<rss version="2.0" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">	<channel>		<title>New Games Tagged 'DOS, classic, space' on The Great Games Experiment</title>		<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/games/recent/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>		<description>New Games on The Great Games Experiment</description>		<image>			<url>http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/css/logo.jpg</url>			<title>New Games Tagged 'DOS, classic, space' on The Great Games Experiment</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/games/recent/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>		</image>		<language>en-us</language>		<item>			<title>SkyRoads</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/skyroads/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/c/c2ba27df937493613061dcc1558a90d6_sq.gif" title="SkyRoads Image" /> &quot;You could play this game just for the amazing sound tracks, but the gameplay is also very catchy. Simply, you need to steer your space vehicle along the course, jumping and dodging blocks that will wipe you out when you're flying along at light-speed. Balancing acceleration and fuel usage becomes tricky when you've got a time limit to beat with hardly any fuel in the tank. Your reflexes and timing will be the difference between getting home safely and floating aimlessly through space.&quot;<br />
-dosgamesarchive.com<br />
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This is truly an original. Very simple, very addictive.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>19 Mar 2007 09:09:34</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Frontier: First Encounters</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/FrontiereliteFirstEncounters/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/4/414b212518fdaa31184888d21080bb25_sq.jpg" title="Frontier: First Encounters Image" /> First Encounters is the sequel to Frontier (1993), which itself was a sequel to the seminal 1984 game Elite. The game was created by David Braben&Atilde;&cent;&acirc;&sbquo;&not;&acirc;&bdquo;&cent;s company, Frontier Developments. Many fans of the game refer to it by the shortened title of FFE.<br />
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Like Frontier, First Encounters features realistic Newtonian physics and the ability to land on planets. It has graphics that are an improvement over Frontier (the main difference being Gouraud shading) and, as well as employing the same open-ended gameplay of its predecessors, it also features a storyline concerning an alien race called the Thargoids.<br />
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Like the other two Elite games, it has been re-released as shareware and can be freely downloaded from the Elite Club site.<br />
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Being a DOS game, First Encounters has difficulty running with Windows XP or Windows 2000 machines, although the official site does offer solutions to get the game running. A recreated game engine called JJFFE allows playing the game on Linux, Windows and DOS.<br />
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First Encounters plays much like its immediate predecessor Frontier: the game is a combination of trading, fighting and a variety of other activities&Atilde;&cent;&acirc;&sbquo;&not;&acirc;&euro;<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>03 Mar 2007 01:23:22</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Frontier: Elite II</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/frontierelite2/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/f/f388621c1e0fce015cf552e6649e6f04_sq.jpg" title="Frontier: Elite II Image" /> Frontier: Elite 2 is a computer game written by David Braben and published by Gametek in 1993. It is the first sequel to Ian Bell and David Braben's earlier game Elite, and is available for Commodore Amiga, Atari ST and PC computers.<br />
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Frontier (or FE2 as it is commonly referred to) retains the same principle component of Elite&acirc;&euro;&rdquo;namely completely open-ended gameplay&acirc;&euro;&rdquo;and adds to this realistic physics and an accurately modelled galaxy. There is no plot within Frontier, nor are there pre-scripted missions (as there are in its sequel, First Encounters); instead players explore space while trading legally or illegally, carrying out missions for the military, ferrying passengers from system to system, engaging in piracy or any combination of the above. As a consequence, Frontier cannot be completed or &quot;won&quot;&acirc;&euro;&rdquo;instead, players themselves decide what to aspire to and set out to achieve it.<br />
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The game has since been released as shareware and is available as a free download, although being a DOS game, users of Windows 2000 and Windows XP may initially have difficulty getting it to run. Using emulation such as DosBox will get the official shareware version of the game to run on modern operating systems including Windows XP, Mac OS X and Linux.<br />
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In Frontier, the player assumes the role of one of Commander Jameson's grandchildren, having inherited from Commander Jameson one hundred credits and an Eagle Long Range Fighter. By the game&acirc;&euro;&trade;s standards, this is incredibly modest, and is used as a spur to encourage players to earn money by whatever means they feel is appropriate.<br />
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As with Elite, much of Frontier is concerned with trading: players can buy and sell much&acirc;&euro;&rdquo;from food and computer parts to guns and slaves&acirc;&euro;&rdquo;with the intent of making the most profit from each trading run. Thus, learning to compare prices in various systems is essential for profitability, and calculating overheads for each trip (such as fuel, missiles, and hull repair) are essential skills. It often becomes apparent that a particular trading route is profitable, such as the Barnard&acirc;&euro;&trade;s Star-Sol route. It is worth noting that some items (particularly narcotics, nerve gas, weaponry and slaves) are illegal in most systems and attempting to trade these in a system in which they are illegal will result in being fined by the police, which can often escalate into violence. It is often worth the risk, however, as illegal goods generally have a very high price on the black market.<br />
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Frontier substitutes Elite&acirc;&euro;&trade;s arcade flying style for one based rigidly on Newtonian physics: momentum must first be neutralised to bring the player's craft to a stop, and turning 180&Acirc;&deg; has no effect on the direction of travel until previous momentum has been counteracted. The craft&acirc;&euro;&trade;s control is largely left to the player, but often day-to-day tasks&acirc;&euro;&rdquo;such as navigating from a hyperspace exit-point to a desired planet or space-station and docking&acirc;&euro;&rdquo;can be handed over to a ship's autopilot.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>03 Mar 2007 12:22:46</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Elite</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/elite/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/b/b0a3dd7d62fcfeac7ed6b182945f0e05_sq.jpg" title="Elite Image" /> Elite is a seminal space trading computer game, originally published by Acornsoft in 1984 for the BBC Micro and Acorn Electron computers. The game's title derives from one of the player's goals of raising their combat rating to the exalted heights of 'Elite'. It was written and developed by David Braben and Ian Bell, who had met while they were both undergraduates at Jesus College, Cambridge. Non-Acorn versions of the game were published by Firebird.<br />
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Elite was one of the first home computer games to utilise wireframe 3D graphics. Another novelty was the inclusion of The Dark Wheel, a novella by Robert Holdstock which influenced new players with insight into the moral and legal codes which they might aspire to. It elevated the technically complicated software beyond the pigeon-hole of &quot;game&quot;.<br />
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Elite's open ended game model, advanced game engine and revolutionary 3D graphics ensured that it was ported to virtually every contemporary home computer system, and earned it a place as a classic and a genre maker in gaming history. Even now, over 20 years after it was published, Elite is frequently used as a yardstick by which any new space trading game is measured. It has often been said that &quot;Elite has been imitated but never bettered&quot;. While this is perhaps somewhat hyperbolic, it is certainly true to say that Elite was a hugely influential game, serving as a model for more recent games such as EVE Online, Wing Commander: Privateer and the X series of space trading games.<br />
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The Elite universe contains eight galaxies, each galaxy containing 256 planets to explore. Due to the limited capabilities of 8-bit computers, these worlds are procedurally generated: A single seed number run through a fixed algorithm the appropriate number of times and creates a sequence of numbers determining each planet's complete composition (position in the galaxy, prices of commodities, and even name and local details &acirc;&euro;&rdquo; text strings are chosen numerically from a lookup table and assembled to produce unique descriptions for each planet). This means that no extra memory is needed to store the characteristics of each planet, yet each is unique and has fixed properties. Each galaxy is also procedurally generated from the first.<br />
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The player, initially Commander Jameson, starts at Lave Station with 100 Credits and a lightly armed trading ship, a Cobra Mark III. Most of the ships that the player encounters are similarly named after snakes, or other reptiles. Credits can be accumulated through a number of means. These include piracy, trade, military missions, bounty hunting and the mining of asteroids. The money generated by these enterprises allows the player to upgrade their ship with such enhancements as better weapons, shields, increased cargo capacity, an automated docking system, and more.<br />
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Travel between planets is constrained to those within range of the ship's limited fuel capacity (7 light years); fuel can be replenished after docking with a space-station in orbit around a planet - a challenging task without a docking computer, as it requires matching the ship's rotation to that of the station. Players can upgrade their equipment with a fuel scoop, which allows raw fuel to be skimmed from the surface of stars - a dangerous and difficult activity - as well as collecting free-floating cargo canisters and escape capsules liberated after the destruction of other ships.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>03 Mar 2007 12:00:49</pubDate>		</item>	</channel></rss>