I started playing PC games a few years ago, gradually exploring different titles and genres.
I started playing PC games a few years ago, gradually exploring different titles and genres.
I began playing games as a child, didn’t think it was that intense with Dora the Explorer and SpongeBob. My passion shifted to FPS games at 12. Now I’m into CS:GO, COD, Gmod and various strategy titles.
I started playing my first game on a PC. I was raised in the digital world, shaped by it from the beginning. It wasn’t until I reached adulthood that I encountered console players.
Began around 2006 with my first PC. I aimed to play games earlier, but growing up in a modest family meant I didn’t own a regular PC until I was about 16. It wasn’t until I reached my late teens that I could afford and assemble my own gaming rig, which came around 2007-2008. For most of my life I stuck with consoles, though I’m proud of it. I have countless happy memories of Nintendo and still enjoy buying their devices and handhelds.
Early in Counter Strike around 2004... Frequently used to push opponents hard...
I really enjoyed that game too, just like with Tonka: Construction—those were my first experiences playing. Eventually, I switched to Modern Warfare 1, 2, and 3 on this machine: Intel Pentium 3.0GHz, 2GB RAM, 512MB GPU (the name is a bit fuzzy). I’m not sure how I got those titles running, but I kept them for a while until the computer stopped functioning about two years ago. Curious about what caused it to fail...
Back when I can think of it, my parents owned an Atari 130XE (probably) and they had a handful of games for it. If that’s not enough: we eventually got a Win95 PC, where I played some kid-friendly titles like Putput and Freddi Fish, a few racing games, but also Dune, FIFA, Need for Speed, Motocross, and Age of Empires...
I began playing games in 2003. I can't recall my very first title—it was either Battlefield 1942 or Conflict: Desert Storm II. My initial MP game was CoD4, those were the good old days before CoD turned into a challenge. I logged around 3000 hours on that one.