pinback wrote: Wed Jan 11, 2023 3:17 pm
Nobody doesn't like the Pac-Man. But where did he shine the brightest?!
I happen to have the opposite of like. The opposite of like is not hate. The opposite of like - or of hate - is indifference. I have no feelings about any of the more than 7,347,182 different versions of Pac-Man, relatives, or its clones, on coin machines, phones, consoles, watches, stand-alone players, PC versions, on any of the 3,000,000,000,000 devices it was installed on.
pinback wrote: Wed Jan 11, 2023 3:17 pm
If you disagree, EXPLAIN BELOW!!
I voted "other" because, while Pac-Man was a major contributor to video games , then popularizing them into being a significant part of the economy, I cannot see any of the variations of Pac-Man being significant as "the greatest games of all time." I think that honor probably goes to a game people played a long time before, and will still be playing long after (hopefully) we're all dead, civilization inevitably collapses, and a new civilization replaces it.
The question is: which game is? I'm going to pick gambling card games as a genre, because once people started living in communities, it was possible to find a little time for friends to have some healthy competition through playing cards, and before too long, someone figured out a way to bet on it. Might have had farmers gambling others for a piece of their harvest. Or soldiers in Caesar's legions betting on who got overnight duty, the worst player by score, or the one who got out of guard duty that night, the player with the best winning score. I'm picking card games over more complicated ones, because a game with simple rules is going to be much more popular and influential than one with complicated rules.
The best game of all time might be a board game, which probably means chess, in all its variations, considering it has been played for hundreds of years, if not thousands of years, in countries of all ideologies, from communist, to capitalist, from civilized to anarchy to Draconian-level despotisms.
On the other hand, you have five fingers. Err, I mean on the other hand, for board games checkers, or more likely, backgammon, might have been more popular and influential, especially once people figured out a way to gamble on it.
It's probably no coincidence that checkers/chess boards had backgammon layouts on the reverse, since checkers work perfectly fine as backgammon markers.
Now, let's cast a wider net. I mean, if we're going to pick the greatest games of all time in the electronic sphere, maybe Pong was, since it popularized the display of a video game on a TV monitor. Maybe Doom, bringing a near-3d experience to the PC.
While I agree that Pac-Man was a significant factor in the development of video games, it's nowhere
close to being the greatest video game, let alone the greatest game
-+-