games was Jet Pac, which I had been searching for since I myself went into games.

Fortunate thanks to the fine people at Retrospec I was able to enjoy the game in a new form as well as play several games I never had the fortune to play in their original incarnations on the Spectrum.

As there are many British members on this forum I take it some of you have also played with or owned a Spectrum at one time in your lives.

So what was it like, and what games do you remember the most?
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Demon Cleaner 04:55 24th August 2007
I did never have a Spectrum at the time, now I have a Spectrum+, but never used it, as I don't have any software or the knowledge to run it.

The only game I remember playing on a Spectrum was Attic Attac, that was in 1982 when I was in Brentford near London.

I now emulate the Spectrum on my barebone emulation system, I have the complete TOSEC set, which is quite big.

A good Spectrum site I know is www.worldofspectrum.org
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Tiago 11:01 24th August 2007
I Still have my ZXSpectrum 48k and same cassetes.
I play out-run, same weeks ago!!!
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Harrison 11:30 24th August 2007
I never owned my own Sinclair Spectrum, but a friend was really into them at the time. I had a 48K Spectrum and a lot of games. We used to spend hours playing through them all, and I would usually buy the Amstrad CPC versions after first playing them on the Spctrum.

His 48K Spectrum died when one day a pair of scissors lying on the floor near the back of the computer made contact with something in the back and shorted the system out.

He then saved up and purchased a +3 and continued to play around with that for years.

As with DC, I now play Speccy games via emulation, and World of Spectrum is a great site to visit if you are looking for anything as they have a huge archive of over 6000 games for download.
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TiredOfLife 23:08 24th August 2007
More invaders to repel.
Not that long ago, we had someone on here asking a similar question only that time about atari machines.
Heretics.
I wouldn't have sullied my fingers om either those or the cursed speccy machines.
The mighty CBM 64 all the way for us true believers.
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Ghost 23:56 24th August 2007
Hello guys,

Harrison,

Yeah, I know about the World of Spectrum site, that is how I came up with this topic.
While waiting for new game releases I sometimes get nostalgic so I start looking up info about the great machines of yesterday.

I have never played many games on it, the first 'home computer' I got to own was a Philips MSX2 (on hindsight I would have preferred the sony one) and after that I pretty much went into consoles like the Sega Master System.

Still it is nice some times to look at these old games, a lot of modern gamers look down upon them but they fail to realise that without these games they never had their Halo or Gears of War.

I sometimes think gaming has become too mainstream, almost everyone and their dog is into gaming these days.


Though the Spectrum has less colours it seems to me that its graphics are sharper than those of the Commodore 64.
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Ghost 04:18 25th August 2007
Something really weird happened while I was going through the top hundred of games at World of Spectrum.

I had opened several links, going through them and closing them after I was finished when I suddenly get a white screen with the text "mirroring denied".

I have no idea what that means but as far as I know I have done nothing to violate the site.
Anyone here who can explain it to me?
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Harrison 09:37 25th August 2007
Maybe they only allow a certain number of simultaneous connections to their server from one connection. To try and prevent leeching of their content and bandwidth.

You mention Halo and Gears of War as two examples of modern gaming, but I personally don't think either of those hold up as good examples. While GoW set new graphical standards on release to show what the Xbox 360 could do, and the original Halo pushed the first person shooting genre forward, showing that much more was possible compared to similar games before it, they are both at their hearts just shoot 'em ups, and if you get right down to the nuts and bolts, they owe everything to games like space invaders and galaga. Take away the graphics for both and you are left with little more than shooting moving targets.

In contrast games on all retro platforms had to do more than rely on shiny graphics immerse the player and get them hooked. The Spectrum is one of the greatest examples of this as it was the most underpowered and graphically inferior 8-bit system on the market, but managed to see some amazing games that are still as playable today as they were on release. I don't think the same will be try when looking back at Halo or GoW in 20 years time.
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TiredOfLife 10:04 26th August 2007
I can't belive you think the graphics on the speccy were better than the 64.
Off the top of my head, remembering Way of the Exploding Fist.
The graphics were truly awful on the speccy.
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Sharingan 10:11 26th August 2007
Haven't owned a Spectrum myself, but my cousin did, and I remember always wanting to sneak into his room everytime we visited just to have a go at it.
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