Older Than the NES: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Character Level]]: ''[[Dnd (Video Game)|Dnd]]'', 1975, or ''[[Dungeons and Dragons]]'', 1974
* [[Clairvoyant Security Force]]: ''[[Zork (Video Game)|Zork]]'', 1979, for one.
* [[Color -Coded Multiplayer]]: Some ''[[Pong]]'' systems, 1975.
* [[Color -Coded Armies]]: Kreigsspiel, the first example of [[War Gaming]] and used to train the Prussian General Staff, 19th Century
* [[Controllable Helplessness]]: ''[[Adventure (Video Game)|Adventure]]'', 1979
* [[Cores and Turrets Boss]]: ''[[Bosconian]]'', 1981
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* [[Faux First Person 3D]]: ''[[Maze War (Video Game)|Maze War]]'', 1974
* [[Final Boss]]: ''[[Dnd (Video Game)|Dnd]]'', 1975
* [[First -Person Shooter]]: ''[[Maze War (Video Game)|Maze War]]'', 1974
* [[Flip Screen Scrolling]]: ''[[Adventure (Video Game)|Adventure]]'', 1979
* [[Game Over]]: ''[[Space Invaders]]'', 1978
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* [[In Vehicle Invulnerability]]: ''[[Gran Trak 10 (Video Game)|Gran Trak 10]]'', 1974
* [[Inventory Management Puzzle]]: ''Colossal Cave'', 1975
* [[Invincibility Power -Up]]: ''[[Pac-Man]]'', 1980
* [[Invisible Grid]]: ''[[Maze War (Video Game)|Maze War]]'', 1974
* [[Job System]]: ''[[Avatar (Video Game)|Avatar]]'', 1979
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* [[Nintendo Hard]]: Of course -- if you're ignorant of anything Nintendo preNES -- the title may now break your mind.
* [[Nonstandard Game Over]]: ''[[Star Trek Text Game (Video Game)|Star Trek Text Game]]'', 1971, running out of fuel.
* [[No Plot, No Problem]]: Sports and board games in general are [[Older Than Dirt]].
* [[Numbered Sequels]]: ''[[Space Invaders]] II'', 1981; not to be confused with Space Invaders ''part'' II.
* [[Obvious Beta]]: ''[[ET the Extra Terrestrial (Video Game)|ET the Extra Terrestrial]]'', 1982
* [[Old Save Bonus]]: ''[[Wizardry (Video Game)|Wizardry]]'' 2, 1982
* [[One -Hit Kill]]: ''[[Space War]]'', 1962
* [[One -Hit -Point Wonder]]: ''[[Space War]]'', 1962
* [[One Bullet At a Time]]: At least as early as ''[[Space Invaders]]'', 1978
* [[One Up]]
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* [[Porting Disaster]]: ''[[Pac-Man]]'' on the Atari 2600, 1982
* [[Press X to Die]]: ''[[Star Trek Text Game (Video Game)|Star Trek Text Game]]'', 1971
* [[Press X to Not Die]]: ''[[DragonsDragon's Lair (Video Game)|Dragons Lair]]'', 1983
* [[The Problem With Licensed Games]]: ''[[Raiders of the Lost Ark (Video Game)|Raiders of the Lost Ark]]'', May 1982, [[Ur Example]]; ''[[ET the Extra Terrestrial (Video Game)|ET the Extra Terrestrial]]'', 1982, [[Trope Codifier]]
* [[Puzzle Boss]]: ''[[Donkey Kong]]'', 1981
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* [[Scoring Points]]: ''[[Pong]]'', 1972
* [[Shielded Core Boss]]: ''Star Castle'', 1980
* [[Shoot 'Em Up]]: ''[[Space Invaders]]'', 1978
* [[Side View]]: ''[[Tennis for Two (Video Game)|Tennis for Two]]'', 1958
* [[Silliness Switch]]: The potion of hallucination in ''[[Rogue (Video Game)|Rogue]]'', 1980.

Revision as of 10:06, 8 January 2014

File:300px-Atari2600a 7997.jpg

Here are The Oldest Ones in The Book for Video Games. The NES's US introduction in October 1985 marked the beginning of the end of The Great Video Game Crash of 1983, and we have chosen it as a cutoff date for The Oldest Ones in The Book of Video Game Tropes.

A good number of the RPG tropes can be found here, since these games trace their roots pretty much directly back to Tabletop RPGs such as Dungeons and Dragons, which were among the first commercial games to be ported over to a video game system.

Examples: