First post, by Maxaxle
Seriously, I'm wondering if there have been any [commercial] DOS game releases within the past 5-10 years.
Seriously, I'm wondering if there have been any [commercial] DOS game releases within the past 5-10 years.
Don`t think so.
In 2004 nobody would have bought a game that didn`t support directx.
After win95/98 there is no official support for dos from microsoft and only emulated versions came with winME, winxp etc.
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I bought a collector's edition of Prince of Persia (Ubisoft). The DVDs are dated in November 2005, and it included a floppy with the original DOS version of Prince of Persia. Does that count?
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Sometimes going all the way is just a start...
http://www.pouet.net/prod.php?which=62781 I'd guess that's the most recent one 😀
wrote:http://www.pouet.net/prod.php?which=62781 I'd guess that's the most recent one 😀
Wow, that's actually really impressive.
wrote:I bought a collector's edition of Prince of Persia (Ubisoft). The DVDs are dated in November 2005, and it included a floppy with the original DOS version of Prince of Persia. Does that count?
Suddenly I have one less reason to hate Ubisoft. How did they get their hands on a floppy disk that worked well enough to be sold, though?
Define commercial. 😜. Petrila Entertainment which is basically one guy who apparently is now in politics released a number of DOS shooters around 2000-2002ish. Most were politically themed. All but one were freeware.
Since the DOS Games Archive site is not working for me at the moment for some reason, here's archive.org's version:
https://web.archive.org/web/20130916014317/ht … -entertainment/
I'm thinking 97-98ish would be the last big commercial years.
wrote:http://www.pouet.net/prod.php?which=62781 I'd guess that's the most recent one :)
This website triggered Microsoft SmartScreen to have a heart attack... first time I'd ever seen that happen too after over a year of Windows 8 usage. :P
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--- Ancient DOS Games Webshow: www.pixelships.com/adg
pouet is always listed as a "attack site" because of razor1911's presence there.
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it's a popular source of compressed binaries, and we all know compressed binaries are a big red flag to any virus scanner.
wrote:I'm thinking 97-98ish would be the last big commercial years.
That narrows it down to a handful of titles, not including Half-Life.
This thread is kind of amusing considering that there have been commercially released games for the Atari 2600, 5200, 7800 and Commodore 64 in the last few years. Granted, they weren't produced by big companies and sold in brick & mortar stores, but they were released with full packaging and sold via mail order.
It's kind of awesome when you think of it that way though, a lot of PC games back in the day had to be ordered via mail. It's cool to know you can order new games for some of your retro systems in a retro sort of fashion. 😜
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WWII GI, NAM, Burnout (not THAT Burnout) and Elder Scrolls Redguard are the few real late DOS releases I can think of. Not surprising given the companies for their incompetent history 😀
Gunmetal was released in 1998 for MS-DOS and "Windows" but the DirectX version is super unstable no matter what you try to run it on.
It's only stable from within a pure DOS environment. It is also easily the nicest looking DOS game anyone could ever play.
“I am the dragon without a name…”
― Κυνικός Δράκων
wrote:Gunmetal was released in 1998 for MS-DOS and "Windows" but the DirectX version is super unstable no matter what you try to run it on.
It's only stable from within a pure DOS environment. It is also easily the nicest looking DOS game anyone could ever play.
Gunmetal looks absolutely spectacular. It's a shame my DOS machine (which I picked up for free) tends to drop to 20-25 FPS when things are anything but calm.
Granted I've been running Gunmetal in a VirtualBox VM running MS-DOS 6.22, runs at a solid framerate no matter what's going on. And most importantly it doesn't run turbo speed and doesn't crash every single time...
What are you running it on? You need like 32 MB of RAM and maybe a Pentium 2 for this game to shine.
“I am the dragon without a name…”
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The BIOS says it's got a AMD-K5-PR166 and about 66.5k of RAM, but I meant to say that Quake drops from 20-25 FPS whenever things are anything but calm, earlier. I'll give it a shot if it can be stuffed onto a CD or multiple floppies.
As for the game, I just remembered where I've heard the "radio transmission received" sound before: Deus Ex. Weird, huh?
Gunmetal needs to be installed and patched on Windows, the resultant game folder can be put back on a CD-R. So you're in luck there.
The game is massive though. 618~ MB total, so be sure to have sufficient diskspace for it. You do not require the CD to play this game, not even for the music.
And 64 MB of RAM is twice what it recommends so that's a good thing. What about your SVGA card? Hopefully that's not a bottleneck either.
“I am the dragon without a name…”
― Κυνικός Δράκων
1. I suspect my hard drive might not be big enough to fit the entire game, but I could always run it from the CD...
2. I don't actually know what card the DOS machine has, but I'll be sure to check it later.
I never tried to see how well the game is stable under playing with a minimal install, but given how rocky the engine it uses is and the overall programming it might turn sour.
EDIT: Also in response to leilei.. Does Extreme Paintbrawl count too?
“I am the dragon without a name…”
― Κυνικός Δράκων