I'd like to tell
something about my first computer. I don't have any pictures from it
and I can't remember was is year 1990 or 1991 when I got it (I
was 10 or 11 years old then). More likely
1990 because I think I got
NES as Christmas present on 1989 (I was
hoping for a computer).
My first computer
was quite generic XT clone build in AT clone case used by many PC
XT/AT clones. Brand of my first computer
was Trifunic and it was assembled in
Finland.
I remember the specs
very well. I learned a lot with and from this computer. Monitor
was IBM 5153 CGA display. I can't remember was the keyboard IBM as
well but I do remember it was 84-key XT
keyboard. Trifunic didn't come with mouse but I got one later.
Other specs were:
- 8 MHz Turbo Board with NEC V20 processor
- 640 kiB RAM
- 100 % compatible CGA clone adapter
- Seagate ST-225 20 MB MFM hard drive
- 720k 3.5” Floppy Drive
- 360k 5.25” Floppy Drive
- Multi I/O card of some sort (it did have serial port to plug the mouse in)
As you might have
guessed by now, system like that bought in 1990 must mean it was
previously owned and it was. Nobody had slower PC and I couldn't play
many of the games my friends did. I always wanted new computer back
then but now I'm glad what I got. It made
possible for me to start from XT systems and feel the progress of PC
hardware and games from the beginning.
Friends dad did some
work with computers and through him I got the Trifunic. At their
place I saw a PC for the very first time. I don't know it's specs
other that it was also XT clone. It
had amber display that looked so amazing.
Before I got the
Trifunic I was told it had color display, and it did. CGA is able to
display 4 colors in graphics modes. We were at my friends place to
test the computer for the first time (my friends dad must have
installed DOS and some games in it). Digger was the very first game
we tried on it and it looked and worked great. King's Quest III was
the second game we tried and it appeared black and white! What a
disappointment. There was key combination to switch to color mode but
that was even more disappointment. King's Quest III looked so much
better in amber display, not to mention in
real color display.
About the same time
my friends dad got 386sx system with VGA. No need to guess where we
played all the
games after school.
I didn't know back
then but Sierra's AGI games support CGA composite output. I'm sure I
had one in my Trifunic but even if I had known it, I
wouldn’t have anything to plug it in. European PAL televisions back
then didn't support NTSC and even if they would have, I had black and
white TV for the NES. RGB Output in AGI games were always black and
white or 4 color mode with quite awful palette so
I used the B&W mode. Later SCI games
from Sierra had much better CGA RGB color support.
And those I mostly
played on my Trifunic; every Sierra game that run on it. It didn't
matter that the copy of KQ3 had disk 2 missing or Larry 3 was
corrupted so that it always froze when entering bamboo forest. Or
that I only knew one phone number from Larry 2 (3425, can't forget it) so it took a while
to get in the game.
Other games I played
were Lucasfilms Indy 3 (I'm one of the few who thinks Last Crusade is
better game than Fate of Atlantis but Atlantis didn't work on my
Trifunic, of course), Monkey Island and Zak McKracken.
Then I really spend
many hours on Prince of Persia (one of the best games ever), SimCity
and Ducktales. Again it didn't matter how slow they were as long as
they supported CGA.
If a game worked slow
back then it didn't mean slow frame rate like today. When game was
slow, the character was moving slower that it supposed to. In
my opinion that is better alternative than slow frame rate (actually
the frame rate was slow as well but it feels completely different on
2D games than on 3D games).
I wanted to let you
know how my PC gaming started because that certainly affects what I
consider to be “best” retro gaming XT system.
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