Reply 2720 of 6866, by domomex89
Shreddoc wrote on 2021-02-05, 04:25:It must be remembered, with games like DOTT and Sam&Max, that those jokes were funny in the early 1990's, for the target audience. Very funny. And crucially, edgy - boundary pushing.
In that era, the world was just seeing The Simpsons for the first time. The sitcom Friends didn't exist yet. Many people had never experienced stand-up comedy. No South Park, no Family Guy. That was all comedy-of-the-future, the world was literally too young to handle it. Young people interested in computers and computer games were a strange minority of outcasts (far, far more than today!). There was no internet. No cell phones. It was a hugely different world and culture.
Those games were funny in the same way that the Police Academy movies were insanely funny, and cool in the way that the Back To The Future and Terminator movies were the height of cool. As a teenager in the 90's.
I understand. What you said was obvious though.
Shreddoc wrote on 2021-02-05, 04:25:This is the essence of retro. To truly understand the productions of an era, you had to be there at the time, living through it. Then gain several decades of memories on top - a varied landscape to peer longingly back across, in search of old friends from a simpler time of life.
Trends come and go, but some things dont age well. Also the 20th century was no simple time. It was crazy just like now.
Unrelated talk here, but the main reason why I did not enjoy Sam & Max Hit the Road was because of the writing. The jokes didnt really bother me that much but since the writings pretty uneven, I didnt really enjoy the game.