Hey LGR, I am sorry if this sounds cheesy or cringy, but I am around your age and grew up with the same technology and games as you. I had to leave behind the country where I grew up, leaving behind my friends whom I shared wonderful memories with playing the games you review (Dune, Ages of Empire, NFS...etc). Listening to your stories about your childhood, how some of these games helped you through some difficult times makes me feel like you were one of those friends I left behind and terribly miss every day. I empathize the loss of your sister, I lost my dad suddenly who put me on the path of PCs in the early 90s and also played a lot of games back then (NFL95, Sam and Max) and these games help me get through stuff as well. Your videos kind of helps me fill that hole and I thank you for that. I feel like you're a friend I always wanted to have. So...thank you!
I’m 36 btw, your era seems close to mine as well. The 90’s were an amazing time for games, computers, and consoles with 3d support. Pre-social media and pre-streamed games.
Whoa, I never thought something I had a hand in would ever show up in an LGR video! I designed the PowerPCMe K-Mart tape (8:45)back in 2016, first cassette I ever designed. I’ve since had a hand in the art direction of over 100 physical music releases.
the CD is likely doing that because the computer it was copied from didn’t “finalize” the disk. it should work on playback only devices like a cd player boombox, car, etc. this has happened to me before with small indie band cds they’ve sold. idk how to get around it but that’s probably what jt is!
If the CD isn't finalized, you can *try* opening it up in a proper CD-authoring-and-burning program like Nero Burning ROM, and see if it can close the open session and finalize it from there. Of course, that presumes you still have an optical drive on your PC...
@@ballyastrocade5672 When disc drives started to be phased out, I swore I'd always have an optical drive, because they are just too handy, especially because I was starting to play some of the older games in my collection. And I also liked to play my old CD music. But finally, in 2023, I bought my current PC, which has no optical drive. So I bought an external USB DVD burner/drive. It's now been over a year, and I still haven't hooked up that drive. In other words, I finally became part of the problem of trusting everything to the internet. GOG exists, so I had no need for the CD/DVD drive. And there's plenty of places to listen to my favorite music online, and I've always had great speakers plugged in to my PC. And when I can't find a favorite CD online (which does happen), I fire up my old living room stereo system, which sounds better anyway.
@@ballyastrocade5672 Wow, that would be awesome. Is there a status code written somewhere on the cd? Possibly on the inner rings that have all the metadata and title info.
I OWNED THAT LINUX SIMCITY! Sorry to shout. I thought for a while that all my Loki Games were just a college fever dream. That's fantastic! I ran them on Redhat Workstation and MandrakeLinux I bought at Fry's Electronics in big boxes.
I believe the PS2 was PPC (YellowDog linux) so it would have to be compiled from source, and probably debugged. Only very special(insane) programmers would take up the challenge! lol😂
Previous to that I got an "unlimited" Red Hat Bible which promised forever updates, but years later after contacting RedHat, they told me the newest RH distro is fundamentally different and Fedora linux was available to me, so they didn't have to abide by the terms!😕
Clint, thank you so much for showcasing CART zine and my comics! I'm so thrilled you enjoyed it and you had so many amazing words for Kid Internet 😭 funnily enough the coolmath person I interviewed left about a month ago, lol. Thank you again for the decade of entertainment 💖
Huge thanks for showing off the print and the website! It's been crazy to map the Vaporwave/Retro CGI/LGR community overlap in real time through people tagging me when they watched the video.
Hehe, the licorice that came with the Ultrasound was made in the same building that used to be my vocational college back in the day. I got a nice Mikromikko 486 from their storage while they were moving out of that building. (alongside a massive pile of old components and server blades)
Always appreciate a fresh new LGR video on a Friday morning! As per usual, thank you very much for having good and accurate closed captioning, even on unscripted content, it is always something I am thankful for.
51 minutes of mail ins, count me in! Love seeing all the cool stuff people send. My favorite was the big box Gizmos and Gadgets by The Learning Company in a past episode
Talk about timing. This whole week I was watching unboxing mail in videos as far back as 6 years ago, and I now see another video uploaded. Thank you LGR for the hours of entertainment of amazing goodies
47:06 Regarding those Model M5s in case it helps, the two I have had dead trackballs on arrival but I was able to fix them by replacing the capacitors on the trackball's controller PCB. At least for Lexmark-made ones, whilst the keyboard's PCB uses THT components like earlier M controllers, the trackball's PCB uses SMD components, so this issue might be related to the one that also affects Model M1 and M2 keyboards entirely.
I live in Japan and I found a pack of 5 640 MO discs and a USB drive at hard-off for less than $10 for everything. Those things are so neat, they make a weird sound and it all seems like alien technology from another dimension!
Oh sweet, welcome to the Model M trackball world! For the longest time, my white whale was the M5-1. Both examples I own have problems, but c'est la vie. The M5-2's are really fun in a pinch (including the Unicomp USB version) for doing server work without having to make space for a mouse.
The mouse house did have a practical use for people with limited space. I distinctly remember having one of those things stuck to the side of our Tandy back in the day because the "desk'" we had for it was just a cart and the keyboard tray didn't have enough room for the keyboard and mouse at the same time. We had to mouse on our leg for things that used the mouse.
I loved those ATI All-In-Wonders back in the day. Just being able to watch a TV program in a window on your PC's desktop at the same time you were doing actual productive stuff in the other windows was an amazing thing, especially in the pre-streaming era of dial-up internet where over-the-air broadcasts and cable TV were pretty much your only options...
@@nickwallette6201 I loved the MiniDisc system. I still have several of them: a Sony deck, a Sharp CD+MD combo deck, a couple of the Sony portables, and even an in-dash car stereo unit. It *is* unfortunate that it didn't catch fire here in the US and Canada as well, but Sony kinda botched the marketing -- first when their advertising seemed to be pushing it as The Next Big Thing after CDs when most people were still replacing their vinyl with CDs ("You mean I have to buy "Dark Side of the Moon" *again?*"), and then when they split MD-Audio and MD-Data into incompatible formats so that you couldn't use MD blanks for both music and data storage because Sony's media division was afraid that someone somewhere would make an unauthorized copy of something if they allowed it. 😞
Yeah, he's going to be very disappointed when he realizes there is no optical drive in that... all it does is hold your CD's that you catalog and tell the software what is in what slot, so you can find it more easily. Then you take it out of that device and put it in your optical drive.
Of all the stuff in this video, those Taiwanese games are by far the most immaculate thing I see. Absolutely gorgeous art, beautiful condition, and obscure as hell overseas. Fantastic contribution by Brandon.
Love the Max Payne mousepad! I use mine everyday. I remember buying the game at CircuitCity spurred by The Matrix and bullet time. NICE! Mine is a little more worn in lol
That Quiz Wiz was my childhood. Loved it back when that version would've been new in the early 90's, love it now. Wish I still had mine, but I'm decently certain my parents threw it away 25-ish years ago.
I have no idea what happened to mine, but my folks are notorious pack-rats, so I'm sure it's sitting somewhere with the batteries I left in it eating through the contacts. I loved mine as well, such a great way to pass time in a house where _real_ video games were forbidden, but anything "learning" was approved. I also had a "sports" cartridge, but I still think the "General Knowledge" one was the best.
OMG that Tiger Whiz Quiz is so nostalgic for me. I had one as a kid and spent so much time messing around with it. At the time, I thought it was the height of tech.
I didn’t know any of the Star Trek computer accessories existed when they on sale originally. I definitely would have done everything in my power to get my hands on all of them! I still want it all!!!
I've got one stashed away from a surveillance computer I had to trash. Never used it. That computer also had this weird module in one of the RAM slots (yes, in an actual ram slot!) that has an FPGA on it along with a few other chips. I've never seen anything like it. I can't figure out what it is, it's completely unmarked. Maybe an MPEG encoder or something? Since the PC did have like 8 video inputs and recorded video.
27:11 One word of warning with the ATi Radeon should you get round to reviewing it. Make sure that you have an audio connection from the card to your sound card before you record using its capture device. My friend's PC came with a newer version of the All In Wonder Radeon 9200 card where the OEM forgot to supply all the correct breakout cables so when he recorded analogue TV using the built in tuner, it saved it without the audio. One workaround we employed was to use one of those internal Analogue CD Audio cables with a white connector and plug it into a spare Line-in Header on the motherboard's audio (which it thankfully had). That header at the top left may be used for that but it could also be additionaal headers for another A/V input like Hauppage WinTV cards used to have in Media Center PCs back in the day. That being said, I caught a glimpse of a 3.5mm cable off an S-Video like cable/dongle thing which I am guessing could be the all important cable.
That Eee PC - I nearly bought one of those way back in the day but I never did, opting for a more expensive but more future-proof laptop. I wish I still had my late 1970s Quiz Wiz. They were pretty neat little game machines, and I had no idea they persisted into the 1990s. The old ones were made by Coleco, and the old models have a certain charm to them. I hope we get an episode about the 75-disc CD changer!
I still have my KDS (Korea Data Systems, IIRC) CD organizer in my closet; my parents got it for me for Christmas decades ago. It was pretty neat, but is definitely an artifact of the time. It came with some rudimentary software that could index a disc and store the results in a database for easy searching. It could also control ejecting the individual trays, or one could do it with controls on top of the tower. It was neat at the time, and I just can't bear to throw mine out, even though I will likely never have a use for it again.
I recognized a few of those Taiwanese games, the one with the Warrior guy on the black background with the 3 on it is Legend of the Chivalrous Hero 3, a really cool RPG, has some amazing sprite work and combat animations. I'd love to see a video on these games with you just messing around with them. And who knows, maybe that'll get translations going too! I can dream dangit
one of my earliest memories was how BIG the Dick Tracy movie was - it was being covered everywhere after the success of Batman (1989) .....and then it came out and no one talked about it ever again. But Hollywood thought they were on to something , so Rocketeer got made - that The Shadow and The Phantom were the nails in the coffin of old timey comic strip movies
Trying to get that Linux version of Sim City 3000 working on a modern version of Linux would be an interesting video on its own. It would undoubtedly be incredibly frustrating and possibly beyond the scope of LGR's channel, but it would be interesting. Let's just say binary backwards compatibility in Linux isn't exactly as easy as it is in Windows.
XFree86 isn't even the same X server used these days (X org), and even that is on its way out due to wayland. That is also a painfully ancient version of glibc, lol. A linux system from back then may as well be an amiga with how difficult it would be to get this running.
The first two of those Taiwanese Kingformation games are 俠客英雄傳3 (usually referred to in English as Chivalrous Heroes 3, there is no 2), and 俠客英雄傳XP (a Windows XP port/remake of the same title). The game is an amazing Taiwanese DOS RPG classic that is fairly well known.
Honestly really cool of you to open up mail. I'm sure alot of youtubers get mail but only a few will record them opening it. Love your channel. Can't wait to see your next video on a PC game that I don't know about but should. I remember watching your video on Slave Zero and being amazed. Played and beat that game thanks.
Speaking of Windows 95 nostalgia, this year's Finnish entry for the Eurovision Song Contest is Windows95man. We'll see, whether his throwback eurobeat song will win, riding on millennial nostalgia. xD
The Max Payne mousepad really brought me back! That was my favorite game as a teenager and I used that pad for years and years. I've gotta check if it's still laying around my parents' house.
That ATI All-In-Wonder is also an analog TV tuner. That's how I got into building my own DVRs, my first one was running Windows 95 using a freeware DVR app, but later I moved to XP with Windows Media Center. It worked great!
33:36: The Asus EEeeeeee, was the one I used when backpacking around in Mexico like 2009. It had 4gb hdd so not much space, but donwloaded a XP lite version which worked quite well. It kind of saved me due sometimes you just needed to look up local things and places without going to a internet café all the time. And ot took really little space and weight too.
I had one of those Tyan S1854 motherboards and I loved it. One of the best motherboards I had. Lots of features and many upgrade paths. Want to keep your PCI SLI setup until you can upgrade to AGP without losing your sound card, NIC, extra drive controller and whatever other PCI/ISA devices you run? Want to run your socket 370 Celeron 500 until you can upgrade to a slot 1 based 1GHz PIII? That board let you do it, was sturdy, and mine lasted me many many years. Still associate Tyan with quality.
Some of these items bring back memories from my youth. I remember the ATI graphics card, pretty sure we owned one of a similar model and used the TV tuner a little as well. Fun times.
Clint's descent into madness has been well documented in this video. I'm ashamed to say it was so incredibly amasuing to watch this descent. For what it's worth, my family still has their HP PSC 750 running to this day. I just found new ink for it recently too.
I'm in Japan for a few months and I have been thrifting multiple times and the piles of vintage Japanese tech hilarity... if there are any Japanese items you're interested in and would like me to keep my eyes open for, I'd be happy to do so. I think about your channel every time I walk past the "vintage tech" sections.
@33:20 Would be cool if you covered some unique board games related to video games! I still have and play often the Age of Mythology board game, which is very complex but very fun! I remember the very first time I played it was with my Mom the Christmas that it came out and she completely wiped the floor with me at it... which is hilarious because she knows how much I love that game (to this day she is still waiting for an AoM2 to come out to buy for me, haha). Some unique board games like that would be a cool random-venture for you, maybe as a "Blerbs" type of video 😆
I had to check my CD collection to see if I still had that Duke Nukem album. I used to have over 3000 CDs but alas drastic changes in my situation meant I’ve all but sold em off except for a few. My respect for LGR is what led me to hang on to that one. It’s actually sitting in the shelf right next to the interestingly rare Dexter’s Laboratory album that turned out was the earliest I ever heard of will.i.am
17:54 There was something disturbingly familiar about the letter before me. The handwriting was all pretty curves. "You're a mouse pad, Max." The truth was a burning green crack through my brain. A two-tone monochrome image of me holding a handgun and looking off to the side with a tagline in bright red letters on top, and my name in big, bold letters on bottom, all printed onto a rubber pad meant to keep your desktop from getting scratched up by your mouse. I was a mouse pad. Funny as hell, it was the most horrible thing I could think of.
I truly believe Clint does not know how many people he comforts with his videos... something about them just makes them feel like a safe place from this mad world.
The Simcity 3000 Linux case and disc have no esrb ratings, so it's possible they used the same insides and/or artwork for multiple versions of the game. Simcity 3000 Unlimited has a ton of different names around the world, and Linux is pretty niche.
i rememeber getting an EEE PC for uni back in 2007 ish. But didn't hold onto to it for long, I remember it was quite limiting back then. Would love to have one to sit on a shelf lol.
They’re pretty easy to find on eBay nowadays- I just got one for cheap (again). It’s my second. I have the Disney Princess one also that I saved from the trash.
OMG I remember the Quiz Whiz! Man, hearing those trills brings back memories. I haven't seen one of those in ages. So glad it's going to find a good home!
Oh man, I also had that Star Trek keyboard and mouse pad (but not the mouse, oddly). I think we got it as a bundle at Goodwill when I was a kid. I think I still have the keyboard, blinken-lights and all!
Looks like one of those All-In-Wonder ATI cards with a Theather chipset. If so, you just got your hands on some of the best capture hardware that exists for analog NTSC/PAL media.
Hey LGR, I am sorry if this sounds cheesy or cringy, but I am around your age and grew up with the same technology and games as you. I had to leave behind the country where I grew up, leaving behind my friends whom I shared wonderful memories with playing the games you review (Dune, Ages of Empire, NFS...etc). Listening to your stories about your childhood, how some of these games helped you through some difficult times makes me feel like you were one of those friends I left behind and terribly miss every day. I empathize the loss of your sister, I lost my dad suddenly who put me on the path of PCs in the early 90s and also played a lot of games back then (NFL95, Sam and Max) and these games help me get through stuff as well. Your videos kind of helps me fill that hole and I thank you for that. I feel like you're a friend I always wanted to have. So...thank you!
I’m 36 btw, your era seems close to mine as well. The 90’s were an amazing time for games, computers, and consoles with 3d support. Pre-social media and pre-streamed games.
Whoa, I never thought something I had a hand in would ever show up in an LGR video! I designed the PowerPCMe K-Mart tape (8:45)back in 2016, first cassette I ever designed. I’ve since had a hand in the art direction of over 100 physical music releases.
that’s really cool
How very cool!
Wow is that tape that old? I've never come across it. and I'm always collecting radio station tapes.
the CD is likely doing that because the computer it was copied from didn’t “finalize” the disk. it should work on playback only devices like a cd player boombox, car, etc. this has happened to me before with small indie band cds they’ve sold. idk how to get around it but that’s probably what jt is!
copy it to mini disc
If the CD isn't finalized, you can *try* opening it up in a proper CD-authoring-and-burning program like Nero Burning ROM, and see if it can close the open session and finalize it from there. Of course, that presumes you still have an optical drive on your PC...
@@ballyastrocade5672 good point!
@@ballyastrocade5672 When disc drives started to be phased out, I swore I'd always have an optical drive, because they are just too handy, especially because I was starting to play some of the older games in my collection. And I also liked to play my old CD music. But finally, in 2023, I bought my current PC, which has no optical drive. So I bought an external USB DVD burner/drive. It's now been over a year, and I still haven't hooked up that drive. In other words, I finally became part of the problem of trusting everything to the internet. GOG exists, so I had no need for the CD/DVD drive. And there's plenty of places to listen to my favorite music online, and I've always had great speakers plugged in to my PC. And when I can't find a favorite CD online (which does happen), I fire up my old living room stereo system, which sounds better anyway.
@@ballyastrocade5672 Wow, that would be awesome. Is there a status code written somewhere on the cd? Possibly on the inner rings that have all the metadata and title info.
Glad to see Sim City 3000 has a good home... Thanks for the shout out! Keep up the great work!
my disappointment that someone didn't just send you 5,400 feet of jumbo 2-ply toilet paper is immeasurable
And a taco bell gift card. Since the brand is Marathon 😂
@@Triumph-dg4bv That would be a perfect match. "Taco Bell -- where every meal is a #2."
a few years back that would be worth a fortune lol
ya i thought it was a printer for toilet rolls haha
@@nickwallette6201I've never had these alleged taco bell poops
I OWNED THAT LINUX SIMCITY! Sorry to shout. I thought for a while that all my Loki Games were just a college fever dream. That's fantastic! I ran them on Redhat Workstation and MandrakeLinux I bought at Fry's Electronics in big boxes.
Makes me wonder if it would even run on the version of Linux designed for the PS2,or if that version of Linux is too new
I know that feeling too well. Also, Mandrake was the first Linux I was able to get all my devices working on. That as such an exciting time.
There where several ports Railroad Tycoon, II, Civiization Call to Power,, heretic II, Heroes III ran on Ubuntu !
I believe the PS2 was PPC (YellowDog linux) so it would have to be compiled from source, and probably debugged. Only very special(insane) programmers would take up the challenge! lol😂
Previous to that I got an "unlimited" Red Hat Bible which promised forever updates, but years later after contacting RedHat, they told me the newest RH distro is fundamentally different and Fedora linux was available to me, so they didn't have to abide by the terms!😕
Clint, thank you so much for showcasing CART zine and my comics! I'm so thrilled you enjoyed it and you had so many amazing words for Kid Internet 😭 funnily enough the coolmath person I interviewed left about a month ago, lol.
Thank you again for the decade of entertainment 💖
Certainly, it’s all kinds of charming. Thanks again for sending it my way!
Wholesome af
What a great community ❤
Happy Easter 🙏🏻🥚
OMG I love the tamagotchi art 🥺💕 Will follow you in insta if you have one!
@@giselletorres4156I do, same as my handle here! tysm :')
Is that Reuben aka 625 on the first page???
Huge thanks for showing off the print and the website! It's been crazy to map the Vaporwave/Retro CGI/LGR community overlap in real time through people tagging me when they watched the video.
Your art is great, I didn't know I wanted it in my life until I saw it.
Your artwork is incredible! 🙏🏼
Hehe, the licorice that came with the Ultrasound was made in the same building that used to be my vocational college back in the day. I got a nice Mikromikko 486 from their storage while they were moving out of that building. (alongside a massive pile of old components and server blades)
Looks suspiciously at licorice.😒 Is that "Salt licorice"??? I don't know how you northern Europeans eat such stuff! 😝
@@squirlmy It's normal licorice.
"Give it to your grandparents so they can learn how to... flower."
I did laugh.
I think that they already figured out how to "flower"... that's why they have kids and grandkids :)
Always appreciate a fresh new LGR video on a Friday morning! As per usual, thank you very much for having good and accurate closed captioning, even on unscripted content, it is always something I am thankful for.
Happy to provide it!
That Zer0 Rei art is absolutely insane ♥♥ ♥
Aww, thank you!
51 minutes of mail ins, count me in! Love seeing all the cool stuff people send. My favorite was the big box Gizmos and Gadgets by The Learning Company in a past episode
REALLY thought somebody was insulting you with that N64 cart sticker. Boy that name "Clint" can cause trouble
I did a double-take and had to rewind to look closer.
And this is why font choice and kerning is important.
Talk about timing. This whole week I was watching unboxing mail in videos as far back as 6 years ago, and I now see another video uploaded. Thank you LGR for the hours of entertainment of amazing goodies
You bet, I hope you enjoy this one as well!
Me too! Lol
47:06 Regarding those Model M5s in case it helps, the two I have had dead trackballs on arrival but I was able to fix them by replacing the capacitors on the trackball's controller PCB. At least for Lexmark-made ones, whilst the keyboard's PCB uses THT components like earlier M controllers, the trackball's PCB uses SMD components, so this issue might be related to the one that also affects Model M1 and M2 keyboards entirely.
I live in Japan and I found a pack of 5 640 MO discs and a USB drive at hard-off for less than $10 for everything. Those things are so neat, they make a weird sound and it all seems like alien technology from another dimension!
Hard offs are so cool
@@gmcnewlook they are! the soundtrack that plays in the stores even know that, they say "hard off is your dream place" 😆
LoL i my dad had a mouse house on the side of his monitor he kept his pack of smokes in it.
Pretty much the only use for it is to store anything besides a mouse...
these unboxing vids are always a welcome thing to watch on my 2nd monitor while i work.. here's to more!
Oh sweet, welcome to the Model M trackball world! For the longest time, my white whale was the M5-1. Both examples I own have problems, but c'est la vie. The M5-2's are really fun in a pinch (including the Unicomp USB version) for doing server work without having to make space for a mouse.
The mouse house did have a practical use for people with limited space. I distinctly remember having one of those things stuck to the side of our Tandy back in the day because the "desk'" we had for it was just a cart and the keyboard tray didn't have enough room for the keyboard and mouse at the same time. We had to mouse on our leg for things that used the mouse.
My dad had a mouse house like that at work at his workstation.
I loved those ATI All-In-Wonders back in the day. Just being able to watch a TV program in a window on your PC's desktop at the same time you were doing actual productive stuff in the other windows was an amazing thing, especially in the pre-streaming era of dial-up internet where over-the-air broadcasts and cable TV were pretty much your only options...
These unboxing vids have to be my favorites.
Very much looking forward to the Oddware video for the PC controlled CD organiser!
Kinda funny that in some 80s anime, they saw the future as MO discs lol
80s and 90s Japanese media is half the reason I wanna cover them. Metal Gear Solid etc
Well it was kind of accurate ... In Japan (and a few other places), MiniDisc caught on like wildfire. :-)
@@LGR The first time I saw MO disk was at the end of Resident Evil 2.
@@nickwallette6201 I loved the MiniDisc system. I still have several of them: a Sony deck, a Sharp CD+MD combo deck, a couple of the Sony portables, and even an in-dash car stereo unit. It *is* unfortunate that it didn't catch fire here in the US and Canada as well, but Sony kinda botched the marketing -- first when their advertising seemed to be pushing it as The Next Big Thing after CDs when most people were still replacing their vinyl with CDs ("You mean I have to buy "Dark Side of the Moon" *again?*"), and then when they split MD-Audio and MD-Data into incompatible formats so that you couldn't use MD blanks for both music and data storage because Sony's media division was afraid that someone somewhere would make an unauthorized copy of something if they allowed it. 😞
@@Dukefazon
I grabbed them in RE1 (Deadly Silence).
Thank you for all the great content! I love this community, each and everyone of you are awesome!
That CD Organizer is only to hold them as organized -- I actually had one like 10 years ago - also got from a goodwill!
Yeah, he's going to be very disappointed when he realizes there is no optical drive in that... all it does is hold your CD's that you catalog and tell the software what is in what slot, so you can find it more easily. Then you take it out of that device and put it in your optical drive.
Of all the stuff in this video, those Taiwanese games are by far the most immaculate thing I see. Absolutely gorgeous art, beautiful condition, and obscure as hell overseas. Fantastic contribution by Brandon.
ok, i lost it at "i've been making squirrel feeders shaped like scaled down arcade cabinets"
Sounds like Clint has been reading too much Savestate.
Oh man that Memorex 256mb thumb drive. I remember paying a ridiculous amount of money for one of those as a teenager...
Now thumb drives are so big that people will see an old 128MB drive and think it's 128GB!
I still remember when 2G SD cards cost $99.
Love the Max Payne mousepad! I use mine everyday. I remember buying the game at CircuitCity spurred by The Matrix and bullet time. NICE! Mine is a little more worn in lol
That CD changer is begging for woodgrain contact paper!
You just have to wear that sweater next Christmas, Clint! What a fine piece of attire!
I love that sweater for its weirdness. I'd absolutely wear it to work at least a couple of times!
That Quiz Wiz was my childhood. Loved it back when that version would've been new in the early 90's, love it now. Wish I still had mine, but I'm decently certain my parents threw it away 25-ish years ago.
I have no idea what happened to mine, but my folks are notorious pack-rats, so I'm sure it's sitting somewhere with the batteries I left in it eating through the contacts. I loved mine as well, such a great way to pass time in a house where _real_ video games were forbidden, but anything "learning" was approved. I also had a "sports" cartridge, but I still think the "General Knowledge" one was the best.
OMG that Tiger Whiz Quiz is so nostalgic for me. I had one as a kid and spent so much time messing around with it. At the time, I thought it was the height of tech.
I didn’t know any of the Star Trek computer accessories existed when they on sale originally. I definitely would have done everything in my power to get my hands on all of them! I still want it all!!!
Those ATI All-In-Wonder! I always wanted one, but i got a 9800 xt 256mb instead. I couldn't complain... that 9800 ran everything!
I've got one stashed away from a surveillance computer I had to trash. Never used it.
That computer also had this weird module in one of the RAM slots (yes, in an actual ram slot!) that has an FPGA on it along with a few other chips. I've never seen anything like it. I can't figure out what it is, it's completely unmarked. Maybe an MPEG encoder or something? Since the PC did have like 8 video inputs and recorded video.
25:00 fire
11:20 I remember that sandwich stacker game! from the Lilo and Stitch tv show!
That diorama could be used as the new 'intro' vídeo of yours. It's pure art!
27:17 Oh yeah, I remember cards with built-in TV tuners! Had one for a few years.
Now we need an LGR Oddchair where you're taking a look at chairs that are odd
27:11 One word of warning with the ATi Radeon should you get round to reviewing it. Make sure that you have an audio connection from the card to your sound card before you record using its capture device. My friend's PC came with a newer version of the All In Wonder Radeon 9200 card where the OEM forgot to supply all the correct breakout cables so when he recorded analogue TV using the built in tuner, it saved it without the audio.
One workaround we employed was to use one of those internal Analogue CD Audio cables with a white connector and plug it into a spare Line-in Header on the motherboard's audio (which it thankfully had). That header at the top left may be used for that but it could also be additionaal headers for another A/V input like Hauppage WinTV cards used to have in Media Center PCs back in the day.
That being said, I caught a glimpse of a 3.5mm cable off an S-Video like cable/dongle thing which I am guessing could be the all important cable.
Watching your videos is always such a treat!
"(great size for most squirrels)" is my new favorite parenthetical comment
Cancel my appointments and hit the pizza button! LGR has a mail bag video!
That Eee PC - I nearly bought one of those way back in the day but I never did, opting for a more expensive but more future-proof laptop.
I wish I still had my late 1970s Quiz Wiz. They were pretty neat little game machines, and I had no idea they persisted into the 1990s. The old ones were made by Coleco, and the old models have a certain charm to them.
I hope we get an episode about the 75-disc CD changer!
Calm came to my soul with first few notes of intro music, and all anxiety went away…
It’s like something very pleasant is going to happen
Anxiety, anxiety, anxiety... American society became a bunch of pushovers.
I’m not from US, from a different continent entirely
And having a very hard time now
Wish u never experience what I’m going through
@@karlimo4034 I am from the UK. Everyone is different, you're lucky you don't have to experience anxiety and I wish you never have to, it's horrible.
Ooh, a Mechwarrior series video in the works? Yes, please!
I still have my KDS (Korea Data Systems, IIRC) CD organizer in my closet; my parents got it for me for Christmas decades ago. It was pretty neat, but is definitely an artifact of the time. It came with some rudimentary software that could index a disc and store the results in a database for easy searching. It could also control ejecting the individual trays, or one could do it with controls on top of the tower. It was neat at the time, and I just can't bear to throw mine out, even though I will likely never have a use for it again.
Thanks for sharing the firsthand experience! I’m stoked to test out that indexing and searching functionality.
I recognized a few of those Taiwanese games, the one with the Warrior guy on the black background with the 3 on it is Legend of the Chivalrous Hero 3, a really cool RPG, has some amazing sprite work and combat animations. I'd love to see a video on these games with you just messing around with them. And who knows, maybe that'll get translations going too! I can dream dangit
Did I hear, "Mechwarrior video"?
Was that Com Truise I spotted there? I’ve got the vinyl.
The new 8-track release, yep
one of my earliest memories was how BIG the Dick Tracy movie was - it was being covered everywhere after the success of Batman (1989) .....and then it came out and no one talked about it ever again. But Hollywood thought they were on to something , so Rocketeer got made - that The Shadow and The Phantom were the nails in the coffin of old timey comic strip movies
Exactly. I was SO into Dick Tracy back then later The Shadow.
My ex’s aunt actually worked on The Shadow.
Trying to get that Linux version of Sim City 3000 working on a modern version of Linux would be an interesting video on its own. It would undoubtedly be incredibly frustrating and possibly beyond the scope of LGR's channel, but it would be interesting. Let's just say binary backwards compatibility in Linux isn't exactly as easy as it is in Windows.
XFree86 isn't even the same X server used these days (X org), and even that is on its way out due to wayland. That is also a painfully ancient version of glibc, lol. A linux system from back then may as well be an amiga with how difficult it would be to get this running.
I love these videos. Find them relaxing and fascinating at the same time. Looking forward to the next one in 6 to 9 months. :)
The first two of those Taiwanese Kingformation games are 俠客英雄傳3 (usually referred to in English as Chivalrous Heroes 3, there is no 2), and 俠客英雄傳XP (a Windows XP port/remake of the same title). The game is an amazing Taiwanese DOS RPG classic that is fairly well known.
It's a little depressing that Taiwan has a rich history of games the world doesn't know much about..!
The backside of that Gravis ultrasound extreme is IMMACULATE. I love it so much, I wish I could order a giant version in 3D to put on my wall.
Honestly really cool of you to open up mail. I'm sure alot of youtubers get mail but only a few will record them opening it. Love your channel. Can't wait to see your next video on a PC game that I don't know about but should. I remember watching your video on Slave Zero and being amazed. Played and beat that game thanks.
Speaking of Windows 95 nostalgia, this year's Finnish entry for the Eurovision Song Contest is Windows95man. We'll see, whether his throwback eurobeat song will win, riding on millennial nostalgia. xD
Props to this powerpc guy he knows how to advertise! Definitely gave him a follow I love me some obscure electronic music
24:50 That's actually some great music, I think I'll listen to that later. Good thing its on Spotify.
8:34 "All of those kind of transportational sayings" 😂
I absolutely loved my Fossil MSN Direct watch back in the day. It wasn't the Dick Tracey version but I remember it fondly
The Max Payne mousepad really brought me back! That was my favorite game as a teenager and I used that pad for years and years. I've gotta check if it's still laying around my parents' house.
That ATI All-In-Wonder is also an analog TV tuner. That's how I got into building my own DVRs, my first one was running Windows 95 using a freeware DVR app, but later I moved to XP with Windows Media Center. It worked great!
wow those Cartzines look like someone really put their heart and soul into it, cool.
✋🏼 thank you :')
Awesome stuff as always!
Oooh sweet, I love binging these in the background!
much love, a German fan!
I love the [chuckle of respect] at 28:58
This morning my wife told me a joke. What do Nerds call soft clothes?... Software. 😂
I love watching LGR unboxing fan mail in the morning. ☕️☺️
god bless her shes trying
I don't get it
@@coboldelphi may be lots of things you don't get like respect and p[_]say hahah
Whoaaaa Quiz Wiz memory unlocked!! Soon as you unpackaged that I recognized it, but haven't thought about it in decades. Very cool to see that again!
I appreciate the 60fps and clarity it brings
33:36: The Asus EEeeeeee, was the one I used when backpacking around in Mexico like 2009. It had 4gb hdd so not much space, but donwloaded a XP lite version which worked quite well. It kind of saved me due sometimes you just needed to look up local things and places without going to a internet café all the time. And ot took really little space and weight too.
Love these videos! Makes me excited for future videos about the weird things you received.
Anders's space tracks are vibin'
I had one of those Tyan S1854 motherboards and I loved it. One of the best motherboards I had. Lots of features and many upgrade paths. Want to keep your PCI SLI setup until you can upgrade to AGP without losing your sound card, NIC, extra drive controller and whatever other PCI/ISA devices you run? Want to run your socket 370 Celeron 500 until you can upgrade to a slot 1 based 1GHz PIII? That board let you do it, was sturdy, and mine lasted me many many years. Still associate Tyan with quality.
0:15 that's a lot of bog roll. Someone sure won't go short in the near future 😂
Man, you'll never run out of content. This will be a valuable historical reference of this era, in the future. Hello future!
Some of these items bring back memories from my youth. I remember the ATI graphics card, pretty sure we owned one of a similar model and used the TV tuner a little as well. Fun times.
The ASUS EEE ... had 701 and 901 ... now they are toys in my wifes work - kindergarden :D they where neat little things back then
Always cool to see the packages ppl send in 👍
Clint's descent into madness has been well documented in this video. I'm ashamed to say it was so incredibly amasuing to watch this descent.
For what it's worth, my family still has their HP PSC 750 running to this day. I just found new ink for it recently too.
Always love these. Almost as good as thrifting
I'm in Japan for a few months and I have been thrifting multiple times and the piles of vintage Japanese tech hilarity... if there are any Japanese items you're interested in and would like me to keep my eyes open for, I'd be happy to do so. I think about your channel every time I walk past the "vintage tech" sections.
Anything particularly weird/cool catch your eye so far?
These unboxings and thrifts are my jam! ❤
@33:20 Would be cool if you covered some unique board games related to video games! I still have and play often the Age of Mythology board game, which is very complex but very fun! I remember the very first time I played it was with my Mom the Christmas that it came out and she completely wiped the floor with me at it... which is hilarious because she knows how much I love that game (to this day she is still waiting for an AoM2 to come out to buy for me, haha). Some unique board games like that would be a cool random-venture for you, maybe as a "Blerbs" type of video 😆
My grandma had that Compaq MSN computer gizmo at least around 2002-2007, and then she was upgraded to a standard Dell.
I had to check my CD collection to see if I still had that Duke Nukem album. I used to have over 3000 CDs but alas drastic changes in my situation meant I’ve all but sold em off except for a few. My respect for LGR is what led me to hang on to that one. It’s actually sitting in the shelf right next to the interestingly rare Dexter’s Laboratory album that turned out was the earliest I ever heard of will.i.am
Now you reminded me of the Total Annihilation soundtrack. Excellent game and soundtrack.
17:54 There was something disturbingly familiar about the letter before me. The handwriting was all pretty curves.
"You're a mouse pad, Max."
The truth was a burning green crack through my brain. A two-tone monochrome image of me holding a handgun and looking off to the side with a tagline in bright red letters on top, and my name in big, bold letters on bottom, all printed onto a rubber pad meant to keep your desktop from getting scratched up by your mouse.
I was a mouse pad. Funny as hell, it was the most horrible thing I could think of.
* slow clap *
Perfection.
Oh my God Clint that MechWarrior box...😍😻😍😻
Wow, that mini arcade cab is amazing .
This and the thrifting are my absolute favs.
LGR thank you for these magnificent videos, this is exactly the kind of retro computing comfort that I need
...... to fill the empty void in my soul
I truly believe Clint does not know how many people he comforts with his videos... something about them just makes them feel like a safe place from this mad world.
I unboxed two cib SNES games I bought off ebay while watching this video. Two more mint/near-minties added to the collection and Excel sheet.
The Simcity 3000 Linux case and disc have no esrb ratings, so it's possible they used the same insides and/or artwork for multiple versions of the game. Simcity 3000 Unlimited has a ton of different names around the world, and Linux is pretty niche.
i rememeber getting an EEE PC for uni back in 2007 ish. But didn't hold onto to it for long, I remember it was quite limiting back then. Would love to have one to sit on a shelf lol.
They’re pretty easy to find on eBay nowadays- I just got one for cheap (again). It’s my second. I have the Disney Princess one also that I saved from the trash.
OMG I remember the Quiz Whiz! Man, hearing those trills brings back memories. I haven't seen one of those in ages. So glad it's going to find a good home!
Oh man, I also had that Star Trek keyboard and mouse pad (but not the mouse, oddly). I think we got it as a bundle at Goodwill when I was a kid. I think I still have the keyboard, blinken-lights and all!
My favorite LGR topic!
Looks like one of those All-In-Wonder ATI cards with a Theather chipset. If so, you just got your hands on some of the best capture hardware that exists for analog NTSC/PAL media.