We are seriously lacking good word art these days. I am very disappointed of my options on Ms Office 2016. I can't create arched rainbow text that pops out of the page anymore. Don't even get me started on the clipart. Clint is right to buy that pack! :)
Coming up at the next techno show: Dj LGR! But instead of a laptop, he will play his tunes on an old Win 95 machine with a CRT. Live sound bites will be floppy disk drive squeaks and dot matrix printer squeals! After the show he will give each of his fans an autographed print of FARTS written in multiple word art styles.
Well, that's RUclips-it's run by a bunch of assholes (presumably from _Spaceballs_ ), and they've been cracking down unnecessarily heavy on ASMR that audibly is even slightly lewd. Buncha jerks.
@@Quesbe: You know what ASMR, or _Spaceballs_ is, right? The asshole reference is from the 1987 film _Spaceballs._ ASMR is autonomous sensory meridian response, audio that's intended to induce a sensation, like having somebody massage your ears even though you're just listening with headphones/earbuds. As one might imagine, lewd ASMR variants exist... but lately it seems that RUclips is having no truck with even slight lewdness (hence why I comically called the people who run RUclips a bunch of assholes).
Oh my God LGR thank you so much, this disk is an irreplaceable part of my childhood. A friend had it, and he lent it to "me" (me and my brothers). I've been looking for it for ages but I didn't know what it was called, however as soon as I saw that expert logo and that rhyno my mind remembered.
As a kid, I grew up on these bundles. In my mind, it was either pay $20 for 1 game, or pay the same amount for 250 games. The answer was a no-brainer at the time. I remember buying Expert Software's 250 Best Arcade Games, and although there were a lot of stinkers, there were a lot of games that stuck out and still remember to this day. Great memories.
The ticking of that PC, the ding of the mouse click, the extreme 90s aesthetic of that install wizard, three nostalgia is insane! I used to have this cd called "bits for kids" or something like that. Didn't speak a word of English back then but somehow I fandangled my way through most of the menu and games. Seeing this makes me realise that we probably had more of these collection cds and that that's where I need to start searching for games I vaguely remember from my childhood. Finally a new rabbit hole to jump into.
I remember those episodes from *PushingUpRoses,* _Let's Play Some Obscure DOS Games! (ft. Lazy Game Reviews)_ and _EVEN MORE._ I don't remember if there was a third episode.
Clint, I love and respect you on a whole new level(and that’s saying something) this video helped me find a collection of shareware that I had as a kid and have been searching for the better part of 20 years. I downloaded it off the internet archive and I’ve been enjoying showing my 8 year old stepdaughter the DOS games from my childhood more than I have anything in quite a while ❤️
1) seeing a Packard-Bell PC just hit me with every level of Nostalgia. 2) this collection reminds me of these old Show & Go shareware disks with similar layouts and random collection of games.
Very 90s techno loops on that techno DAW generator thing! I love it. I suspect the drums were dubiously sampled from other tracks as well! The 303 definitely had to be samples as ReBirth the original 303 VST wasn't out IIRC! I would love to see the full thing in action since I'm a 90s techno nerd hahaha
Oh man, seeing Hodj'N'Podj in that catalog brings back some memories. Old buddy of mine and I used to play the crap out of that against each other. Actually a pretty good time back in the day.
3:30 Holy shit, that brings back some memories! So, back in the day, where I was growing up, we only had dial-up internet - which was metered according to data used but you _also_ had to pay the phone company for the phone call to the ISP. So internet access was an expensive commodity. But computers were still this exciting new thing that everyone was talking about (again, where I lived; can't say about other places - rural life is what it is) and I wanted to learn more about them. So - I actually bought those magazines with the articles about 'how to reformat to XYZ file system', 'installing linux for the first time', 'automating scheduled backups' and rubbish like that. Not because I wanted to know how to do half the stuff in them, just because they were such an insight into what a computer was and what it could do. And I read a lot more of them than I ever bought, because this being physical print media I was able to swap them with friends. I think all my old copies of these ended up with a cousin who was really into computers, or an IT department at a school a relative taught at. But they were actually really decent interesting things to have, if going online to find the information would have cost several dollars anyway and been over a 56kbps line.
I remember that Hounds and Jackals game, especially the sounds. I think I never really figured out how it worked. But I tried quite a few times. Enough times to basically sear those sounds into my memory.
I have been looking for this software forever! I have been watching your videos for so long, and did not realize that you did a video on this! This was bought for us grandkids to play on the old work computer my grandparents had for their business. Male strip show was the one piece of software that I have been searching for for so long, I remembered it as aliens and a very avant garde art style. Thank you for what you do man, you always make my day!
I have two big boxes from Expert - one is the Slam Tilt Pinball (one of the best of the genre EVER) and the other is Fantasy Illustrations, which is just a clip-art collection that's super rare today. And yeah, they were just shovelware publisher for the most part, but the packing they sticked to had certain charm.
I loved Beat2000 Demo when I was a kid. Spent many many hours to create a cool track but since it was a demo I wasn't able to save it, so I recorded it on tape :D
the best part is, recording it onto tape is a more legit music production experience (it's what you'd've had to do with any drum machines etc, and it's what they did in studios too)
I think the "test drive" in Hangman Jr. was trying to get an idea of how well you spell before picking words for you to spell. I've seen edutainment do that before. It helps them set a level to start at so the game isn't too frustrating for kids.
That ominous cut away to you picking up that font creator on eBay simply because you found something that moderately intrigued you in the product catalog is such a relatable aesthetic ...well, it is to me anyway.
I was thinking only the other day about a CD collection of these sorts of games that my aunt and uncle got me for a present years ago. I got rid of it but now I'm on my nostalgia trip, wish that I'd kept it. Thanks for uploading the disc image, I think I'll grab it and fill my boots with that!
Oh thank you thank you thank you for your struggle with the dll thing. I never found out what to do when that pops up in those shovelware cds and now i can try all the games i couldn't when i was a kid. I have been meaning to browse through the collections for a while now and it's a good time to see what to do to atleast get a change to see them work.
the blue to black gradient, with the white times new roman with a shadow.. fills me with excitement and nostalgia. as does that embossed packard bell logo wallpaper! haha wow.
I have an old Expert racing game called Backroad racers from 1993 that had a very early full motion video feature that for whatever reason never worked right. It would never play the audio from the videos even back then. I guess it required a specific type of sound card. I recently even tried the game on dosbox and the video clip audio didn't work there either.
Cool, at first I thought you'd had a few drinks before making the video but then realised the playback speed was at 0.5. Still a great experience anyway, thanks.
Man, those old collection discs were rad back in the day. I had a few that I think were pretty much just bootleg compilation discs that had all sorts of random games on them. A lot of them shovelware, but sometimes there was a real game in there between them. Knowing nothing about PC games at the time, it often took me a while to realize that some of the better games that I really liked from them were actually hugely beloved titles. Biggest one that comes to mind being the original Fallout. I actually didn't realize Fallout was a real beloved franchise for the longest time because even when I did find a Fallout game in stores and bought it, it turned out to be Tactics. So for a while I just assumed my memories of liking that one game from that one compilation disc was just wrong.
I bought one of this kind of CDs when I had my first computer. It had a lot of showelware games but some jewels like Warcraft, A-Train, 1865 and Abuse.
Ohhh I saw Exile 3 in the adventure games list. Played it a lot back then. (1-3 actually) The dev., Spiderweb, is still around and they made remakes of their games, called Avernum now. (Was the name of the world in Exile 1-3). Even the remakes are still very close to the original feeling.
OH SHIT! I had a shovelware disk I loved that I lent to a friend ages ago and never got back. I've never been able to remember what it was called, so couldn't begin to replace it. It wasn't this one. BUT I suddenly remembered it because of the "500 games best value" thing on the back. I was like "Shit, I had one that claimed it had over a thousand games on it" and the light went off in my head. Now patrolling eBay for an ugly green "1001 Games and More" disk. Thank you LGR, you've saved my youthful memories.
Holy shit I almost forgot about Expert Software! They always had those 100-in-1 game discs at Babbage's/GameStop back in the late 90's and I fell for the trap and bought them every damn time like candy at the grocery store check out!
I had that same Packard Bell monitor. I gave it away after college, but I kept the Pentium 200MHz machine for use as a router. those built in speakers were convenient.
I have the expert releases of both Cannon Fodder and Dust, bought at a long gone Pharmhouse store in the mid-late 90's. If you've never played Dust I highly recommend it, its a very unique adventure game.
Dust: A Tale of the Wired West was a fun little point-and-click game, very reminiscent of Myst or Shivers. I actually had it when it originally came out. It was put out Cyberflix. I've been trying to find a copy of it again, just because it was so fun.
I picked up one of those home design “games” new in box at goodwill not too long ago, I’m not surprised it’s basically like The Sims without people and more Home Depot.
I've been looking for "Trucks & Stuff" by Expert Software. You can find a listing for it on Amazon, with a picture, but unavailable. Anyone have it? I'd love to see a video of it. I remember being obsessed with it as a child. I just want to see if again.
This is where it all started and I’m proud to say I remember those mid 90s days...... you can even see those architectural programs Will Wright said got inspired from, I love this ❤️
Loving these blurbs. It's a long, long, shot, but you mention having a collection of X-in-many packages. I've been looking for a very particular one for a very very long time, but unfortunately I barely remember anything. All I remember is that the menu had lots of red and yellow colors used, potentially in the background as well. I think there was a pirate theme to it, with a cartoon pirate or similar in the menu or next to the game list? And one of the game was a 3D asteroids space shooter kind of thing with a whole cockpit as a HUD. If you have ANY idea, that would be greatly appreciated!!!
Looking forward to that Font Blerb. Expert Software also re-released my favorite PC game, The Dark Eye. It is a point-and-click adventure game that is based upon the works of Edgar Allen Poe, and all the characters are clay puppets. It also has a great cast William S. Boroughs, Jennifer Hale, and Tom Kane. One of the unique points of the game is how each tale is played from the perspective of victim and murderer. It is an extremely underrated game.
I'm trying to figure out why the expert logo is seared into my brain, but this isn't the collection I remember. Who knows what I had but one day maybe I'll stumble across it
@@Ash0512 I'm glad to hear people remember the game fondly. Sadly it seems civ 2 doesn't get as much love compared to the other entries, a boxed copy was way cheaper than it should be (I'm not complaining though)
@@MyMyMicah32 have never played Civ 2, but I have played a lot of FreeCiv, which from what I understand is basically Civ 2.5. It's one of my favorite time wasters when I find myself on Linux.
@@KyurekiHana While FreeCiv was based on Civ2, the game I think of as Civ 2.5 is Civ 2: Test of Time. A standalone expansion that adds a whole bunch of stuff never seen in any other Civ game; I couldn't do it all justice in a single RUclips comment.
@@OriginalPiMan yeah I kept seeing it pop up. They released it around the time as Alpha Centauri right? I'll try and find a digital copy to give it a go, my partner may not approve of finding another big box PC game magically appear just yet.
As a kid msdos shareware compilations were some of my favorite things to go through. Now years later they’re probably the only msdos games I still play.
I remember getting a Mr. Pibb video game from McDonald's as a kid, I think on a floppy disk, and it was actually a really good first person shooter-type adventure game.
Reminds me of those Internet web site guide magazines you used to buy at the newsagents. The ones that were just like a phone book directory listing full of web sites.
I have PTSD from that windows error noise. Also, the frustration of hitting the windows key while you were in a fullscreen dos game, and having it get windowed, or usually, then immediately crashing, such as with Duke 3D, and of course when you were playing Dukematch, and winning.. Is why I ended up with a bunch of keyboards with the 3 windows keys popped off, because I could never find a way to disable them..
I've "15.000 Games and variants" from Easy Computing. I don't have the box anymore. But I do have the 8 (!) CD-ROM's it came with. Some of the games I actually 'liked'. But most of it's use is now on my mothers Acer Desktop with Vista. For like-this-other-game game: Tetris, Mahjongg, Bejeweled. I picked it up during it's Windows XP-era release.
Huh...I was digging around on one of my shareware collections (Over 1000 Games vol. 1, from Microforum) and by happenstance found a 1990 game from John Romero: Dangerous Dave in "Trophy Trouble". I really need to set up an old computer I have in my bedroom for this kind of stuff
People may not understand now, but before high speed internet, shovelware/shareware disks were amazing. It was the equivalent of 'flash games' for an earlier generation.
Better than the shareware collection i used to borrow from a friend.. 1000 games and only numbered folders on the disc. once the companion booklet was lost it became a nightmare. But it had demos to warcraft2 and batle arena so we were happy.
Smart computing was/is a magazine geared towards older and less experienced computer users. I worked in tech support for the publishing company that printed it about 10 years ago. They had a "free tech support" line that you could call into. At one point they had about 30 techs with a call queue in the 100s all day every day with no revenue to show for it. The bulk of the calls were from octogenarians. Remoting into a PC and seeing a sliver of web browser content under 30 tool bars was the norm, not the exception.
I remember Gubble! I was able to get both Gubble and Gubble 2 at an Ocean State Job Lot when I was in middle school; hooray for CD bargain bins. Didn't get that far into the first one compared to the second, the difficulty was surprising for a kids game. I had a hunch and went to check Steam; turns out the developer released an updated version this year on June 9th for $10, same price as the CD back then. Welp, time to go rack my brain again.
I have a few I bought from when I first started getting into Windows around 1996-97...even have one called Shareware Overload Trio designed for DOS (with a few programs for Windows and OS/2!). Pretty much everything the makers could scrounge up on BBS, dumped onto three CD-ROMs....
Joel from Vinesauce has a series called Shareware Madness where he takes a look at shareware compilations like these live on stream and, because he's Joel, proceeds to destroy all of the games as much as possible. I took a look at some highlight clips and yeah, exactly what you expect out of Joel.
Yeah, a disc with a bunch of demos/shareware/shovel-ware shareware crap that no-one wanted anyway.... Thankfully magazines later curated the better games into decent cover-discs! I remember seeing these packs of crap game demos being sold and wondering why anyone would want to buy that rubbish.... you got nothing but frustrating demos that often didn’t even work, so you paid some random company that put out these discs for demos that often the main software developers put out for free anyway!
I remember this disc. There's a lot of cool stuff in there. Wipeout 2097 was fun, and you could mess with the texture files. Beat2000, H.U.R.L, and Skunny Kart was fun too.
You know you’ve made a good software catalog when it convinces Clint to buy a pack of word art fonts nearly 20 year later
1998 was 22 years ago
@@smaerd That hurts...
@@smaerd 2 years +/- is still nearly 20 years
@@smaerd oh no
We are seriously lacking good word art these days. I am very disappointed of my options on Ms Office 2016. I can't create arched rainbow text that pops out of the page anymore. Don't even get me started on the clipart. Clint is right to buy that pack! :)
I was vibing to your techno mix - pure talent!
🤘
the hell does this "vibing" mean? do people just not listen to music anymore
@@mrN3CR0 Yeah! this is the first music song I’ve listened to in years I’m loving it
@@loam6740 I've been laughing at "music song" for like ten minutes, please send help, I don't even know why it's tickling me so much
Coming up at the next techno show: Dj LGR! But instead of a laptop, he will play his tunes on an old Win 95 machine with a CRT. Live sound bites will be floppy disk drive squeaks and dot matrix printer squeals! After the show he will give each of his fans an autographed print of FARTS written in multiple word art styles.
"people getting married, they got everything!" lmao loving this one.
Not males stripping, though.
You should try it’s sequel, Bitter Couples Getting Divorced, the game Irreconcilable differences where there are no Winners.😁.
"There's not enough male stripping" -LGR
I admit that game was not what I was expecting. Quite honestly, I don’t think it’s what anyone would be expecting.
Well, that's RUclips-it's run by a bunch of assholes (presumably from _Spaceballs_ ), and they've been cracking down unnecessarily heavy on ASMR that audibly is even slightly lewd. Buncha jerks.
@@Christopher-N ???
@@Quesbe: You know what ASMR, or _Spaceballs_ is, right? The asshole reference is from the 1987 film _Spaceballs._ ASMR is autonomous sensory meridian response, audio that's intended to induce a sensation, like having somebody massage your ears even though you're just listening with headphones/earbuds. As one might imagine, lewd ASMR variants exist... but lately it seems that RUclips is having no truck with even slight lewdness (hence why I comically called the people who run RUclips a bunch of assholes).
@@Christopher-N alright, mate
Oh my God LGR thank you so much, this disk is an irreplaceable part of my childhood. A friend had it, and he lent it to "me" (me and my brothers). I've been looking for it for ages but I didn't know what it was called, however as soon as I saw that expert logo and that rhyno my mind remembered.
Haha, excellent. Enjoy the download too, should you choose to revisit it hands-on!
@@LGRBlerbs I actually will. Gonna check it out just after work! I'm glad you (and others) archive all the good stuff man.
I relate to this so well. I'm still trying to find the purple and yellow one I had from Radio Shack. Spent many hours using my cdr-1100
Oh my god me too!
As a kid, I grew up on these bundles. In my mind, it was either pay $20 for 1 game, or pay the same amount for 250 games. The answer was a no-brainer at the time. I remember buying Expert Software's 250 Best Arcade Games, and although there were a lot of stinkers, there were a lot of games that stuck out and still remember to this day. Great memories.
The ticking of that PC, the ding of the mouse click, the extreme 90s aesthetic of that install wizard, three nostalgia is insane!
I used to have this cd called "bits for kids" or something like that.
Didn't speak a word of English back then but somehow I fandangled my way through most of the menu and games.
Seeing this makes me realise that we probably had more of these collection cds and that that's where I need to start searching for games I vaguely remember from my childhood.
Finally a new rabbit hole to jump into.
We need another long video of this whole collection with you and roses. This is so awful and wonderful
I remember those episodes from *PushingUpRoses,* _Let's Play Some Obscure DOS Games! (ft. Lazy Game Reviews)_ and _EVEN MORE._ I don't remember if there was a third episode.
I remember the Barbie Detective one...
*CLINT!*
Blursed is the word?
I would love a return of the two digging into some dos oddities, Roses mostly covers obscure 90s TV now though
Clint, I love and respect you on a whole new level(and that’s saying something) this video helped me find a collection of shareware that I had as a kid and have been searching for the better part of 20 years.
I downloaded it off the internet archive and I’ve been enjoying showing my 8 year old stepdaughter the DOS games from my childhood more than I have anything in quite a while
❤️
That late night lighting is great. You should it more often
1) seeing a Packard-Bell PC just hit me with every level of Nostalgia.
2) this collection reminds me of these old Show & Go shareware disks with similar layouts and random collection of games.
Love how quickly you misremembered “Shaggymane” as “Weedguy”
weed.. shrooms.. basically the same amirite
This is some of my favorite content just exploring these old software compilations
Thank You so so much for trying that Male Strip Show game, you had me laughing more than i have in a long time. Wow was that funny.
Very 90s techno loops on that techno DAW generator thing! I love it. I suspect the drums were dubiously sampled from other tracks as well! The 303 definitely had to be samples as ReBirth the original 303 VST wasn't out IIRC!
I would love to see the full thing in action since I'm a 90s techno nerd hahaha
Oh man, seeing Hodj'N'Podj in that catalog brings back some memories. Old buddy of mine and I used to play the crap out of that against each other. Actually a pretty good time back in the day.
3:30 Holy shit, that brings back some memories!
So, back in the day, where I was growing up, we only had dial-up internet - which was metered according to data used but you _also_ had to pay the phone company for the phone call to the ISP. So internet access was an expensive commodity. But computers were still this exciting new thing that everyone was talking about (again, where I lived; can't say about other places - rural life is what it is) and I wanted to learn more about them. So - I actually bought those magazines with the articles about 'how to reformat to XYZ file system', 'installing linux for the first time', 'automating scheduled backups' and rubbish like that. Not because I wanted to know how to do half the stuff in them, just because they were such an insight into what a computer was and what it could do. And I read a lot more of them than I ever bought, because this being physical print media I was able to swap them with friends. I think all my old copies of these ended up with a cousin who was really into computers, or an IT department at a school a relative taught at. But they were actually really decent interesting things to have, if going online to find the information would have cost several dollars anyway and been over a 56kbps line.
I remember that Hounds and Jackals game, especially the sounds. I think I never really figured out how it worked. But I tried quite a few times. Enough times to basically sear those sounds into my memory.
I have been looking for this software forever! I have been watching your videos for so long, and did not realize that you did a video on this! This was bought for us grandkids to play on the old work computer my grandparents had for their business. Male strip show was the one piece of software that I have been searching for for so long, I remembered it as aliens and a very avant garde art style. Thank you for what you do man, you always make my day!
I have two big boxes from Expert - one is the Slam Tilt Pinball (one of the best of the genre EVER) and the other is Fantasy Illustrations, which is just a clip-art collection that's super rare today. And yeah, they were just shovelware publisher for the most part, but the packing they sticked to had certain charm.
I loved Beat2000 Demo when I was a kid.
Spent many many hours to create a cool track but since it was a demo I wasn't able to save it, so I recorded it on tape :D
the best part is, recording it onto tape is a more legit music production experience (it's what you'd've had to do with any drum machines etc, and it's what they did in studios too)
I interested in that " Do it yourself lawyer" pack. I wonder how well that would work.
Oh wow! Crystal Calibrun!
I remember that one so well! Had a really nice BGM too!
These things were my early childhood, my first experience with windows was playing a weird mixed game pack
I think the "test drive" in Hangman Jr. was trying to get an idea of how well you spell before picking words for you to spell. I've seen edutainment do that before. It helps them set a level to start at so the game isn't too frustrating for kids.
That ominous cut away to you picking up that font creator on eBay simply because you found something that moderately intrigued you in the product catalog is such a relatable aesthetic
...well, it is to me anyway.
Heck, I remember 40 Games for windows from Expert Software, kept me well entertained as a youngin.
@16:18 sounds your kitchen utensils make! Thank you Sir! fun to see these software collections.
I was thinking only the other day about a CD collection of these sorts of games that my aunt and uncle got me for a present years ago. I got rid of it but now I'm on my nostalgia trip, wish that I'd kept it. Thanks for uploading the disc image, I think I'll grab it and fill my boots with that!
Oh thank you thank you thank you for your struggle with the dll thing. I never found out what to do when that pops up in those shovelware cds and now i can try all the games i couldn't when i was a kid. I have been meaning to browse through the collections for a while now and it's a good time to see what to do to atleast get a change to see them work.
Amazing!!! I had the CD when I was a child. Damn, I want this now in 2023!!!
the blue to black gradient, with the white times new roman with a shadow.. fills me with excitement and nostalgia. as does that embossed packard bell logo wallpaper! haha wow.
Going through the catalog is low key asmr for me
Standing by for another Blerb where Clint mixes a song from Beat 2000. Love to hear a masterpiece :)
I actually played that Hounds and Jackals game when I was a kid. I distinctly remember the dogs barking at the start.
My uncle had a multiple-year subscription to Smart Computing in Plain English.....he recently gave all of the issues he had to me. Nice stuff.
500 Games of Non-Stop fun! Press X to doubt.
X
Expert Software was one of the better shovelware companies, and I miss them dearly. Tons of memories. Remember Spin Doctor? Fun game, that.
I saw Scorched Earth 2 in that collection. I wonder if that one's any good? I played a ton of the original Scorched Earth.
LGR, making key-gen music since 2020.
lol. I used to love keygen music
Underrated comment
I have an old Expert racing game called Backroad racers from 1993 that had a very early full motion video feature that for whatever reason never worked right. It would never play the audio from the videos even back then. I guess it required a specific type of sound card. I recently even tried the game on dosbox and the video clip audio didn't work there either.
Cool, at first I thought you'd had a few drinks before making the video but then realised the playback speed was at 0.5. Still a great experience anyway, thanks.
Just seeing the Packard Bell monitor brings back a lot of memories.
Man, those old collection discs were rad back in the day. I had a few that I think were pretty much just bootleg compilation discs that had all sorts of random games on them. A lot of them shovelware, but sometimes there was a real game in there between them. Knowing nothing about PC games at the time, it often took me a while to realize that some of the better games that I really liked from them were actually hugely beloved titles. Biggest one that comes to mind being the original Fallout.
I actually didn't realize Fallout was a real beloved franchise for the longest time because even when I did find a Fallout game in stores and bought it, it turned out to be Tactics. So for a while I just assumed my memories of liking that one game from that one compilation disc was just wrong.
I like that the fLiPeD oUt installer uses a warning dialog to let you know it finished successfully.
I bought one of this kind of CDs when I had my first computer. It had a lot of showelware games but some jewels like Warcraft, A-Train, 1865 and Abuse.
Ohhh I saw Exile 3 in the adventure games list. Played it a lot back then. (1-3 actually)
The dev., Spiderweb, is still around and they made remakes of their games, called Avernum now. (Was the name of the world in Exile 1-3).
Even the remakes are still very close to the original feeling.
OH SHIT!
I had a shovelware disk I loved that I lent to a friend ages ago and never got back. I've never been able to remember what it was called, so couldn't begin to replace it.
It wasn't this one. BUT I suddenly remembered it because of the "500 games best value" thing on the back. I was like "Shit, I had one that claimed it had over a thousand games on it" and the light went off in my head.
Now patrolling eBay for an ugly green "1001 Games and More" disk.
Thank you LGR, you've saved my youthful memories.
Expert Is like a 1998 version of Humble Bundle.
This is a top shelf blerb! I remember digging through broken shovelware as a teen. Good times!
I had a subscription to Smart Computing and a couple others in the 90's, seems it was an easy christmas gift for me for several years in the 90's
Holy shit I almost forgot about Expert Software! They always had those 100-in-1 game discs at Babbage's/GameStop back in the late 90's and I fell for the trap and bought them every damn time like candy at the grocery store check out!
Every time I see a video pop up - I now see my cat going “blerb” in my head. Like a derpier version of “mlem”
We have indeed seen that Hangman Jr. game show up on Shovelware Diggers! ;)
I knew it! I recall my bemusement at the way it showed pictures of the words before the player enters them.
11:56 the 420 folder, look at the .c and .h files. Did they accidentally ship the source code with the shareware version of their game? lmao
I had that same damn Packard Bell monitor with the side speakers in 1997!! Wow. I'm glad I don't have it anymore.
I had that same Packard Bell monitor. I gave it away after college, but I kept the Pentium 200MHz machine for use as a router. those built in speakers were convenient.
Shaggy manes are delicious mushrooms. I saw mushrooms also on the name text. Mycology is wonderful.
I found a copy of beat 2000 over on the archive but its Italian. still has some english on parts of the software though.
thanks for the comfy video clint
Seeing Helious for the first time in 25 years brings back some repressed memories. Such a weird and frustrating game to play.
This was a wonderful video!
THE PACKARD BELL NAVIGATOR! Oh man, i loved that house
I have the expert releases of both Cannon Fodder and Dust, bought at a long gone Pharmhouse store in the mid-late 90's. If you've never played Dust I highly recommend it, its a very unique adventure game.
Dust: A Tale of the Wired West was a fun little point-and-click game, very reminiscent of Myst or Shivers. I actually had it when it originally came out. It was put out Cyberflix. I've been trying to find a copy of it again, just because it was so fun.
I picked up one of those home design “games” new in box at goodwill not too long ago, I’m not surprised it’s basically like The Sims without people and more Home Depot.
I think every gamer had one of this game collection once in his lifetime.
a disc similar to this was basically my Internet long before I got actual Internet ;)
I had one of those game compilation packs for Windows 95 as a kid. It wasn't the same one reviewed here but it had a fat stack of games on it.
"Male Strip Show" sounds like a fun adventure game
I've been looking for "Trucks & Stuff" by Expert Software. You can find a listing for it on Amazon, with a picture, but unavailable. Anyone have it? I'd love to see a video of it. I remember being obsessed with it as a child. I just want to see if again.
This is where it all started and I’m proud to say I remember those mid 90s days...... you can even see those architectural programs Will Wright said got inspired from, I love this ❤️
Loving these blurbs. It's a long, long, shot, but you mention having a collection of X-in-many packages. I've been looking for a very particular one for a very very long time, but unfortunately I barely remember anything. All I remember is that the menu had lots of red and yellow colors used, potentially in the background as well. I think there was a pirate theme to it, with a cartoon pirate or similar in the menu or next to the game list? And one of the game was a 3D asteroids space shooter kind of thing with a whole cockpit as a HUD. If you have ANY idea, that would be greatly appreciated!!!
Looking forward to that Font Blerb.
Expert Software also re-released my favorite PC game, The Dark Eye. It is a point-and-click adventure game that is based upon the works of Edgar Allen Poe, and all the characters are clay puppets. It also has a great cast William S. Boroughs, Jennifer Hale, and Tom Kane. One of the unique points of the game is how each tale is played from the perspective of victim and murderer. It is an extremely underrated game.
whoa. I'm pretty sure I bought exactly this from a computer store when I was a young kid. That jewel case seems so familiar
I'm trying to figure out why the expert logo is seared into my brain, but this isn't the collection I remember. Who knows what I had but one day maybe I'll stumble across it
The weirdest thing just happened, as soon the Ebay image popped up, my phone notified me that my Ebay order of civ 2 is expect by Nov 19
Good call! Civ 2 is fun!
@@Ash0512 I'm glad to hear people remember the game fondly. Sadly it seems civ 2 doesn't get as much love compared to the other entries, a boxed copy was way cheaper than it should be (I'm not complaining though)
@@MyMyMicah32 have never played Civ 2, but I have played a lot of FreeCiv, which from what I understand is basically Civ 2.5. It's one of my favorite time wasters when I find myself on Linux.
@@KyurekiHana
While FreeCiv was based on Civ2, the game I think of as Civ 2.5 is Civ 2: Test of Time. A standalone expansion that adds a whole bunch of stuff never seen in any other Civ game; I couldn't do it all justice in a single RUclips comment.
@@OriginalPiMan yeah I kept seeing it pop up. They released it around the time as Alpha Centauri right? I'll try and find a digital copy to give it a go, my partner may not approve of finding another big box PC game magically appear just yet.
When I was a 4 year old in the 90s, I had that Mcdonaldland create and paint. I had the weirdest flashback seeing that screenshot in that catalog
5:31 "Do It Yourself Lawyer"
Wasn't that a Tim and Eric sketch?
A P75 corner Packard Bell? A friend had one of them with the PB software Navigator...ohh fun times.
That Beats 2000 demo was pretty cool. Do hope you find a full copy and make a video on it.
I noticed on the back of the box that it contained Crystal Caliburn. That was a great virtual pinball program back in the day.
As a kid msdos shareware compilations were some of my favorite things to go through. Now years later they’re probably the only msdos games I still play.
I remember getting a Mr. Pibb video game from McDonald's as a kid, I think on a floppy disk, and it was actually a really good first person shooter-type adventure game.
"Tarot: Unlock Life's Mysteries Through The World Of Tarot"... That CD-ROM title in the catalog looks quite interesting!
Reminds me of those Internet web site guide magazines you used to buy at the newsagents. The ones that were just like a phone book directory listing full of web sites.
Expert typing tutor on win 3.11 is what taught me how to type. I thank my grandma everyday for forcing that onto me now that I’m older
The enthusiasm here has me white knuckling my mouse and keyboard.
I have PTSD from that windows error noise.
Also, the frustration of hitting the windows key while you were in a fullscreen dos game, and having it get windowed, or usually, then immediately crashing, such as with Duke 3D, and of course when you were playing Dukematch, and winning.. Is why I ended up with a bunch of keyboards with the 3 windows keys popped off, because I could never find a way to disable them..
I've "15.000 Games and variants" from Easy Computing. I don't have the box anymore. But I do have the 8 (!) CD-ROM's it came with. Some of the games I actually 'liked'. But most of it's use is now on my mothers Acer Desktop with Vista. For like-this-other-game game: Tetris, Mahjongg, Bejeweled.
I picked it up during it's Windows XP-era release.
I cant remember what it was, but I had a disc that was advertised to have 2000 games on it. I remember it being a red and black disc.
Huh...I was digging around on one of my shareware collections (Over 1000 Games vol. 1, from Microforum) and by happenstance found a 1990 game from John Romero: Dangerous Dave in "Trophy Trouble". I really need to set up an old computer I have in my bedroom for this kind of stuff
People may not understand now, but before high speed internet, shovelware/shareware disks were amazing. It was the equivalent of 'flash games' for an earlier generation.
Better than the shareware collection i used to borrow from a friend.. 1000 games and only numbered folders on the disc. once the companion booklet was lost it became a nightmare. But it had demos to warcraft2 and batle arena so we were happy.
Smart computing was/is a magazine geared towards older and less experienced computer users. I worked in tech support for the publishing company that printed it about 10 years ago. They had a "free tech support" line that you could call into. At one point they had about 30 techs with a call queue in the 100s all day every day with no revenue to show for it. The bulk of the calls were from octogenarians. Remoting into a PC and seeing a sliver of web browser content under 30 tool bars was the norm, not the exception.
I remember Gubble! I was able to get both Gubble and Gubble 2 at an Ocean State Job Lot when I was in middle school; hooray for CD bargain bins. Didn't get that far into the first one compared to the second, the difficulty was surprising for a kids game.
I had a hunch and went to check Steam; turns out the developer released an updated version this year on June 9th for $10, same price as the CD back then. Welp, time to go rack my brain again.
Seems like not even early Windows was safe from these weird "500-in-1" game packs
Honestly, early Windows was where it all seemed to start and it only got worse from there.
If this was released in 1996, all the programs are from the early to mid 90’s
I have a few I bought from when I first started getting into Windows around 1996-97...even have one called Shareware Overload Trio designed for DOS (with a few programs for Windows and OS/2!). Pretty much everything the makers could scrounge up on BBS, dumped onto three CD-ROMs....
Joel from Vinesauce has a series called Shareware Madness where he takes a look at shareware compilations like these live on stream and, because he's Joel, proceeds to destroy all of the games as much as possible.
I took a look at some highlight clips and yeah, exactly what you expect out of Joel.
Yeah, a disc with a bunch of demos/shareware/shovel-ware shareware crap that no-one wanted anyway.... Thankfully magazines later curated the better games into decent cover-discs!
I remember seeing these packs of crap game demos being sold and wondering why anyone would want to buy that rubbish.... you got nothing but frustrating demos that often didn’t even work, so you paid some random company that put out these discs for demos that often the main software developers put out for free anyway!
I actually did buy the 3D Font Creator back in the day at like OfficeMax. Can't say I used it more than a few times.
15:47
I'd listen to more techno stuff from Clint like this.
I have great memories of DUST a great fps/adventure title :)
I remember this disc. There's a lot of cool stuff in there. Wipeout 2097 was fun, and you could mess with the texture files. Beat2000, H.U.R.L, and Skunny Kart was fun too.
The fond memories of that monitor/speaker combo...