As a Commodore fanatic from the USA, your remark about the best games coming from the UK is spot on. We were painfully aware of that fact back in the day, especially in the underground BBS scene whose most prized members were typically folks with overseas connections who could import the good stuff that we couldn't otherwise get followed by the programming geniuses who could modify the games to work on our NTSC machines if needed. It also goes without saying most of my favorite C64 games musics were also written by folks from the UK, such as the incomparable Rob Hubbard. We turned out some classics over here as well, but we will forever live in the shadow cast by the juggernauts of the UK software industry.
+aphexteknol I'm in the USA and my feelings about UK software were mostly the opposite. For starters, most PAL software that showed up on local BBSs was NOT fixed for NTSC systems and was typically full of horrible graphical glitches, slowdown and outright crashes. Before I knew what PAL and NTSC were, I used to think that the cracking groups were full of incompetent morons because so many of the games that I downloaded were so screwed up that they were unplayable. Even when the games worked properly, it often seemed like they cut corners on the games just for the sake of fitting the entire game into memory at once rather than making each level the best that it could be. That's not to say that I disliked all UK/European games. I loved Elite, Commando, Buggy Boy, etc. But a lot of my favorite games at the time (Archon 1 & 2, Destroyer, Skyfox II, Leaderboard, Hacker, etc) came from American companies.
+lurkerrekrul I can totally understand, I had alot of software that wasn't perfect either running on my NTSC machines as well back then. I have PAL machines now too however so I have the best of both worlds in the present day. I got a bit of a late start on the 64 anyways, everyone else was already playing NES for a couple years by the time I inherited my first 64 from my uncle so my experience was a little skewed to begin with. One thing I do have to admit is that my very favorite games are many of the early arcade ports, and most of those were all NTSC titles anyways. The contrast between the experiences of C64 fans here at home and in the UK is a very interesting one any way you look at it...
+aphexteknol I forget what year it was, but I got my C64 fairly early, like 83 or 84. I mostly went Atari 2600 > C64 > Amiga 500 > Windows 98. It really wasn't until I got the Amiga that I learned about the differences between PAL and NTSC, mostly thanks to the fact that the later version of the Agnus chip could switch between them. Even on the Amiga, a lot of software didn't work properly, if at all, in NTSC. One of the most spectacular glitches was with Robocop II. It looked like someone sliced the screen into quarters and then swapped them horizontally and vertically, plus it flickered like crazy. I once thought about getting a PAL C64, but at the time, C64s were still fairly expensive, so that never came to pass. Now I mostly use emulation. My original C64 and 1541 are buried in the closet. I do have a C64 and 1541 that I can use, but it still has the original power supply and I'm not sure how much I can trust it.
There are a few exceptions where the American version is better (The US version of Street fighter comes to mind) but for the most part, the best versions are always PAL format. Plus the US version of Bionic Commando also didn't have the awesome Tim Follin music. The music in that version was generic as fuck. And don't get me started on the gameplay. Thank God for emulation, so I can now play those games.
Amazing stuff, I'm from Argentina and here we have the Drean Commodore 64c, which is basically the same 64c but an argentine company called Drean converted to the PAL-N format we used to have, so we can finally see colors in our tvs and sold it bundled with GEOS. I still have mine even it doesn't work properly, but it was the machine that made me the gamer I am today. Cheers for the video!
Naming the German model "64D" would have made even more sense considering "Deutschland" is the German word for, well, "Germany". I'm sure someone has said that before me :)
mate ive got to say simply a massive FUKING huge thanks!, for all your videos I absolutely love them they're not just a walk down memory lane they're really genuinely double interesting because they go into those technical things we all used to be obsessed about nice one mate for putting the time in it it's appreciated out here nice one
My dad bought our 64 back in 1984 upgrading from a Spectrum. We had a 1541 because of the the painfully long cassette loading times but in all fairness it was a bit crap. The disc drive was essential to get hold of pirate and US games
I remember my sister getting braces back in 1986. My parents bought me a c64 with 1541 floppy drive instead of braces. Best choice I ever made. My c64 still works today and I retro game on it all the time. My collection of about 700 games still work. All the good memories this machine gave to me. The c64 will always be my favorite gaming memory, cause my parents bought it for me. They are passed now, but the c64 they bought for me is still running strong.
I'm always impressed when other people promote the Commodore 64. There are many people I've met who have never heard of the company. So thanks for doing justice for the machine that changed my life.
Back in 1982 it wasn't obvious that the C64 would be the world's best selling computer, because of the initial high price. It was still £300 when I got interested in home computers. I got an Acorn Electron instead (couldn't afford the C64). Commodore really blew it with the follow up computers (which was just as surprising).
Anyone remember the Mastertronic brand of games in the UK? They made it affordable for me as a young teenager to get hold of what were actually really good games. Just £1.99. Happy memories.
Subscribed! Glad to discover this channel. I loved my C64 for so many years! I was in a local User group with weekly meetings. I was one of two people who wrote, and published our newsletter on a C64 and dot matrix printer. Thanks for the memories!
I had a C64 and a C64C for many years and never played any of the games you featured. Some of my favorites would have to be Archon 2, Pitstop 2, Jumpman, Wizard, Castles of Doctor Creep, M.U.L.E, Impossible Mission, Raid over Bungling Bay, Raid Over Moscow, Master of the Lamps, Gunship, Skyfox, Turbo Out Run, Maniac Mansion. Man, I could keep going on...So many awesome games.
1:30 Sovereign house. Once upon a time in a drunken stupor, I don’t quite know how but managed to fined my way inside and got lost and couldn’t find my way out again. But the heating was still on but it’s been empty for years. I feel asleep and once awake I found the way out. But I remember not liking the feeling I felt inside there, it felt very haunting.
Maan this was a great journey :-) Thanks for all of this info. I owned a C64 back in the days as well. If i had known how successful the SID-Chip will become - round about 20 years later - i had never sold it :-( Getting one today with the chip still inside is quite hard. And Elektrons SID-Station is at an extremely high price tag already ... its like trying to get a Roland 303 - an original. Commodore sure did not knew what legacy they build back in those days.
That SID .. still unsurpassed in many ways and the soundtrack of my childhood.. it weren’t nessecarely about the graphics nor the the games themselves.. often the brilliant soundtracks would keep me well entertained for hours
Now this was a marvellously good quality video of yours! Probably the most comprehensive review of the C64, done with a passion. The topic is much exploited on the internet beside/behind retro consoles, I still learned a few tidbits here I wasn't aware of thus far.
I loved it back then when I could go into my local newsagents and they had a big rack of budget games starting from 99p. But even better was I could take my twin deck ghetto blaster and copy games from people, of course that often took hours and hours because if you tried using high speed dubbing the games often failed to copy.
i know im asking randomly but does anybody know of a tool to get back into an Instagram account?? I somehow lost my password. I would appreciate any tricks you can give me
This is my favorite 8 bit computer, and there is a myriad of programs and games available for it, even today. Plus, you can create your own programs and games as well. Long live the Commodore !!!
@@scottbreon9448 The C64 had more sprites but with display list interrupts one could slice an Atari 800 sprite into smaller sprites, give each one a different color, and a different horizontal position. The SID chip had 3 16 bit channels while the Atari only had 2. However the Atari could split the sound channels into 4 channels. It's sound chip also did sound effects. I'll take the Atari over the C64.
Absolutely outstanding reviews on all the micros of the past, in my secondary school days my classmates were split into commodore 64 owners (me) and spectrum type people. If you had a C64 you felt very superior to the spectrum side of the classroom. I loved my C64 and I loved the fact that my cousin had one too with a disk drive and would copy many many many games onto a cassette for me. The mid eighties were a very happy time for me. Time ⌚ machine please.
Great video! I loved my C64 and used it for so much more than playing games. I taught myself to program using the COMOL language that obviated the use of all those pokes for video/audio.. Through high school and college I did all my word processing on the 64. I don't know how you Brits dealt with the cassette drive! Moving from the cassette to the 1541 was like going from dial-up to broadband. I'm still bummed Commodore was managed into the ground.
Totally agree with your comment about being more impressed with hearing the load music, over things out today. I'm still blown away by the ingenuity used in both hardware design, programming, and game designs from yesteryear, vs anything out there today. There is no mystery, or magic to how things work now. A racing game today, as an example, is easy. Make 3d models, and have them race around. Trying to figure out how something like Outrun 2019, or even Space Harrier actually worked, is just mind boggling. Thank you for your videos.
Man, that loading music is awesome! Using my dad’s old ZX Spectrum 128k +2, a many years ago, (mind you I was about 6 and it was still the mid 2000’s.) I figured out a method of getting decent quality analogue audio from the cassettes, and now that I think of it I’m sure I could find a way of using that for loading music. I originally worked out how it could be used for in-game voice acting without needing to use digitised samples, that was my original intention, but ingame music would be possible too without any modification. The problem you’d have would be being able to hear the music over the loading sound, you’d need 2 separate sound channels, but I’m sure it’d still be possible on the Spectrum, definitely with some minor modification.
having the experiences of the games, programing, and other stuff then sharing with your fellow computer users was half the fun and was how alot of us interested in other interests made friends.
Lovely, lovely video! Very interesting to listen too. I'll be buying myself a C64-c in less than a month, from my local retro shop, all boxed, tested, comes with a tape deck, and 1 game, RGB cables from the online store I use, and lastly 6 months warranty! :D
I think I've seen this video in the past. Nevermind, today it gave me entertainment and relax during supper. :) Thank you for that. And I just brotherly love you for the outro. :)
Some of the team that designed the C64, including Robert Yannes (designer of the SID chip) went on to form the synthesizer company Ensoniq. The Ensoniq ESQ-1, released in 1985, was a digital synthesizer that used wave table lookup for oscillator waveforms and utilizes analogue low-pass filters and other components to create a truly unique sound. It's sort of a spiritual successor to the SID, as it's similar to how he had hoped the SID would have been used. I finally acquired one a few years ago and it's one of the most interesting synths I've ever had the pleasure of using.
Real nice video. Did not know about a lot of those Commodore 64 variants. Some great looking computers. I recall the Plus4 and Commodore 16 and remember how bizarre it was to see those in the shops. No idea what Commodore were thinking! For me the C64 was the computer I learned programming on back in the day so I have a lot to thank my mother for in that regard as I've earned my living from it for the last 25+ years!
Hey man, your videos are wonderful and informative. They're not condensed or roundabout at all, actually nice to sit and watch. I show all my geeky friends your channel. Hope you get more recognition!
Them feels. Just watched it, and it brought back fond memories. My first foray into computing was an ex-raf Vic 20, followed up by the C64 a few years later. Most frustrating was the James Bond game. Never loaded right, and when it did you died really quickly and had to reload.
at 14:37 i can see you dancing (to the loading music) in the reflection of your monitor. i rewatched it 5 times and laughed harder each time. great video. ...and thanks for the laugh. edit: ahh, i just noticed someone pointed that out years before i did.
I owned a C64 C with the disk drive in the UK! I wasn't a rich kid but I managed to get a C64 with the disk drive and games for a low price. Not many disk based games were available but I managed to find a cartridge that plugged into the back of the C64 which would snapshot the C64 memory to disk. You could then load from tape and snapshot to disk. Loading up games in 6 seconds in the 80s would amaze people. I also bought GEOS and a mouse which gave the C64 a GUI interface, it was like owning an apple at the time. For a while that machine was my life.
I used a datacette with my c128 because it was all I could afford. I didn't play much games and there weren't much in the USA. Took me months to save up $280 for a 1571 drive.
I have plenty of Commodore software and some Sinclair software somewhere around my home. I have 2 Commodore 64's, 1 floppy drive, 1 joystick, and a 64k modem for the machine. The machines both work just fine although I have not used them in some time. Someone purchased the rights to use the name and sold a different version of the machine, but it never made any advancement in the U.S. I still have some magazines from the late 1980's and early 1990's which had programs in them for various computers and Commodore programs was among those programs in them. I also had a Commodore +4 which I ended up giving to a friend whom I worked with and he and his wife loved it.
64C was my favorite, plus instead of a tape drive, the 1541 floppy drive was included. The 64 came with a tape drive in my area. I got GEOS from a Commodore focused magazine I subscribed to. As a kid my wrist did not notice it was a less ergomatic machine.
Yes, I owned a CBM64, and I loved it. I owned a disc station, and then a C64 Exective with 'all-in'. That one I sold to a collector(?) with profit, much later. But I hardly EVER played games, I made programs in Basic! Gosh, I loved it.
I did not know all those models! :) One thing that always puzzles me is that special love relationship of the UK with cassette tapes. Nobody had a disk drive... Boggles my mind. I was fairly young, born in 1981, but being a German and raised by a single mother with very little income still we (rather my older brother) had a disk drive in the late 80s. And actually I don't recall anyone around not having one. XD no idea if it was cheaper here? But the C64 reigned supreme, and disk drives were common. But I guess the UK had that super cheap budget game market for tapes that was not so prevailant here either. :)
108Stars yeah, same here . You could buy a disk drive with paper route money and many kids (young teens) did that if they got C64 without. It was a few hundred guilders. Not very cheap but achievable .
OMG I found a game on your video that I couldn't remember the name of. I recognized the music though and looked it up. After reading the description I'm like YUP!!! That's it alright. Quake Minus One. THANK YOU!!!!! I've been looking for years.
+gingernutpreacher because of the difference required for PAL colour encoding frequencies. Watch my Why is Sonic Faster In America video and it's explained.
I never had a tape drive for the C64; we bought a 1541 floppy drive at the time of our original C64 purchase (a C64c), and almost all of our C64 software was floppy-based. I remember 1 cartridge game I played on the C64 (Telengard from Avalon Hill), but that was it.
I believe I remember hearing that the guy who started Commodore USA and was redoing the models with x86 hardware and such passed a way a few years after starting and his dream went away with him unfortunately. There are a lot of other fun hardware projects though such as the Turbo Chameleon 64, C64 Reloaded, and Mega 65.
I’m from Norwich and hi my fellow Norfolk brethren. I broke into sovereign house in anglia square once when drunk and panicked trying to find my way out. It is immense inside and though empty, the heating was still on and I felt like I was being watched and followed. Until I passed out and woke up next morning.
In Germany, the disk drive was sold for about the same price as the C64. But there were some games that were disk-exclusive, plus commercial disk magazines. I used tapes for a year or so and then upgraded to a disk drive - I could then finally use those GEOS disks that came bundled with my C64G ;)
Finally got around to watching this one. Great video, mate! When you loaded up Haunted House, I recognized the game purely by SID tune! Great trip down nostalgia lane! You need a new second spring in that 64C spacebar.
i played through Turrican 2 on my Amiga 500+ the other day. it's been over 20 years since i played it and it still feels like such a good game. the level design is impressive and expansive with multiple routes and hidden secrets. the weapons, power-ups and changes in gameplay keep it feeling fresh from level to level. to think that it was programmed by one guy is just unbelievable. if it came out today i'd give it a 8/10 easily...please play it if you haven't. Same goes for Apidya...great shmup!
I started off with a tape deck then moved to the disk where I played strategy and RPGs of which there were MANY. I guess the disk drive was cheaper in Aus, I certainly wasn’t rich. Great video.
Ahh I remembered I visit my schoolbuddy at his home. He has the German style c64, sawing him load a game from cassette for the first time in my life. It was Ninja Spirit. I was amazed by the sound, music and graphics! We were 10 year olds... I was playing with transformers.
Being born in '81 I didn't see too many C64s in the wild during their original run, but to me it seemed like everyone had a disk drive in Germany. The first time I saw a tape drive was when I got my own C64 in the late 90s. Still haven't used it once.
Really enjoy your video's! Started watching with the CD32,which is the most in depth review I've ever watched of that great little machine (I got myself into debt at the time to get one),to the Speccy and the '64....really good stuff.. You have another sub !
Not sure but I think the cassette thing was something typical UK. As far I remember, in Belgium the tapes were only used for the first 2 years or so. Later on most of us were using the floppy drive. Like I did and we were far from rich! ;-)) Maybe it had something to do with the cheap (but crappy) Sinclair computers in the UK. Sinclair let the people believe that computer could made dirt cheap. It is hard to convince people afterwards to pay money for a proper made product.
Mum Blic Rubbish. Sinclair wanted to get people in the UK in to computing, something that wouldn't have happened at the prices Commodore, Apple and Atari were charging. The BBC Micro was too expensive for most people, despite their use in most UK schools (hence they introduced the Acorn Electron). It was easy for people to see the limitations of the ZX range, and many people moved on to bigger and better... simply because they were able to get that initial foot on the ladder. Disk drives weren't rare in the UK, but they were less common due to their price.
Fun fact: for years we use the qwertz keyboard layout instead of the english qwerty. So apart from the G in the name no German would assume this to be a specifically made for Germany computer. Also: Germany in the 80s meant West-Germany. Om my side of the iron curtain there was no Commodore... Why do English and American RUclipsrs always show maps oh the current Germany? Germany never looked like this before 1990. Good video tough:)
Here in Germany everyone that had a C-64 also had a floppy drive. There were tape games and I remember that I got Trivial Pursuit on a tape for my birthday. Bought a tape drive for it (they were indeed very cheap) and was amazed how long it took for it to load :D LOAD "*",8,1 ftw!
Love the videos. My mate had the c16 after I had bought the c64. Still have mine. It is a goodjob there is no backup battery . Nowadays these things are leaking and messing up older computers that have them.
This is an excellent video. We needed a different point of view on retrogaming: all channels of this sort appear to be mainly Sega/Nintendo oriented, which I couldn't care less about (except for AVGN, who is fun). Apparently Sinclair and Commodore machines were stronger here in Europe than in the US. It's them (and Pc stuff from the 90's) I'm particularly interested in. Subscribed. I'll be checking out your channel regularly. Cheers.
Sinclair was pure eurotrash, Timex had no success with their us version, but C64 did very decently for a bit, albeit almost universally with floppies not cassette garbage.
I had a disc drive for my 64, but I came to it in the early 90s when people were selling stuff cheap to buy Amigas. Night and day difference between that and the older tape loading. The evolution of impatience is pretty funny actually - Tape -> Floppy -> Hard drive -> Faster hard drive -> SSD -> M2 SSD. Still impatient when loading.
When we lived in Kansas back in like '93-96' or so and there was a tornado warning in our area we'd all huddle inside the 1541 casing till the storm was over.
Interesting Lore of the C64!!! ...just watching to see what the competition is up to, lol. (I owned it's 1986 competitor, the Atari 130XE ---very nice ST and XE design cosmetics, thanks Jack!--- with disk drive, printer, modem & composite monitor.
As a Commodore fanatic from the USA, your remark about the best games coming from the UK is spot on. We were painfully aware of that fact back in the day, especially in the underground BBS scene whose most prized members were typically folks with overseas connections who could import the good stuff that we couldn't otherwise get followed by the programming geniuses who could modify the games to work on our NTSC machines if needed. It also goes without saying most of my favorite C64 games musics were also written by folks from the UK, such as the incomparable Rob Hubbard. We turned out some classics over here as well, but we will forever live in the shadow cast by the juggernauts of the UK software industry.
+aphexteknol I'm in the USA and my feelings about UK software were mostly the opposite. For starters, most PAL software that showed up on local BBSs was NOT fixed for NTSC systems and was typically full of horrible graphical glitches, slowdown and outright crashes. Before I knew what PAL and NTSC were, I used to think that the cracking groups were full of incompetent morons because so many of the games that I downloaded were so screwed up that they were unplayable.
Even when the games worked properly, it often seemed like they cut corners on the games just for the sake of fitting the entire game into memory at once rather than making each level the best that it could be.
That's not to say that I disliked all UK/European games. I loved Elite, Commando, Buggy Boy, etc. But a lot of my favorite games at the time (Archon 1 & 2, Destroyer, Skyfox II, Leaderboard, Hacker, etc) came from American companies.
+lurkerrekrul I can totally understand, I had alot of software that wasn't perfect either running on my NTSC machines as well back then. I have PAL machines now too however so I have the best of both worlds in the present day. I got a bit of a late start on the 64 anyways, everyone else was already playing NES for a couple years by the time I inherited my first 64 from my uncle so my experience was a little skewed to begin with. One thing I do have to admit is that my very favorite games are many of the early arcade ports, and most of those were all NTSC titles anyways. The contrast between the experiences of C64 fans here at home and in the UK is a very interesting one any way you look at it...
+aphexteknol I forget what year it was, but I got my C64 fairly early, like 83 or 84. I mostly went Atari 2600 > C64 > Amiga 500 > Windows 98. It really wasn't until I got the Amiga that I learned about the differences between PAL and NTSC, mostly thanks to the fact that the later version of the Agnus chip could switch between them.
Even on the Amiga, a lot of software didn't work properly, if at all, in NTSC. One of the most spectacular glitches was with Robocop II. It looked like someone sliced the screen into quarters and then swapped them horizontally and vertically, plus it flickered like crazy.
I once thought about getting a PAL C64, but at the time, C64s were still fairly expensive, so that never came to pass. Now I mostly use emulation. My original C64 and 1541 are buried in the closet. I do have a C64 and 1541 that I can use, but it still has the original power supply and I'm not sure how much I can trust it.
There are a few exceptions where the American version is better (The US version of Street fighter comes to mind) but for the most part, the best versions are always PAL format.
Plus the US version of Bionic Commando also didn't have the awesome Tim Follin music. The music in that version was generic as fuck. And don't get me started on the gameplay. Thank God for emulation, so I can now play those games.
Amazing stuff, I'm from Argentina and here we have the Drean Commodore 64c, which is basically the same 64c but an argentine company called Drean converted to the PAL-N format we used to have, so we can finally see colors in our tvs and sold it bundled with GEOS. I still have mine even it doesn't work properly, but it was the machine that made me the gamer I am today. Cheers for the video!
Naming the German model "64D" would have made even more sense considering "Deutschland" is the German word for, well, "Germany". I'm sure someone has said that before me :)
+prolinea4 That's an incredibly good point, and one which passed me by. Still, American's don't usually recognise other languages do they?
+Nostalgia Nerd Surely they must have been in contact with German representatives, marketing or someone like that while developing it, though.
I guess English trumps common sense. Maybe they anticipated the 64 to go on for another 10 years and wanted to release a 64D in 1996 XD
@@Nostalgianerd wow!! Your telling me english isnt the only language on the planet.mind BLOWN!!!
If you sneeze near an American, they will probably say "Gesundheit"
So there's that...
mate ive got to say simply a massive FUKING huge thanks!, for all your videos I absolutely love them they're not just a walk down memory lane they're really genuinely double interesting because they go into those technical things we all used to be obsessed about nice one mate for putting the time in it it's appreciated out here nice one
can see you dancing to the load music in the reflection on the television screen.. hehehehe
in Poland Pirate market in 80-90 was huge. It's crazy for me to see so much of original C64 stuff :)
You got me at "Yoink!"
Insta-subbed!
Haha, welcome on board. :D
Nooo the little girl's Commodore sixty-four! So cute :D
Best c64 video I've seen. Thank you from the states!
+bizzarrogeorge Kind works. Thanks!
My dad bought our 64 back in 1984 upgrading from a Spectrum. We had a 1541 because of the the painfully long cassette loading times but in all fairness it was a bit crap. The disc drive was essential to get hold of pirate and US games
@@trevorlack630 Crap compared to what? It gave good value for the money. That's why it was so popular.
The C64 was my first ever computer, I have some great memories of playing this and the ZX Spectrum that my brother got
I remember my sister getting braces back in 1986. My parents bought me a c64 with 1541 floppy drive instead of braces. Best choice I ever made. My c64 still works today and I retro game on it all the time. My collection of about 700 games still work. All the good memories this machine gave to me. The c64 will always be my favorite gaming memory, cause my parents bought it for me. They are passed now, but the c64 they bought for me is still running strong.
6:24 Omg Trapdoor, Jet Set Willy and Skool Daze were my childhood
I'm always impressed when other people promote the Commodore 64. There are many people I've met who have never heard of the company. So thanks for doing justice for the machine that changed my life.
this was a very entertaining and informative video dude, keep up the good work as this episode brought tears of nostalgia into my eyes.
+Terry The 2D Maniac :D
Back in 1982 it wasn't obvious that the C64 would be the world's best selling computer, because of the initial high price. It was still £300 when I got interested in home computers. I got an Acorn Electron instead (couldn't afford the C64). Commodore really blew it with the follow up computers (which was just as surprising).
Back in 82 i could throw a pig skin a quarter of a mile. I’m dead serious.
Anyone remember the Mastertronic brand of games in the UK? They made it affordable for me as a young teenager to get hold of what were actually really good games. Just £1.99. Happy memories.
Subscribed! Glad to discover this channel. I loved my C64 for so many years! I was in a local User group with weekly meetings. I was one of two people who wrote, and published our newsletter on a C64 and dot matrix printer. Thanks for the memories!
I had a C64 and a C64C for many years and never played any of the games you featured. Some of my favorites would have to be Archon 2, Pitstop 2, Jumpman, Wizard, Castles of Doctor Creep, M.U.L.E, Impossible Mission, Raid over Bungling Bay, Raid Over Moscow, Master of the Lamps, Gunship, Skyfox, Turbo Out Run, Maniac Mansion. Man, I could keep going on...So many awesome games.
1:30 Sovereign house. Once upon a time in a drunken stupor, I don’t quite know how but managed to fined my way inside and got lost and couldn’t find my way out again. But the heating was still on but it’s been empty for years. I feel asleep and once awake I found the way out. But I remember not liking the feeling I felt inside there, it felt very haunting.
haha can see you dancing in the reflection as you are showing us the loading screens
Yeah man! How can you not dance to SID music?!?
c64 rocks
The C64C is probably the only vintage computer that still looks good today on our desk. Nice color, modern fonts, timeless design. I got 2
Maan this was a great journey :-) Thanks for all of this info. I owned a C64 back in the days as well. If i had known how successful the SID-Chip will become - round about 20 years later - i had never sold it :-( Getting one today with the chip still inside is quite hard. And Elektrons SID-Station is at an extremely high price tag already ... its like trying to get a Roland 303 - an original. Commodore sure did not knew what legacy they build back in those days.
subbz2k :D It was one thing they got absolutely right. I remember upgrading to an Atari ST and thinking "shit, what's happened to the sound?!"
That SID .. still unsurpassed in many ways and the soundtrack of my childhood.. it weren’t nessecarely about the graphics nor the the games themselves.. often the brilliant soundtracks would keep me well entertained for hours
Now this was a marvellously good quality video of yours! Probably the most comprehensive review of the C64, done with a passion. The topic is much exploited on the internet beside/behind retro consoles, I still learned a few tidbits here I wasn't aware of thus far.
I loved it back then when I could go into my local newsagents and they had a big rack of budget games starting from 99p.
But even better was I could take my twin deck ghetto blaster and copy games from people, of course that often took hours and hours because if you tried using high speed dubbing the games often failed to copy.
i know im asking randomly but does anybody know of a tool to get back into an Instagram account??
I somehow lost my password. I would appreciate any tricks you can give me
This is my favorite 8 bit computer, and there is a myriad of programs and games available for it, even today. Plus, you can create your own programs and games as well. Long live the Commodore !!!
It's not quite my favourite, but it's up there.
To me, it's a tossup between this and the Atari 800 for being my favorite 8-bit computer, although the Spectrum comes in a close third
@@scottbreon9448 The C64 had more sprites but with display list interrupts one could slice an Atari 800 sprite into smaller sprites, give each one a different color, and a different horizontal position. The SID chip had 3 16 bit channels while the Atari only had 2. However the Atari could split the sound channels into 4 channels. It's sound chip also did sound effects. I'll take the Atari over the C64.
bjbell52 no way sorry
Absolutely outstanding reviews on all the micros of the past, in my secondary school days my classmates were split into commodore 64 owners (me) and spectrum type people. If you had a C64 you felt very superior to the spectrum side of the classroom. I loved my C64 and I loved the fact that my cousin had one too with a disk drive and would copy many many many games onto a cassette for me. The mid eighties were a very happy time for me. Time ⌚ machine please.
Great video! I loved my C64 and used it for so much more than playing games. I taught myself to program using the COMOL language that obviated the use of all those pokes for video/audio.. Through high school and college I did all my word processing on the 64. I don't know how you Brits dealt with the cassette drive! Moving from the cassette to the 1541 was like going from dial-up to broadband. I'm still bummed Commodore was managed into the ground.
Totally agree with your comment about being more impressed with hearing the load music, over things out today. I'm still blown away by the ingenuity used in both hardware design, programming, and game designs from yesteryear, vs anything out there today. There is no mystery, or magic to how things work now.
A racing game today, as an example, is easy. Make 3d models, and have them race around. Trying to figure out how something like Outrun 2019, or even Space Harrier actually worked, is just mind boggling.
Thank you for your videos.
Man, that loading music is awesome! Using my dad’s old ZX Spectrum 128k +2, a many years ago, (mind you I was about 6 and it was still the mid 2000’s.) I figured out a method of getting decent quality analogue audio from the cassettes, and now that I think of it I’m sure I could find a way of using that for loading music. I originally worked out how it could be used for in-game voice acting without needing to use digitised samples, that was my original intention, but ingame music would be possible too without any modification.
The problem you’d have would be being able to hear the music over the loading sound, you’d need 2 separate sound channels, but I’m sure it’d still be possible on the Spectrum, definitely with some minor modification.
Totally lost it when you took the C64 to the park :D
+Simon Barnett It's been downhill ever since if I'm totally honest
After watching this, I was overwhelmed by nostalgia for the C-64's rounded key caps.
These are some of my favorite videos. I love the history lesson and high production value.
having the experiences of the games, programing, and other stuff then sharing with your fellow computer users was half the fun and was how alot of us interested in other interests made friends.
Lovely, lovely video! Very interesting to listen too. I'll be buying myself a C64-c in less than a month, from my local retro shop, all boxed, tested, comes with a tape deck, and 1 game, RGB cables from the online store I use, and lastly 6 months warranty! :D
14:35 that dance in the "black mirror", rofl!
Thanks for this. Missing a few details I would have included. But no less wonderful to behold. Made me very happy to watch.
I loved that my old Atari joysticks got some play on the C64.
I think I've seen this video in the past. Nevermind, today it gave me entertainment and relax during supper. :) Thank you for that. And I just brotherly love you for the outro. :)
Some of the team that designed the C64, including Robert Yannes (designer of the SID chip) went on to form the synthesizer company Ensoniq. The Ensoniq ESQ-1, released in 1985, was a digital synthesizer that used wave table lookup for oscillator waveforms and utilizes analogue low-pass filters and other components to create a truly unique sound. It's sort of a spiritual successor to the SID, as it's similar to how he had hoped the SID would have been used.
I finally acquired one a few years ago and it's one of the most interesting synths I've ever had the pleasure of using.
Real nice video. Did not know about a lot of those Commodore 64 variants. Some great looking computers. I recall the Plus4 and Commodore 16 and remember how bizarre it was to see those in the shops. No idea what Commodore were thinking! For me the C64 was the computer I learned programming on back in the day so I have a lot to thank my mother for in that regard as I've earned my living from it for the last 25+ years!
I've seen many but your nostalgia channel gets it right, thx!
Hey man, your videos are wonderful and informative. They're not condensed or roundabout at all, actually nice to sit and watch. I show all my geeky friends your channel. Hope you get more recognition!
Them feels. Just watched it, and it brought back fond memories. My first foray into computing was an ex-raf Vic 20, followed up by the C64 a few years later. Most frustrating was the James Bond game. Never loaded right, and when it did you died really quickly and had to reload.
I remember Bond on the Speccy, don't think I ever had a chance to play it on the c64..... Now there is time!
Ah, the shot of Jarrold's for some Norfolk love.
And sovereign house in Anglia square at 1:30
at 14:37 i can see you dancing (to the loading music) in the reflection of your monitor. i rewatched it 5 times and laughed harder each time. great video. ...and thanks for the laugh. edit: ahh, i just noticed someone pointed that out years before i did.
Great video as always and I really appreciate the little sketch you did there!
I owned a C64 C with the disk drive in the UK! I wasn't a rich kid but I managed to get a C64 with the disk drive and games for a low price. Not many disk based games were available but I managed to find a cartridge that plugged into the back of the C64 which would snapshot the C64 memory to disk. You could then load from tape and snapshot to disk. Loading up games in 6 seconds in the 80s would amaze people. I also bought GEOS and a mouse which gave the C64 a GUI interface, it was like owning an apple at the time. For a while that machine was my life.
I had a C16 and I must say it’s much improved Basic v3.5 and built in machine language monitor sparked my programming interests for a lifetime.
Oh so many memories! Thanks for this vid...
I can't recall a single instance that I've seen anyone use a c64 with a datasette in the 80s in Germany. It was floppies all the way.
I used a datacette with my c128 because it was all I could afford. I didn't play much games and there weren't much in the USA.
Took me months to save up $280 for a 1571 drive.
Cassettes were for us schoolkids swapping games, but by '84 they were pretty much finished.
My dad used both
Really great video. I can tell you put a lot of work into it. Deserves more views!
I saw you dancing in the screen reflection omg Hahahaha during the game loading music
My son and I say "Yoink" whenever it's appropriate! Thanks!
As an American when you said you used tape based software I went holy shit like in Star Trek sweet
I have plenty of Commodore software and some Sinclair software somewhere around my home. I have 2 Commodore 64's, 1 floppy drive, 1 joystick, and a 64k modem for the machine. The machines both work just fine although I have not used them in some time. Someone purchased the rights to use the name and sold a different version of the machine, but it never made any advancement in the U.S. I still have some magazines from the late 1980's and early 1990's which had programs in them for various computers and Commodore programs was among those programs in them. I also had a Commodore +4 which I ended up giving to a friend whom I worked with and he and his wife loved it.
That ending was pure gold!!
I was about 9 when we got our C64. (1985) in USA. We did use a cassette drive at first and started with the games "Forbidden Forest" and "Zaxxon."
64C was my favorite, plus instead of a tape drive, the 1541 floppy drive was included. The 64 came with a tape drive in my area. I got GEOS from a Commodore focused magazine I subscribed to. As a kid my wrist did not notice it was a less ergomatic machine.
Yes, I owned a CBM64, and I loved it. I owned a disc station, and then a C64 Exective with 'all-in'. That one I sold to a collector(?) with profit, much later. But I hardly EVER played games, I made programs in Basic! Gosh, I loved it.
Nostalgia Nerd *clearly playing a clone of centipede* - "It's like space invaders on steroids!"
I did not know all those models! :) One thing that always puzzles me is that special love relationship of the UK with cassette tapes. Nobody had a disk drive... Boggles my mind. I was fairly young, born in 1981, but being a German and raised by a single mother with very little income still we (rather my older brother) had a disk drive in the late 80s. And actually I don't recall anyone around not having one. XD no idea if it was cheaper here? But the C64 reigned supreme, and disk drives were common. But I guess the UK had that super cheap budget game market for tapes that was not so prevailant here either. :)
108Stars yeah, same here . You could buy a disk drive with paper route money and many kids (young teens) did that if they got C64 without. It was a few hundred guilders. Not very cheap but achievable .
OMG I found a game on your video that I couldn't remember the name of. I recognized the music though and looked it up. After reading the description I'm like YUP!!! That's it alright. Quake Minus One. THANK YOU!!!!! I've been looking for years.
+doctorbarrientos I can't reply to your comment, but that was intentional XD
why was mos 6510 slower on pal?
+gingernutpreacher because of the difference required for PAL colour encoding frequencies. Watch my Why is Sonic Faster In America video and it's explained.
oh its the same thing got ya
is it true that commodore ceeded the us market to Nintendo?
Very amusing! Can't believe I've only just seen this. And thumbs up for bothering to film the street urchin scene. 👍😂🕹️
Thank You! Thanks to this video I have found game of my childhood: Bomborino. I have searched it for ages on c64 longplays without results.
Excellent! Glad to be of service :D
I never had a tape drive for the C64; we bought a 1541 floppy drive at the time of our original C64 purchase (a C64c), and almost all of our C64 software was floppy-based. I remember 1 cartridge game I played on the C64 (Telengard from Avalon Hill), but that was it.
I can only watch your video dreaming that I had a commodore again with all the games I loved.
I believe I remember hearing that the guy who started Commodore USA and was redoing the models with x86 hardware and such passed a way a few years after starting and his dream went away with him unfortunately. There are a lot of other fun hardware projects though such as the Turbo Chameleon 64, C64 Reloaded, and Mega 65.
+Thraka's House Ahhhh, I see. I am hopeful for the Mega 65! Haven't heard of the Turbo though!
Good to see Norwich in the video. I'm in Yarmouth.
+corgiGY Hello there, fellow local
+Nostalgia Nerd Hi there! Looking forward to seeing your next videos mate. Really enjoy them.
Thanks! I've just pushed one out. Hopefully I'm back to regular ones again now!
I’m from Norwich and hi my fellow Norfolk brethren. I broke into sovereign house in anglia square once when drunk and panicked trying to find my way out. It is immense inside and though empty, the heating was still on and I felt like I was being watched and followed. Until I passed out and woke up next morning.
Best c64 video I've seen. Thank you from the Slovakia
I love this machine. Both Gauntlet, Space Taxi, Track N Field and Dr Who and the Mines of Terror were great games. Also Gianna Sisters!
In Germany, the disk drive was sold for about the same price as the C64. But there were some games that were disk-exclusive, plus commercial disk magazines. I used tapes for a year or so and then upgraded to a disk drive - I could then finally use those GEOS disks that came bundled with my C64G ;)
takes me back to the good days ...thanks!
Finally got around to watching this one. Great video, mate! When you loaded up Haunted House, I recognized the game purely by SID tune! Great trip down nostalgia lane! You need a new second spring in that 64C spacebar.
Superb video. Thanks. :) Never owned a C64 but a friend let me have his C16 back in the day (1986 I think) when he upgraded to the C64.
i played through Turrican 2 on my Amiga 500+ the other day. it's been over 20 years since i played it and it still feels like such a good game. the level design is impressive and expansive with multiple routes and hidden secrets. the weapons, power-ups and changes in gameplay keep it feeling fresh from level to level. to think that it was programmed by one guy is just unbelievable. if it came out today i'd give it a 8/10 easily...please play it if you haven't. Same goes for Apidya...great shmup!
Dude. Your videos are the business.
"That's the only thing I have in the world", that is the best child acting I believe that I've ever seen. Great timing and hilarious.
Thanks for the excellent video! I spent many an hour as a child playing games on my C64 before I ever got an NES. :D
Ahhh such fond memories, especially Hunchback and Cabal!
I started off with a tape deck then moved to the disk where I played strategy and RPGs of which there were MANY. I guess the disk drive was cheaper in Aus, I certainly wasn’t rich. Great video.
Ahh I remembered I visit my schoolbuddy at his home. He has the German style c64, sawing him load a game from cassette for the first time in my life. It was Ninja Spirit. I was amazed by the sound, music and graphics! We were 10 year olds... I was playing with transformers.
Being born in '81 I didn't see too many C64s in the wild during their original run, but to me it seemed like everyone had a disk drive in Germany. The first time I saw a tape drive was when I got my own C64 in the late 90s. Still haven't used it once.
Really enjoy your video's!
Started watching with the CD32,which is the most in depth review I've ever watched of that great little machine (I got myself into debt at the time to get one),to the Speccy and the '64....really good stuff..
You have another sub !
*videos
apostrophes don't belong in plural words...smh
@@scottbreon9448 Shut up. Besides, it's a 4 years old comment...smh
@@mortenera2294 And if your mother wasn't a moron, she would have had an abortion
That otro hit me in my feels with such 80s nostalgia.....:D
Not sure but I think the cassette thing was something typical UK. As far I remember, in Belgium the tapes were only used for the first 2 years or so. Later on most of us were using the floppy drive. Like I did and we were far from rich! ;-))
Maybe it had something to do with the cheap (but crappy) Sinclair computers in the UK. Sinclair let the people believe that computer could made dirt cheap. It is hard to convince people afterwards to pay money for a proper made product.
In Sweden, the 1541 was without a doubt a luxury item. With the success of the Amiga around the corner, most of us upgraded directly to an A500.
Mum Blic same here in the Netherlands, mostly disks.
Mum Blic Rubbish. Sinclair wanted to get people in the UK in to computing, something that wouldn't have happened at the prices Commodore, Apple and Atari were charging. The BBC Micro was too expensive for most people, despite their use in most UK schools (hence they introduced the Acorn Electron). It was easy for people to see the limitations of the ZX range, and many people moved on to bigger and better... simply because they were able to get that initial foot on the ladder. Disk drives weren't rare in the UK, but they were less common due to their price.
Fun fact: for years we use the qwertz keyboard layout instead of the english qwerty. So apart from the G in the name no German would assume this to be a specifically made for Germany computer.
Also: Germany in the 80s meant West-Germany. Om my side of the iron curtain there was no Commodore... Why do English and American RUclipsrs always show maps oh the current Germany? Germany never looked like this before 1990.
Good video tough:)
its still emulated perfectly today and the games on it are still fun to play today
I was looking for a spot to hook up my C64 again, and it sat on my lap your entire video.
I love how Peter says 'muvverboard'
Loove this! Ohh, the nostalgia! Bittersweet.
Here in Germany everyone that had a C-64 also had a floppy drive. There were tape games and I remember that I got Trivial Pursuit on a tape for my birthday. Bought a tape drive for it (they were indeed very cheap) and was amazed how long it took for it to load :D LOAD "*",8,1 ftw!
Haha dude the ending is brilliant!
Love the videos. My mate had the c16 after I had bought the c64. Still have mine. It is a goodjob there is no backup battery . Nowadays these things are leaking and messing up older computers that have them.
This is an excellent video. We needed a different point of view on retrogaming: all channels of this sort appear to be mainly Sega/Nintendo oriented, which I couldn't care less about (except for AVGN, who is fun). Apparently Sinclair and Commodore machines were stronger here in Europe than in the US. It's them (and Pc stuff from the 90's) I'm particularly interested in. Subscribed. I'll be checking out your channel regularly. Cheers.
Tonio Miklo I agree. I don't like mainstream. Niche, UK or failed systems all the way ;)
Sinclair was pure eurotrash, Timex had no success with their us version, but C64 did very decently for a bit, albeit almost universally with floppies not cassette garbage.
I had a disc drive for my 64, but I came to it in the early 90s when people were selling stuff cheap to buy Amigas. Night and day difference between that and the older tape loading. The evolution of impatience is pretty funny actually - Tape -> Floppy -> Hard drive -> Faster hard drive -> SSD -> M2 SSD. Still impatient when loading.
When we lived in Kansas back in like '93-96' or so and there was a tornado warning in our area we'd all huddle inside the 1541 casing till the storm was over.
21:43
ok i liked that more than I should
dndboy13 I loled
Thanks for posting . Many thanks from the Philippines!!
Outstanding video, so much nostalgia. Thank you!!!!
Interesting Lore of the C64!!! ...just watching to see what the competition is up to, lol. (I owned it's 1986 competitor, the Atari 130XE ---very nice ST and XE design cosmetics, thanks Jack!--- with disk drive, printer, modem & composite monitor.