All screens were squares til like nearly 2010. Heck I have an early Nvidia GPU laptop around here somewhere with the most ridiculous looking 1:1 screen from like '08-ish.
Still peak gaming was MW3, CS, BF2-1942-2142. Back in the day, those were so good people ran successful brick and mortar businesses called internet cafés just for the masses to play those things or some oddie to hold w for hours ““playing”” WoW. Gaming sucks so bad it can’t sustain a real brick and mortar business culture any more.
The golden era of cafés here was a bit earlier than that. Late Quake 3, early CS. The MMO I remember people playing by the hour to play was Ultima Online, not WoW.
Still, those were fun and don’t get as much nostalgia as arcades, for some reason.
If you wanted to offer the same “we’ll run these on decent hardware you probably don’t have today” each seat would be like 5 grand to build and you’d need to somehow power 20-30 1000W machines running all day, so that’s a bit of a challenge when everybody has high speed internet. It was easier to do that when people either didn’t have Internet at all or were on dial-up modems that couldn’t sustain playable games at all. The hardware you couldn’t afford then was networking, which was cheap to set up and maintain for LAN by comparison.
People around me had mixed motivations in this later era as you called it. My buddies and I used cafés as a time management tool. Any of us could have built a gaming rig but we would have been on it way too much. Cafés were a destination and way to partition off gaming in our lives.
Really? Paying someone else a bunch of money to play by the hour seems like a weird way to manage your time. Plus, I knew several people who had a real problem with spending money in cafés.
I mean, it’s not gambling because you weren’t getting any money back at any point, but if you were leaving your Ultima Online character mining while you went to class, spending money on running a computer when you weren’t even looking at it… well, I’m gonna say there are better ways to keep yourself from problematic gaming.
The way I remember it (at least where I’m from), cafés were a way for broke college students living in dorms or shared apartments with no Internet to get into online gaming, and sometimes for kids to have a bit of an arcade experience in PCs better than their crappy laptops.
In some cases it got pretty wholesome, where groups of friends would just hang out in the one place that kept running the game they liked. There was this one basement grungy spot in town that started running Quake 1 and just… never stop. Those guys could railgun you mid-flight from a bouncepad on a ball mouse and we all decided it was better to leave them to it.
All the cafés were a long way away from where I lived so yeah we went there like going to the movies or bowling and it followed a similar event like dynamic. It was an optional thing to do but not some default or daily thing.
All screens were squares til like nearly 2010. Heck I have an early Nvidia GPU laptop around here somewhere with the most ridiculous looking 1:1 screen from like '08-ish.
Still peak gaming was MW3, CS, BF2-1942-2142. Back in the day, those were so good people ran successful brick and mortar businesses called internet cafés just for the masses to play those things or some oddie to hold w for hours ““playing”” WoW. Gaming sucks so bad it can’t sustain a real brick and mortar business culture any more.
The golden era of cafés here was a bit earlier than that. Late Quake 3, early CS. The MMO I remember people playing by the hour to play was Ultima Online, not WoW.
Still, those were fun and don’t get as much nostalgia as arcades, for some reason.
If you wanted to offer the same “we’ll run these on decent hardware you probably don’t have today” each seat would be like 5 grand to build and you’d need to somehow power 20-30 1000W machines running all day, so that’s a bit of a challenge when everybody has high speed internet. It was easier to do that when people either didn’t have Internet at all or were on dial-up modems that couldn’t sustain playable games at all. The hardware you couldn’t afford then was networking, which was cheap to set up and maintain for LAN by comparison.
People around me had mixed motivations in this later era as you called it. My buddies and I used cafés as a time management tool. Any of us could have built a gaming rig but we would have been on it way too much. Cafés were a destination and way to partition off gaming in our lives.
Really? Paying someone else a bunch of money to play by the hour seems like a weird way to manage your time. Plus, I knew several people who had a real problem with spending money in cafés.
I mean, it’s not gambling because you weren’t getting any money back at any point, but if you were leaving your Ultima Online character mining while you went to class, spending money on running a computer when you weren’t even looking at it… well, I’m gonna say there are better ways to keep yourself from problematic gaming.
The way I remember it (at least where I’m from), cafés were a way for broke college students living in dorms or shared apartments with no Internet to get into online gaming, and sometimes for kids to have a bit of an arcade experience in PCs better than their crappy laptops.
In some cases it got pretty wholesome, where groups of friends would just hang out in the one place that kept running the game they liked. There was this one basement grungy spot in town that started running Quake 1 and just… never stop. Those guys could railgun you mid-flight from a bouncepad on a ball mouse and we all decided it was better to leave them to it.
All the cafés were a long way away from where I lived so yeah we went there like going to the movies or bowling and it followed a similar event like dynamic. It was an optional thing to do but not some default or daily thing.
Square? 4:3
Comparatively, side by side it looks square to me
MorroWind 3?
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3