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What was the first game that really grabbed you and dominated your life?Old_Man_Gaming Asks RPS
Old_Man_Gaming Asks RPS
Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun
Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun

A few weeks ago, I talked about a number of new featurescoming to RPS in 2023, and here we are with our very first edition ofAsk RPS! This is a new mailbag feature where RPS supporters get to pose questions to the RPS Treehouse team (mostly video games-related, though not necessarily always), and we then answer those questions in public posts for everyone to get involved with. Easy peasy.
To kick us off, our first question comes courtesy of Old_Man_Gaming, who asked:“What was the first game that really grabbed you and dominated your life?”
The 14 Biggest Games Coming To PC In 2023Watch on YouTube
The 14 Biggest Games Coming To PC In 2023

Alice0:Quakewas the main game I played for a good two years. Not even multiplayer QuakeWorld (we didn’t have the Internet until deep into Quake 2), just Quake. I played the shareware episode day after day, slowly learning how to move and aim in a 3D space using only keyboard controls (my jump to mouselook also came only withQuake II). Then I learned the cheat codes and had a blast playing in god mode with all the fancy weapons.
I finally bought the full version after saving birthday money, and soon got into mods through cover discs from cheery RPS fanzine PC Gamer. Every month, new levels and oddities to play with, a wide range of weird, interesting, and clever ideas, some of which were even good. To think, anyone could just make these! I made my own levels too, though I had no way to release them. I even tried making mods, though I didn’t know how to code so mostly I fiddled with numbers and copy/pasted other people’s work between QuakeC files, hoping it would work. It rarely did, and that never stopped me. This also introduced me tomy true passion in life, readme files.

Alice Bee:This is a tough one, because there were loads of games that Ilovedbut that I had restricted access to because The Room With The Computer was my older brother’s bedroom. I think, though, the answer is probablyDiablo II. I loved being the assassin, but I was never good enough at the time to get much beyond The Sister’s Burial Ground. I just replayed it loads.
Ed:This is a tough one, as Wario Land: Super Mario Land 3 on the Game Boy Color was an absolute staple of my gaming diet back in the day.Screamer 2was probably my first PC love, as I often snatched the home PC to rally around rural England or sandy Egypt in my spare time.Moto Racer– the bike equivalent – also had me in a vice grip. I then graduated to the masterpiece that was Muppets Race Mania on the PS1, a kart racer featuring Kermit and co. I remember being elated when I unlocked The Swedish Chef and his hotdog kart.
Ed is the third pizza cape wearer on the right, honest.

RuneScape, though. The free-to-playMMOtook over my entire school year when I first started secondary school, with most morning catchups revolving around the levels we’d gained and the lobsters we’d sold. A lot of us eventually became members, somehow justifying to our parents why our pursuit of level 99 farming required a three quid monthly subscription. The best of times.
Ollie:There were other games that might deserve the mantle of “dominating my life” more, but I still remember the very first PC game I ever played:World Cup 98. I remember watching my Dad play it on the PC, and then asking if I could play. He set up a game where I was playing as the strongest team (Brazil) against the weakest (China PR, I believe).
From that first fateful match, I was hooked, and would spend much of the next 10 years of my life playing football games - though I did move over to PES as the years went on. But the sights and sounds of World Cup 98 are carved forever into my brain. John Motson yelling, “It’s there! A classic finish! Oh, I can’t wait to see the replay of that!” for the thousandth time. Chris Waddle’s derisive, “He couldn’t hit a cow’s backside with a banjo, this fella!” And of course the opening theme of Chumbawamba’s Tubthumping (I Get Knocked Down) every time I’d load up the game. Good goddamn times.
Image credit:id Software

Around the same time, though, our first family PC arrived in 1995 with a copy ofDoom II, and I think my brothers/parents must have got sick of me asking how to constantly boot it into DOS so I could play it. I loved Doom II, and a lot of its secrets are still engrained into my brain to this day. Big shout out also to the freeware version of Heretic, which I similarly rinsed for everything it was worth. In terms of the first game that absolutely dominated every waking moment of my life and made me wish it were 100% real, though? The answer can only be Pokémon Red. What can I say? I was 11 years old. Sue me.
Liam:Predictably, I spent a lot of my formative years sat in front of the family PC playing whatever oddities my Dad would bring home from the local computer fair. Theme Park. Sim City. Doom II. The Simpsons: Cartoon Studio. Initially I was just obsessed with the idea of a computer in general, and would spend many happy hours sat in a worn leather chair drawing, typing and playing on our beige Compaq desktop.

James:Having a schoolteacher for a parent precluded any real timesinking in our house. As soon as I moved out, however,Team Fortress 2saw a chance to sink its claws in. I grew into adulthood alongside this game: I remember the holiday that coincided with Valve’s first hat releases, playing Prop Hunt to distract myself from a breakup, spending hours in item trade servers… Not even to trade anything, just to pass the outrageous amounts of free time you get during a journalism degree.

Big cursed 90s PC energy emanating from Salem the cat right there…

Rachel:I had a couple of non-PC obsessions that pre-date my family’s first computer, but my first infatuation on the PC was the 1999 Sabrina The Teenage Witch double game pack, which included bothSpellboundand Brat Attack. I’ve never even seen the Sabrina The Teenage Witch show, I just liked that there was a game about a cool, sassy witch that I could play. Both games focus on Sabrina’s goal of wanting to be a fully-fledged witch, with Spellbound being an old-school point-and-click puzzle game and Brat Attack being much more hardcore with enemies to fight and spells to cast. I loved them both and played them relentlessly.
Hayden:I’m not sure when I first played Pokémon. It’s just always been around, I suppose. I played a lot of Leaf Green as a kid, and I remember being very excited for Diamond and Pearl when I was five. We’ll just assume I came out of the womb with a booster pack in hand (I was, and still am, a big Pokémon TCG player, too).
We didn’t have a fancy PC when I was younger, but we did have this very ugly grey box that could play some arcade games (all very legal, of course). I remember playing, and probably never beating, the Simpsons and TMNT arcade games, and was also a big fan of Outrun. Arcade games aside, my brother eventually got a gaming PC and we put countless evenings intoCivilization V. We played hotseat mode at the time, because I didn’t get my own PC until 2017 (just a few short years before I joined the RPS Treehouse). Steam tells me the first game I played on my own computer was also Civ V, so I assume we hadn’t shifted over to Civ VI just yet. That didn’t become popular in the Hefford household until 2018, apparently.