I'm 44, found Moria around 1992 while rummaging through my brother's collection of 3.5 diskettes he brought home with him on holiday. I couldn't play Angband until 1999 when I upgraded my computer where I started playing 'in earnest' but lusted for it back in 1995 when my friend could run it on his 386. It had color, and artifacts, and rooms full of enemies, uniques, and color. I remember being freaked out when I first saw a unique orc with a horde of other orcs -- Moria is very sparse.
How were You Introduced to Angband?
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On a cross-country plane flight in the early '90s, the passenger next to me was playing angband on his laptop and talked with me about the game. He kindly gave me a copy on a 3.5" floppy disk, and I have played off and on ever since. Didn't ever legitimately win until I watched Fizzix's "Let's Play Angband" series on YouTube. Since then, my game has improved, but still lacks the real professional status of some of the greats.“We're more of the love, blood, and rhetoric school. Well, we can do you blood and love without the rhetoric, and we can do you blood and rhetoric without the love, and we can do you all three concurrent or consecutive. But we can't give you love and rhetoric without the blood. Blood is compulsory. They're all blood, you see.”
― Tom Stoppard, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are DeadComment
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I don't remember actually, but I think it was late 90's or so.
I was one of the guys that supplemented Gervais titles back in the day, when they were the greatest and hi-res (I still love them most of all - I can only play @ in Gervais titles :-) ).
The tile set was missing many new monsters and items and was using ugly substitutes. I contacted Gervais, got his approval and refilled the map with all the missing items, drawing in his style.
Still warms my heart when I see my work & name in the tiles. Small personal stuff, but was proud then.Last edited by maboleth; January 10, 2023, 23:41.Comment
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1988/9 was playing nethack on a unix system. Played that until I discovered angband in 1991 at uni, in a computer science class, where most of us were playing angband instead of the actual course content.Comment
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First played in 1993 or 1994, sophomore year in college. I was in campus housing and sharing a house with a guy who's brother was an engineering major at MIT. He gave my friend and I 3.5" floppies so we could play. It was dos though and I had a Mac so I still had to borrow a computer
This same brother at MIT got us into Magic the Gathering.Comment
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My older brother had a computer supply and service shop back in the 80s and pre-loaded Moria when we upgraded to the XT. Burned a lot of hours playing and eventually lost the program. Went searching for it in the 90's and discovered Angband. Wasn't until then that I figured out what WoR actually did.Last edited by Hounded; January 20, 2023, 16:29.It Breathes. You die.Comment
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I was introduced to nethack by one of my oldest friends when we were roommates (1987, I think). He set me up with a dialup account on the minicomputer in his office at work. We even made up our own character classes, which he then added to the game. Among them were the Valkyrie (starts with a +1 long sword and really good armour), the Guitarist (starts with picks, which you could throw for damage, and a Strat, which was a reskinned axe; if you played it at a nymph, she would giggle and throw her knickers at you, which you could wear as a helmet), and the Asshole (same as the Tourist, only had auto-identify on everything because know-it-all).
Some years later, right around the time Angband came along, a boyfriend introduced me to it. I liked the idea of the town up top that you could always return to if you needed something.
I eventually got rid of the boyfriend, but I'm still playing Angband.Comment
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Unsure exactly when was the first time I played Angband specifically, but it all started in the 80s with Rogue, Hack, Larn (first one I completed, multiple times), Nethack et cetera. I mostly drifted off to graphic games sometime after early Moria, but popped back in for roguelikes every now and then. I think after Adom sometime in the 00s I more heavily picked up Angband for those thematic periods. I reckon Tales of MajEyal and Angband are my two most played roguelikes now, before 2000s definitely Nethack.Comment
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Gosh, there's a looot I'm skipping here, but the short version is that I really liked ADOM!
After a broken hand-me-down PPC iBook with no OS from my school became my only usable computer, I ended up installing Gentoo on it and couldn't find a binary for ADOM that worked on that
But TOME 2 was in the repos, which I ended up liking quite a bit!
I still bounced off Vanilla though--and it wasn't until much later that I ended up reading the Angband lparchive that I ended up "getting" it and giving it a more fair try.
The design of the most recent versions being surprisingly nice really sealed the deal that Angband was something I enjoyed playing~Comment
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I'm pretty sure I found Angband on AOL at some point while searching for Tolkien-related stuff. My only roguelike experience before that was Dungeon of Doom many years previous, on the Macintosh Plus my dad got our family for Christmas one year.
I was a goober and used the cheat death mode for quite a while but never actually beat the game that way. I just had fun looking for all the familiar artifacts and creatures. And recalling back to town constantly to sell things before I learned I enjoyed no-selling mode. Or maybe no-selling wasn't a thing yet? Was that always an option?Comment
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