Time for this post’s only addendum- I just got this compilation set recently for cheap, and I finally have these games I’ve been wanting to own for years now.
I’m still working on some art stuff, so I figured I’d try something different. Here is my Mac games collection I built up earlier this June and August, part of a final push before I stopped retro game collecting entirely (it’s expensive yo, and it was getting toxic to where I sold off or donated a good chunk of it but I digress).
Around that time I had transitioned over to the Apple ecosystem entirely because I had seriously bad luck with crappy laptops and a badly built gaming PC - I’m the sort of person that would want to just plug something in and not worry about if a component is broken or whatever. Not to mention, it felt more interesting for me looking at Mac versions of popular PC games (well, that and Win/Mac titles).
What astounded me these few months collecting these games were the following:
Holy cow, these games were rare. Mac games are not easy to find, I think that’s obvious to retro game, computer or Mac collectors. A lot of them were like $30-100 on eBay. Luckily I didn’t pay that much for these games, BUT Ghost Recon, No One Lives Forever and the Rainbow Six games are easily the rarest out of my collection. Republic: the Revolution was the only one I found at a thrift store. Win/Mac titles like the Blizzard franchises and dinky edutainment titles are easier to come by.
A lot of boomer shooters were given Mac ports. Again, the aforementioned Ghost Recon, No One Lives Forever and the Rainbow Six games, but Aliens vs Predator, SoF II, RTCW, the CoDs…I was not expecting to find Mac versions of Black Hawk Down, Prey and Allied Assault.
Guess what? You still needed to dink around with specific Mac models (namely the Power Macs in this case, most of these games are OSX) to get these games working. You still needed good video cards and CPUs and all that stuff. Of course Intel chipset only games are there, that’s a bit different but I’m not that much of an expert on Intel Macs.
Where could I get these games back in the day? From what I saw, CompUSA and Best Buy and GameStop, and Apple Stores. Yeah, you could buy physical boxed Mac games at Apple Stores…boy, did I miss out on that!
Porting: native Mac versions of these games were ported irregularly, sometimes in a handful of months, or taking a year or more to be ported. I like to think it wasn’t due to porting difficulties and more to the install base, Apple being…Apple and publishers being like “yeah nah can’t justify this, better give it to these third party companies”. Ghost Recon’s Mac port came around the same time as its console ports. Meanwhile, the Mac version of Need for Speed Carbon, which I don’t have, came out two years after the game released (2006…Mac in 2008!!).
Makes you think that *gasp* Macs are viable PC gaming outlets! Well, just recently - took Apple long enough to pull their head out of their ass to realize that with Apple Arcade and their Silicon Macs supporting games like Cyberpunk 2077, the ResiEvil remakes and RoboCop of all things. Still, figured I’d look at an oft forgotten piece of gaming history.
Maybe I should share the rest of my collections next, idk
A preview of ‘Tempo Jr. ’ on the SEGA Game Gear. Source: SEGA Video Magazine, April 1995. Support us on Patreon
Hey Hero, get yourself a SEGA system and play some great games. Support us on Patreon
Hello hello hello! I’m Tony. I’m a university student studying climate science that has a hobby for drawing cartoons (well, that and video games, reading, cooking and baking, sports…). I’m going to make this Tumblr a place for my goofy art, original characters and comics, and I can’t wait to show off what I make!
Fun facts about me:
*I’m pescatarian, and I don’t drink or take drugs
*I adore classic Cartoon Network shows, which have influenced my art style greatly
*I have been properly drawing since 2017. I lost interest for a couple years and didn’t really get back into it until much much later
*I don’t watch a lot of TV or movies anymore, I mostly read and get inspiration from music, books, games and cartoons
*My all time favorite games are Mass Effect, Half-Life, Diablo, Sleeping Dogs and the Total War series, my favorite TV shows are It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, any of the Star Treks, The Simpsons, The X-Files and of course the Cartoon Cartoons - namely Dexter’s Laboratory, Powerpuff Girls and Courage the Cowardly Dog. Favorite movies are RoboCop and Iron Giant, and anime/manga are SpyXFamily, Chainsaw Man and One Piece.
*I listen to a lot of garage and psychedelic rock, metal and punk
Comics That Never Were - Fab Four #049
Art by Bill Morrison
i know it's not much ki fandom but please accept this very polite boy
I’m working on some stuff at the moment, so I wanted to make a little silly post in the meantime.
Being way too much into comics and Cartoon Network, I have this British CN comics annual that’s not easy to come by these days (I got it off eBay for 8 bucks from some dude in Florida).
On the surface it’s just a mere compliation of DC’s Cartoon Network comics from around that time…but this book is (gasp) - vandalized!
Okay, it’s not that bad, most of the vandalization is just some petty kid scribbling stuff in. It’s not annoying, but it is a little bit funny. What isn’t funny is that there’s no Courage the Cowardly Dog comic despite him being on that pretty sweet crossover cover.
The vandalization follows a pattern depending on the comic but I saved the most egregious for down below (did the Powerpuff Girls really need noses?)
Very emotional doodles 🥹
Bubs looks adorable dressed as Kuromi fr. Makes me wish for an official Sanrio/PPG collab (if there hasn’t been one already)
Last PPG post for now, but I went to the mall and they had this claw machine venue. I don’t think I missed out on much…