Sunday, November 9, 2025

OK, I'll Try PC Gaming Again


One of my goals this year was to get a modern, state of the art desktop PC, but not necessarily for gaming.  No, it was to replace an ancient laptop we'd been using for various non-gaming tasks for over a decade. Email, online stuff, music...that kind of use. It played Ultima Online well enough for a few years, and it had a few games like Zuma on it, but the slowass old Dell laptop was never intended for anything as fun as modern gaming.

Even when I owned PCs in the late 1990s and 2000s that were pretty up-to-date, I only had played UO, Everquest, and a few other MMORPG games on them, mostly after becoming discouraged by a few attempts to expand my PC library. There was a Star Wars first person shooter that took over eight hours to install, only to find out that my new computer's graphics card was not good enough or something. Several other game purchases ended similarly, with my lack of understanding about computer hardware and compatibility hindering me each time. 

By the late 2000s I was fully pulled back into consoles anyway, so the slow rise of platforms like Steam didn't catch my eye. What did catch my eye was the PC-only release of Lunacid, a King's Field-style first person dungeon crawler. I wanted that game, but being able to play it was not a part of my calculation when purchasing the behemoth of a PC I ended up with.

No, I wanted the damn thing to just fucking boot up fast, load shit fast, and run shit fast...and be dependable. Thanks to technological advances in the form of whatever solid state memory is, it seems to be that. So a month and a half ago I took the plunge and signed up for Steam, downloaded Lunacid, and played the crap out of it. I'll get to that later.

In spite of my past trauma with PC gaming, Steam has been a zero-hassle experience so far. Synching up a regular Microsoft XBox controller to the PC and Steam has also been easy has hell and I'm grateful for that. I remember failing miserably to get a Logitech console-style controller to work with anything in the 2000s as well.

The offerings in the Steam store seem to be vast but they do not seem to go for any kind of full retro library. There are certainly all kinds of categories of games there that I've never explored, so there is that. Lunacid, while not a graphically demanding game, is playing smoothly so far, easing my fears of having another clunker PC. I'm pretty old, so there is a part of me hoping that this is my last PC purchase and that this buff-ass machine chugs along with me, loaded up with games and memories.

Here's a good memory already, of alternating back and forth between Lunacid on the PC and Sword of Fargoal on the VIC 20. Truly, the best of both worlds.


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