by Flack » Thu Jan 22, 2009 2:02 pm
I have nothing useful to add to this thread so I will tell this story instead.
On the north side of Oklahoma City there are several properties lined up in a row: Remington Park (horse racing/casino), a movie theater, the Zoo, the Omniplex (er, Oklahoma Science Museum) and a bunch of lesser attractions (Firefighter Hall of Fame, Softball Hall of Fame, etc.)
At the Oklahoma Science Museum they have an authentic submarine periscope. For years nobody ever looked through it because there was nothing to see. The last 5 times we've been there, there has been a line of grown men waiting to look through it. I never knew why until the last time I went. The periscope points right toward the horse racing track and you can watch the horses run and see the results.
The only other submarine story I have (and it's not even a story) is that I've been on the
U-505 Submarine Tour at the museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. Even at the age of 16 I was banging my head on stuff in there. Sailors must be really short. Or maybe they just have better "spacial head relations" than I do.
The last submarine games I played were Up Periscope! and Silent Service, both for the C64. Probably not what you were looking for.
I have nothing useful to add to this thread so I will tell this story instead.
On the north side of Oklahoma City there are several properties lined up in a row: Remington Park (horse racing/casino), a movie theater, the Zoo, the Omniplex (er, Oklahoma Science Museum) and a bunch of lesser attractions (Firefighter Hall of Fame, Softball Hall of Fame, etc.)
At the Oklahoma Science Museum they have an authentic submarine periscope. For years nobody ever looked through it because there was nothing to see. The last 5 times we've been there, there has been a line of grown men waiting to look through it. I never knew why until the last time I went. The periscope points right toward the horse racing track and you can watch the horses run and see the results.
The only other submarine story I have (and it's not even a story) is that I've been on the [url=http://www.msichicago.org/whats-here/exhibits/u-505/]U-505 Submarine Tour[/url] at the museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. Even at the age of 16 I was banging my head on stuff in there. Sailors must be really short. Or maybe they just have better "spacial head relations" than I do.
The last submarine games I played were Up Periscope! and Silent Service, both for the C64. Probably not what you were looking for.