20110526

mindshadow game screenshots (1984)

from the commodore 64 version. this game totally blew my mind back in the day. it was also the first time i'd been able to figure out the fundamental difference between raster and vector computer graphics, as the objects for each scene were 'painted' on-screen like bob ross on amphetemines. interplay was truly living fifteen years in the future; adobe flash is nothing more than an advanced version of the techniques they pioneered here.

20110518

solution to the water maze in marble madness (1986-2008)

only took me 20+ years to figure this one out; the secret level required two players. solving it was difficult enough with an commie64 emulator, which could instantly bring me back to where i was with a saved-state file... god knows how much time it would've taken with the old school hardware! 

back to the future 2 concept art (1989)


i've always been obsessed with the neo-reaganian world of 2015 as portrayed by bttf2. we probably would've had fusion, weather control, rejuvenation and hover technology if there had been a technological singularity. with less than four years to go, however, only the 'asian influence' theme seems to have manifested itself; china's economic rise and japan's cultural works have definitely shaped the united states in the past decade

adventure construction set advertisement (1986)

electronic arts was awesomesauce in the 1980's. i must've spent at least eight months of my adolescence making ultima style adventures with this thing on my commodore 64. the largest one was something called "otherworld" which was submitted to this particular contest. a few years back i actually salvaged all my old c64 drawings and programs using an x1541 cable and starcommander to convert the old 5-inch floppies to emulator-readable images. unfortunately, that adventure never survived the data-transition.

max headroom tv series end theme (1987)

great synth from my youth. i pieced this together from the max headroom dvd collection; there were several episodes that had snippets of the audio. the composer may have been midge ure of ultravox, not sure.

and yes, i do know how to capitalize, as you can plainly tell from my other blog. i just figured the whole undercase motif would lend this new journal thingy a nice minimalist air, as i expect to be posting images and video, but not overly much text.