I don't mind the ows really it's fine
Try playing the ST one, then anything ow feels ow ow better ow ow ow than that.
https://youtu.be/BAFmYNhmffI?t=1996
Try playing the ST one, then anything ow feels ow ow better ow ow ow than that.

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.
Show posts MenuQuote from: Proxima on July 27, 2023, 10:09:03 PM
Started with the black & white Mac version back in 1991. As I was a child at the time, it was a couple of years before I reached Pea Soup (Mayhem 14) and found that the level is nearly impossible on that version since the "peas" are invisible. I didn't think of trial-and-erroring through it because the idea of invisible terrain never really occurred to me... fortunately, with technology moving on, my dad passed down to me his Mac LCIII soon after. I was able to progress, but The Steel Mines of Kessel (Mayhem 26) is much harder than intended on the Mac version, and I didn't solve it for another ten years.
My friends and school computers mostly had the Acorn Archimedes version, so that was the other version I became familiar with. I didn't understand that different versions had different levels until years later when I joined the forum that was a precursor to this one.
Quote from: WillLem on July 27, 2023, 11:22:23 PM
I'm proud and grateful to be able to say that my parents bought us an Amiga 500+ back in 1991 (when I was just 7 years old). We had the Cartoon Classics pack with Lemmings, Captain Planet and the Planeteers and The Simpsons: Bart Vs. The Space Mutants bundled with it (as well as Deluxe Paint III, which was bundled with all A500s, I believe - this is the very program upon which the Lemmings graphics were originally created!)
My and my brother and sister spent many a happy hour playing our Amiga - it didn't occur to me until years later that we were the original "PC gamers", whilst everyone else seemed to have Nintendo or SEGA consoles!
And, one game which of course I loved playing was Lemmings, with the "tank" mouse (a very uncomfortable but nonetheless iconic contraption which regularly needed to be de-fluffed so that the trackball would operate properly!):