I got this game in 1980 and spent hundreds of hours on it. The excitement of finding the magic dot and the secret room is was one of the highest points of my gaming career. Was great watching this at age 50.
The programmers had to hide their names as easter eggs because they didn't get any acknowledgement or credit for their work in those days. Everything they did belonged to the company. Warren Robinett would have gotten fired on the spot if they had found out.
I'm sorry but haven't you heard? I already found Hallidays Egg and currently bathing in his money. But a wise man once said: "Videogames are the only thing that make life bearable" - anorak
Reading READY PLAYER ONE. Oh, man, back in 79 this was the shit, I was 8 years old and spent hours on this game. I never did find this easter egg though and no internet back then to look up cheats, no other players to interact and discuss with, things have really changed. Still the best Atari game ever though.
God, I loved this game. I remember finally finding the secret room, and from then on was obsessed with finding secrets in other Atari games, which didn't have them, lol
me too, I solved it back in the 80s. Forgot all about it until reading the book and just now seeing the movie. The book is so much better, in my opinion. However, I did enjoy the movie too. I still have my 2600 and adventure.
Ready Player One was so much FUN despite its flaws. The fact the first easter egg was given such prominence in the book and film just warms my heart. I will be a kid forever in my heart, and there ain't nothin' wrong with that.
I played this game so much, I found the easter egg by accident and my friends and I were freaking out about it for months. It said "Created by Warren Robinett"
Same for me. My brother and I played this game and had already beaten the game on all difficulties. We decided to see if there were other things pr places in the catacombs so we used the bride to do so. But we accidentally found the gray dot and the message
I found this myself when this game first came out purely by luck or perhaps playing the game a thousand times. If you keep all the dragons alive, you can lure them into the "Created by" room one by one and trap them there. Once I saw this secret, I always had a fantasy that by completing a game (any future game) or finding the secret hidden area, you then would receive instruction to mail some sort of code to an address so that you could then receive your large cash award.
+skibumfajita that did happen, sort of! action 52's "ooze" minigame was so hard and badly programmed that they promised a handsome reward to anyone who finished it i don't think anybody had the patience to play that game all the way through
They made the Swordquest games as a sort of Adventure 2 and they did just that, but they didn't use easter eggs, but rather hints in game that would lead you to pages on the comic book that came with the game. You'd find these hidden words that would form a phrase that you mailed in for a chance at the reward. Swordquest wasn't as good as adventure in my opinion, but I loved the comic books.
Lol I got an Atari flashback console ut of nostalgia a couple weeks ago and stil, remembered the maze routes I learned what, 40 years ago. Here to finally get that egg. I did find the dot when I was a kid, but that's it.
When the consumer doesn't get what they expect, they will complain. I don't get mad when I'm served a cheeseburger at mc donalds, but I would if I got the same cheeseburger when ordered from an expensive restaurant.
Yeah man, growing up in the 80s was great. Game design was confined by physical constraints of the medium. Lots of memorization required (muscle memory).
wrong, the last challenge Parzival have to do in the book after reciting Monty Python's Holy Grail, is to find a way to start consoles in a room, then to find this easter egg on an Atari 2600.
This game was made back when most video games were not so far removed, aesthetically and conceptually from board games. We did not complain about flat or unrealistic graphics any more than we would say chess pieces don't look like real soldiers. To this day, I prefer games in which the imagination is most engaged to those in which all details are thoroughly worked out. I loved this game in particular and remember well discovering the Easter Egg, which is not what we called it back then. I thought it was the coolest thing in the world.
here is the funny part... not only did I have this game when I was 9, my brother and I found the egg. We just thought it was a neat little thing and that was that. I never gave it another thought until 10 minutes ago thanks to Ready Player One. I had no idea that we had found the first easter egg.
I played this literally thousands of times but never found that Easter egg (found out about it years later). I realized watching this that the giveaway is that one screen in the black castle appears empty, but causes the bridge to blink, indicating there's another item hidden in there somewhere. Incidentally my favorite thing to do with the bat was lock it in one of the castles. I think this player was trying to do that here but the bat wouldn't cooperate.
Intelligently observed! Possibly Robinett knew this was the case and hoped it would lead somebody to find his credit. Awful, what Atari did to their programmers... and should have been illegal.
We are the same. I remember using the bridge to find rhe flickering room in the black castle, but never found the Easter egg. I used to lock the bat in a castle too and lock the key inside too. I could navigate rhe catacombs blindfolded.
I remember finding it as a kid and getting on the dial wall phone to call my cousins, we took a polaroid photo of the hidden name screen and I had a legendary moment that was never shared past my block and school classroom. The 70's ruled!
I love this game - we would play this on rainy days when we were 19. Just found a perfect replica on the net. I find that if you just bring the bat in the yellow castle with the yellow key many times he stays in there the whole game. Also what is cool, in a way, if you get eaten by a dragon sometimes that bat will pick the dragon up with you in his stomach and fly you around the whole kingdom for awhile. I did not remember where the easter egg dot was - thanks for your help- great video
it's a great adventure game to be from 1979 or 1980, it was fantastic, long before Zelda, there were Atari video game Championships in the early 80's of Swordquest adventure worlds canceled by the Crash of 1983, the ones Atari had at the end of the decade 1970, in 1977 in which the console was launched, caused a sensation as it replicated the tank from the 1974 arcade game in the 1977 combat cartridge
I first found the easter egg before I found the dot. The power cord connector into the rear of the 2600 was bad and if you wiggled it, the game would glitch and cause the line (that you walk through when you have the dot) to move on the screen. If you glitched it just right, the line would be in the middle of the screen where you could simply walk around it. I have not heard yet of anybody else discovering the easter egg this way.
Loved this game as a kid. I always made sure I store every single item in the game in my castle including the dead dragons and the bat before I finished it.
Somebody get this frickin duck away from me! Looking back, it's kind of impressive that the movement of the dragons and bat persisted even off screen, so the bat just shows up at unexpected times and steals unexpected items, and you can even lock him in a castle. Very cool.
when I was a kid I found the dot but I never figured out what to do with it. Of course there was no internet back then and one of my friends ever even found the dot. Crazy!
This is in the gray area between "feature" of the game and "easter egg". Easter eggs would typically be extremely difficult for someone to figure out on their own (like in Gaplus parsec 1, waiting for all enemies to come out, then only shooting the enemy in the bottom row, 2nd from the left, then purposely dying by crashing into the mother ship, then taking the flag that appeared, THAT is definitely an easter egg). But in Adventure for the 2600, by simply exploring, I found that dot and eventually figured out I could cross that line. I knew the dot had to so something.
I soooooo loved this game as a kid!! hours of fun too me. I did find the easter egg and it put chills down my spine. a big thank you for my grandmother for buying this as a gift for all of us.
This is the 4th videogame easter egg: RT-55J noted that Halo 2600 writer Ed Fries had previously found an Easter Egg in Atari's Starship 1, which would have been accessible on 13th August, 1977, but after some research suggested that Spitfire was released later on 31st December, 1977, a newspaper ad for the game as part of the Channel F's package was unearthed, and which seems to conclusively reveal that it existed on 15th April, 1977, seemingly making Spitfire home to the first ever video game Easter Egg. In 2004, an Easter egg displaying programmer Bradley Reid-Selth's surname was found in Video Whizball (1978), a game for the Fairchild Channel F system.
I had an Atari 2600 and this game when I was about 17 or so, and yeah, I remember reading how to find the Easter egg on various dial up BBSes or in gaming magazines
Although twas the hidden secret that resulted in “Easter Egg” being coined, and deserves to be recognized for that reason, it wasn’t the first Easter Egg. Earlier Eggs were found in games for the Channel F, a console that predates the Atari 2600. The first Easter Egg in an arcade game called Starship 1 from 1977, and the first Easter Egg in a computer game goes way back to 1973 in a game called Moonlander! Very little information exists about Moonlander, but I have a video on my channel all about it and the other pre-Adventure Easter Eggs on my channel if you want to know more.
Loved that. Played this game for hours over 35 years ago and never found out about the egg until Ready Player One. That Bat used to drive me crazy, leaving objects in needed stuck in walls... 7:34 sums it up! Thanks for posting, fond memories...
Read Ready Player One and came to see this. I played the game at a friends house when I was a kid, never long enough to actually solve it. Never knew there was a Easter Egg in the game, let alone it being the first ever.
9:31 And if you'll look to your right, you'll see the very first easter egg to appear in a video game. Developers weren't allowed to put their names in their games in the 70s and 80s because everything they did belonged to the company and they didn't get much acknowledgement and credit for their games which is why they created easter eggs so that they may hide their names in their games without the higher authority ever finding out. If they had found out that Warren put his name in Adventure, he woulda been fired on the spot.
ok im a little confused what is happening in the video but from what i am understanding you found an invisable item and used it to enter the room also its amazing how i never knew about this easter egg despite playing the game for years now
Ready player one made this and many other 80's games sound amazing, what an amazing anticlimax! i haven't got a clue what's going on and the graphics are baffling at times.
I followed this guide and got half a trillion dollars and total control of the OASIS. Thanks a lot!
idk idk Absolutely not!
Wait, are you Wade Watts? THE Wade Watts/Parzival???
Darryl Lazakar Ha ha ha, I might be!
Awesome
Robert Downey Jr. So you are going to end avengers infinity war with part 1 and 2
I got this game in 1980 and spent hundreds of hours on it. The excitement of finding the magic dot and the secret room is was one of the highest points of my gaming career. Was great watching this at age 50.
Same!
And that damn bat....uuuuggggh!
54 now
The programmers had to hide their names as easter eggs because they didn't get any acknowledgement or credit for their work in those days. Everything they did belonged to the company.
Warren Robinett would have gotten fired on the spot if they had found out.
We read ready player one.
Caleb Wurtz some people probably didn't.
I learned about this easter egg when it was a published in a magazine published by Atari. So, they couldn't have been too upset with it.
To quote my favourite vine
“But’cha DIDNT”
And now, we also watched it too.
Wow this man is a legend he still is giving hearts even 10 years later
HahhHhh. Lolololo
I completed this feat back in 1981. We didn't call it and Easter Egg then. It was simply called a secret.
Yahuh
Eric Estevez Idk but i think he did
Good old day's
We called it "the magic dot" back then.
Remember when i played this game for the First time...
James Halliday's fortune will be mine!
Sorry master Koon, you must not have read the almanac. Halliday's fortune will be MINE!
I'm sorry but haven't you heard? I already found Hallidays Egg and currently bathing in his money. But a wise man once said: "Videogames are the only thing that make life bearable" - anorak
Lol
R.I.P JAMES
PloKoon09 I was about to say how do you knew about the movie before it came out but then I remembered it was based on a book
Reading READY PLAYER ONE. Oh, man, back in 79 this was the shit, I was 8 years old and spent hours on this game. I never did find this easter egg though and no internet back then to look up cheats, no other players to interact and discuss with, things have really changed. Still the best Atari game ever though.
@Orca the book has been out since 2011
I found the dot but didn't know what to do with it.
I learned this from reading Atari Age magazine back in the day. I always thought it was neat but nobody I demonstrated it for thought so. :P
God, I loved this game. I remember finally finding the secret room, and from then on was obsessed with finding secrets in other Atari games, which didn't have them, lol
me too, I solved it back in the 80s. Forgot all about it until reading the book and just now seeing the movie. The book is so much better, in my opinion. However, I did enjoy the movie too. I still have my 2600 and adventure.
Wow, he just pwned that red duck. I swear to god though, it looked like a real dragon out of Skyrim to an 8 year old kid back in 1979
Damn ur right
Ahh dragonborn
so r u still alive?
maybe more of a seahorse to some people
I thought that was a duck when i was little
just watched Ready Player One for the first time and came to watch this clip, the birth of easter eggs in video games.
Ready Player One was so much FUN despite its flaws. The fact the first easter egg was given such prominence in the book and film just warms my heart. I will be a kid forever in my heart, and there ain't nothin' wrong with that.
I played this game so much, I found the easter egg by accident and my friends and I were freaking out about it for months. It said "Created by Warren Robinett"
Same for me.
My brother and I played this game and had already beaten the game on all difficulties. We decided to see if there were other things pr places in the catacombs so we used the bride to do so. But we accidentally found the gray dot and the message
This comment existed before ready player one
BATTLE STOOORM!!! Holyshit
D_Otec on witch console playing that game
Stefan J
dude. It sure wasn’t the NES. I’ll give you a hint, it starts with an A and ends with an 2600.
lol am joke tho is smol funny
I periodically enter the Warren secret room for fun. Adventure has been among my favorite 2600 games for 40 years.
Ladies and gentlemen; this is it. The first ever video game easter egg in existence. A birth of a new era.
I found this myself when this game first came out purely by luck or perhaps playing the game a thousand times. If you keep all the dragons alive, you can lure them into the "Created by" room one by one and trap them there. Once I saw this secret, I always had a fantasy that by completing a game (any future game) or finding the secret hidden area, you then would receive instruction to mail some sort of code to an address so that you could then receive your large cash award.
+skibumfajita that did happen, sort of!
action 52's "ooze" minigame was so hard and badly programmed that they promised a handsome reward to anyone who finished it
i don't think anybody had the patience to play that game all the way through
They made the Swordquest games as a sort of Adventure 2 and they did just that, but they didn't use easter eggs, but rather hints in game that would lead you to pages on the comic book that came with the game. You'd find these hidden words that would form a phrase that you mailed in for a chance at the reward. Swordquest wasn't as good as adventure in my opinion, but I loved the comic books.
Decades into the future, Wade Watts memorizes this video and used the information to win the game for the OASIS.
James Snapp thanks for spoiling it :)
Damn it I was still reading the book!
@@rotundmonibuv5103 That's not what even happens in the book.
@@raidenthenctzenwithinsomni4961 It is though.... He goes through the maze again. I'm not sure if it was in the movie, but I remember it in the book.
@@rotundmonibuv5103 pretty sure that's the movie
The new games of today are nowhere near as difficult as all the old school games
cmon they still make some hardcore games today. They were probably all harder back then for the most part but i dont want to lose faith.
Dark/Demon Souls.
Because they don't have to be. Games are so easily accessable now, games were hard back then because you might get 3 games every year or so.
TheMewWoo Nope, i think its because companies prefer that you finish their games in less than a week so you buy more games...... $$$$
You obviously haven't played La-Mulana.
And there we have it. The world's first gaming Easter egg. It's so small compared to Easter eggs these days, but it changed the world of video gaming.
I always thought the yellow dragon looked like Big Bird.
"Sorry, Big Bird, it's you or me."
"You killed Big Bird!"
Strong Bad: "Somebody get this freakin' duck away from me!!!"
IT WAS A DRAGON
I can still remember the maze patterns.l haven't seen the game since I was a kid, man I loved this game.
I played this as a child in the '70s. I DREAM the maze patterns.
Lol I got an Atari flashback console ut of nostalgia a couple weeks ago and stil, remembered the maze routes I learned what, 40 years ago. Here to finally get that egg. I did find the dot when I was a kid, but that's it.
And in 2018 People complain about having 30fps.
When the consumer doesn't get what they expect, they will complain. I don't get mad when I'm served a cheeseburger at mc donalds, but I would if I got the same cheeseburger when ordered from an expensive restaurant.
Yeah man, growing up in the 80s was great. Game design was confined by physical constraints of the medium. Lots of memorization required (muscle memory).
you are a bad gamer and an even worse person.
@@wayzy6868 who you talking to
@@rowboat10 i kinda forgot, after 9 months i don't think i would be able to remember the intention of a reply i made on this one video
The only reason I'm here is because of Ready Player One.
Same here.
TlalocGaming yep me too
RelentlessAssault me also
RelentlessAssault Esooooo!! ;D
RelentlessAssault Yeeaaaah ;D
People came from the book, years ago, but I’m here cause of the movie, last night (March 29th 2018)
Drumf 3D?
Then go read the book it’s 100x better
DejaVoodooDoll not at all....
Drumf this wasn't in the book, he had to recite the script of Monty Python's Holy Grail
wrong, the last challenge Parzival have to do in the book after reciting Monty Python's Holy Grail, is to find a way to start consoles in a room, then to find this easter egg on an Atari 2600.
This game was made back when most video games were not so far removed, aesthetically and conceptually from board games. We did not complain about flat or unrealistic graphics any more than we would say chess pieces don't look like real soldiers. To this day, I prefer games in which the imagination is most engaged to those in which all details are thoroughly worked out. I loved this game in particular and remember well discovering the Easter Egg, which is not what we called it back then. I thought it was the coolest thing in the world.
hell yea. it was the bomb no doubt. getting to game at home. I remember wanting to get more games in those cool packaging art boxes.
It was the challis
Like if you got this from ready player one
Knew about the Easter Egg before, but actually came to see this video after I read Ready Player One.
Greetings from Germany :)
Im an avid reader but that is the ONLY book I ever re-read. Just finished it again, so amazing! :)
Yee
As you may know, game detectives are working on a ready player one arg, so here i am
Yep, me too. Re-read it straight away!
here is the funny part... not only did I have this game when I was 9, my brother and I found the egg. We just thought it was a neat little thing and that was that. I never gave it another thought until 10 minutes ago thanks to Ready Player One. I had no idea that we had found the first easter egg.
I like your avatar
Ready player one was a pretty cool book.
i kind of hate to be a party pooper, but an earlier console came with a 'demo cart' that contained the name of a dev within it
room this was an Atari game and the credits had to be a secret because Atari would fire the person if they found out
Was able to find the Easter Egg today on an online version of "Adventure". Well worth the time and attempts. Thank you, Warren.
Mind blowing. I played this game for hours and hours.
I played this literally thousands of times but never found that Easter egg (found out about it years later). I realized watching this that the giveaway is that one screen in the black castle appears empty, but causes the bridge to blink, indicating there's another item hidden in there somewhere.
Incidentally my favorite thing to do with the bat was lock it in one of the castles. I think this player was trying to do that here but the bat wouldn't cooperate.
Intelligently observed! Possibly Robinett knew this was the case and hoped it would lead somebody to find his credit. Awful, what Atari did to their programmers... and should have been illegal.
We are the same. I remember using the bridge to find rhe flickering room in the black castle, but never found the Easter egg. I used to lock the bat in a castle too and lock the key inside too. I could navigate rhe catacombs blindfolded.
I remember finding it as a kid and getting on the dial wall phone to call my cousins, we took a polaroid photo of the hidden name screen and I had a legendary moment that was never shared past my block and school classroom. The 70's ruled!
Still have this game. Me and my wife still play it on my Atari 7800 (plays 2600 games). Its amazing a game almost 40 years old is still fun to play.
Just got out of the movie! Really cool that they put this one in. Heard legends about this for years.
My God!! flashback in my mind... maybe 34 years back in time.... thanks.
I wonder how many people thought this was a glitch in the cartridge and just threw it away
I loved this as a kid. One of my favorite Atari games.
7:32 u mad?
then afther the trolling bat, player won't move for some seconds, probably cursing while breaking stuff
I used to play this all the time when I was a kid. One of my favorite games
Who is here after the movie Ready Player One?
That's why I'm here too!
Me
Me
im here! lol
me too
I used to play this game so much and I used to do this trick as well. It's amazing how such a simple game can be so much fun.
I own they OASIS and inherited half a trillion dollars.
I love this game - we would play this on rainy days when we were 19. Just found a perfect replica on the net. I find that if you just bring the bat in the yellow castle with the yellow key many times he stays in there the whole game. Also what is cool, in a way, if you get eaten by a dragon sometimes that bat will pick the dragon up with you in his stomach and fly you around the whole kingdom for awhile. I did not remember where the easter egg dot was - thanks for your help- great video
it's a great adventure game to be from 1979 or 1980, it was fantastic, long before Zelda, there were Atari video game Championships in the early 80's of Swordquest adventure worlds canceled by the Crash of 1983, the ones Atari had at the end of the decade
1970, in 1977 in which the console was launched, caused a sensation as it replicated the tank from the 1974 arcade game in the 1977 combat cartridge
8:25 is where he gets the gray dot.
Thanks
I first found the easter egg before I found the dot. The power cord connector into the rear of the 2600 was bad and if you wiggled it, the game would glitch and cause the line (that you walk through when you have the dot) to move on the screen. If you glitched it just right, the line would be in the middle of the screen where you could simply walk around it. I have not heard yet of anybody else discovering the easter egg this way.
Just came out of watching Ready Player One. I plan on buying the book super soon lol
challenges in the book are different. I enjoyed both but favored the book a bit more. Easy read
I'm happy this is pure video game history as not only being the first Easter Eggs but also the one that started it all!
The very first easter egg in video gaming history was in 1979 Adventure.
Loved this game as a kid. I always made sure I store every single item in the game in my castle including the dead dragons and the bat before I finished it.
Congrats, you have control of the OASIS now.
Somebody get this frickin duck away from me! Looking back, it's kind of impressive that the movement of the dragons and bat persisted even off screen, so the bat just shows up at unexpected times and steals unexpected items, and you can even lock him in a castle. Very cool.
when I was a kid I found the dot but I never figured out what to do with it. Of course there was no internet back then and one of my friends ever even found the dot. Crazy!
I totally remember this. My friend told me about it and sure enough it worked. Thanks for sharing this! What memories from childhood
This game burned an imprint on my brain. Still there almost 30 years later. I can close my eyes and still do the dark mazes.
I found a blob there in a game that had no first key. I didnt know about going thru a wall. I still play this on atari anthology for x box.
Thank you for this video and thank you Warren Robinett for giving us the very first easter egg.
Wanna see the easter egg? Okay then! 8:21
No
Yeh, I want to see it, but I also want to see how to get to it.
This is in the gray area between "feature" of the game and "easter egg". Easter eggs would typically be extremely difficult for someone to figure out on their own (like in Gaplus parsec 1, waiting for all enemies to come out, then only shooting the enemy in the bottom row, 2nd from the left, then purposely dying by crashing into the mother ship, then taking the flag that appeared, THAT is definitely an easter egg). But in Adventure for the 2600, by simply exploring, I found that dot and eventually figured out I could cross that line. I knew the dot had to so something.
This seems ahead of its time
I soooooo loved this game as a kid!! hours of fun too me. I did find the easter egg and it put chills down my spine.
a big thank you for my grandmother for buying this as a gift for all of us.
I loved this game as a kid
I never forgot this game
Here from "ready player one" movie
This is the 4th videogame easter egg:
RT-55J noted that Halo 2600 writer Ed Fries had previously found an Easter Egg in Atari's Starship 1, which would have been accessible on 13th August, 1977, but after some research suggested that Spitfire was released later on 31st December, 1977, a newspaper ad for the game as part of the Channel F's package was unearthed, and which seems to conclusively reveal that it existed on 15th April, 1977, seemingly making Spitfire home to the first ever video game Easter Egg.
In 2004, an Easter egg displaying programmer Bradley Reid-Selth's surname was found in Video Whizball (1978), a game for the Fairchild Channel F system.
i was scared of that game when i was 5 and just now i found out they where dragons not seahorse lol
+Dylan Lepine me too.
+Dylan Lepine are you talking about the ducks?
Mosca Films what ducks
+XxxMadokaXxx Ha! I knew they were dragons but I always thought of them as ducks when I was playing. I hated that damned bat though.
I thought they were ducks.
I had an Atari 2600 and this game when I was about 17 or so, and yeah, I remember reading how to find the Easter egg on various dial up BBSes or in gaming magazines
Although twas the hidden secret that resulted in “Easter Egg” being coined, and deserves to be recognized for that reason, it wasn’t the first Easter Egg. Earlier Eggs were found in games for the Channel F, a console that predates the Atari 2600. The first Easter Egg in an arcade game called Starship 1 from 1977, and the first Easter Egg in a computer game goes way back to 1973 in a game called Moonlander! Very little information exists about Moonlander, but I have a video on my channel all about it and the other pre-Adventure Easter Eggs on my channel if you want to know more.
Loved that. Played this game for hours over 35 years ago and never found out about the egg until Ready Player One. That Bat used to drive me crazy, leaving objects in needed stuck in walls... 7:34 sums it up! Thanks for posting, fond memories...
That thing about it is that i made it to glich through that barier
Ready player one right here. Great movie AND book!
I was so freaked out of those things that chase you
I had this game when I was 15 but never got the Easter egg. I am 54 now and still love gaming and can't wait for the TLOU2 .
Ready Player One brought me here.
+Breeze same
same
SAME WTF
xd same
same hahaha
Read Ready Player One and came to see this. I played the game at a friends house when I was a kid, never long enough to actually solve it. Never knew there was a Easter Egg in the game, let alone it being the first ever.
Watching Holy Grail now......
Wade Watts Wade Watts
+Wade Watts Username checks out.
9:31 And if you'll look to your right, you'll see the very first easter egg to appear in a video game. Developers weren't allowed to put their names in their games in the 70s and 80s because everything they did belonged to the company and they didn't get much acknowledgement and credit for their games which is why they created easter eggs so that they may hide their names in their games without the higher authority ever finding out. If they had found out that Warren put his name in Adventure, he woulda been fired on the spot.
That's a dragon?, my younger brother and I always thought it was some weird duck type thing.
the animations were quite crude. It's supposed to be a dragon.
Kind of looks like a Jakovasaur from South Park
XD never noticed
It's big bird
Fritz Monorail I thought it was a seahorse. :D
Haven't done this in decades! But I remember the path somehow. Meanwhile, algebra is all but forgotten!
The final challenge in the movie ready player one :o
And the book, of course.
Hi Captain Obvious.
My cousin linked me to hudgames so I could find some games to play, now I’m in love with fireboy and watergirl on this site. Such an amazing game.
Who decided to search this up after watching Ready Player One?
Reading
I wonder how my brother knew about this easter egg back in 1980 without internet or video game magazines even. Pretty crazy
Noice, I just won a trillion dollars, a girlfriend and the rights to the oasis. Thanks halladay!
Thank god I have this game on my Atari 2600 now I can impress my friends with this easter egg. THANKS
Ready player one brought me here!
YOU HAVE THE TOTAL CONTROL OF OASIS!!!!! WELL DONE!!
ready player one’s last scene. Perfect end of this game.
Even the box and game cover was awesome!!
ready player one
mariano12233 yea
Moises Fox the book
The Book
Whatafack ready player one is do 2018 and old 5 years ?
Still remember doing this as a kid. 👌👌
"Ready player one"bring me here.
I really liked how they used this as a symbolic reference in the movie Ready, Player One.
Ready one player brought me here...
First easter egg ever in gaming history?
I remember finding this Easter egg back in the '80s. I seem to remember Yars Revenge has a similar Easter egg
Ready One Player :D
Ready Player One, Anyone? One of the best movies ever in my opinion. So many easter eggs I love it
10 minutes long video no ads
who is here, for _ready player one?_
Shedir
FIRST TO THE KEY!!!
FIRST TO THE EGG!!!
ok im a little confused what is happening in the video but from what i am understanding you found an invisable item and used it to enter the room
also its amazing how i never knew about this easter egg despite playing the game for years now
Ready player one made this and many other 80's games sound amazing, what an amazing anticlimax! i haven't got a clue what's going on and the graphics are baffling at times.
mario is an 80s game
Ready Player One:
95% 2010-2018 games
5% 2009 and older
Though the 5% was siiick, the 95% was.. alright.
Sergeant Detergent well for the movie yeah but the book is much different
I definately like the music of this game. Brilliant.
Who is coming for "ready player one?"
Just you. No one else has read the book or seen the movie.