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The ten greatest years in videogame history

We calculated the best 120 months in gaming - you won't believe the results

Words: GamesRadar US

1982

Arcades were blazing with innovation in 1982, but home systems were starting to come into their own as well. You could satiate your cravings for arcade action with future classics like BurgerTime (would you believe "Mr. Egg" was a copyrighted name?). You could mine for dragons and killer balloons in Dig Dug, stab armored knights off of ostriches in Joust, or shoot the hell out of the mechanized sensory overload that was Robotron: 2084. Isometric shooter Zaxxon amazed people with its graphics, and Tron taught us to fear spiders - though we dreaded Sinistar's roaring, "I hunger!" even more. 

In the living room, the Atari 2600 VCS, was at its peak. There was the jungle adventure Pitfall!, gorgeous Space Invaders knock-off Demon Attack (also on Intellivision), the tense, robots-in-a-maze shooter Berzerk, the "Heart of Darkness"-style vertical shooter River Raid. If those weren't weird enough, Megamania found you blasting away at hamburgers and spare tires, and the uncanny Yars' Revenge actually made being a cyborg fly in outer space seem cool. Dot-muncher Ms. Pac-man made up for the mess that was the 2600 version of Pac-man, Finally, E.T.: The Extra Terrestrial may have sucked so badly it became legendary, but many of us played the crap out of it anyhow.

The Mattel Intellivision had made its living showing off its sports games, but Advanced Dungeons & Dragons gave fantasy gamers a reason to rejoice. The experimental Vectrex, with its self-contained screen and line-based vector graphics, did its best with decent arcade ports of Berzerk, Rip Off, and Scramble, and the Colecovision arrived on the scene with nearly perfect versions of arcade hits Donkey Kong and Venture. Atari's 5200 system released some strong arcade ports as well.

Personal computers even snuck in a few hits, with the Commodore 64 donning the graphical adventure The Mask of the Sun - sorry, Raoul - and feeling the vengeance of Ultima II: Revenge of the Enchantress.


 
7 Comments
Order Comments: Newest First | Oldest First
babo_u_da  - 11 months 8 days ago 
im gonna be gay and just do this FIRST!
(sry people who hate playing first)
Wazoox2  - 11 months 7 days ago 
2nd last paragraph, it says Incredible Hulk: Maximum Destruction.. is it not Ultimate Destruction?
CoD_22  - 11 months 6 days ago 
How can they like star wars battlefront? touch the right analog stick and your crosshair thingy will shoot off a metre or so. its impossible to snipe and its just too easy. the only thing that makes it hard is your teammates because they die and you lose your reinforcements. if it was just you on your own you would own them!
CoD_22  - 11 months 6 days ago 
i realise i may have contradicted myself slightly. its easy because you can run up to people to kill them without losing any health or you can get in tanks and become invincible. and they have no snipers because they have all given up trying as well. and that makes it really boring.
Wolf007  - 11 months 4 days ago 
How about you just put the greatest year of gaming. 1997! You talked about FFVII, is has there ever been a greater game. I think not! By the way, why doesn't it get ported to PS3 and the 360. It would sell like 300 million copies!
mjmont92  - 10 months 16 days ago 
woo for 1997! dark forces II is one of my all time favorite shooters. (much better than Halo 3 imo)
rbrent  - 4 months 14 days ago 
This would be perfect for a timeline of the history of video games that I've been putting together at http://timelines.com/topics/video-games.

It's on a website called http://timelines.com. Anyone is free to contribute to it and enhance it with images, videos, or commentary.

Our idea is to create an interactive historical record of anything and everything, based on specific events that combine to form timelines. We're trying to achieve a sort of user-created multimedia encyclopedia, in which no event is too big and no event is too small, and where each event can contain various types of resources, such as video, images, maps, etc. It's also a good way to direct traffic to your blog because your events will pop up along with anything else that's thematically related. We're also planning on creating an embeddable version of our timelines in the near future.