What is your favorite underrated or unknown DOS game?
We all love our "Doom"," Command & Conquer", "Commander Keen" etc.
But what is a game that you love that no one seems to know and/or like? What is that one gem that makes you type your "C:>cd games" just that little tiny bit faster?
I'll go first. My pick is Normality from 1996 by Gremlin Interactive. A 3D first person point and click adventure with FMV Cutscenes. It's goofy and weird but perfectly playable. I highly recommended anyone who loves point and click adventures to try this one out. It's basically Doom Point 'n Click
It's a pity OMF is so underrated. Whenever someone claims they're a fan of fighting games, and I ask them which games they've played, not a single one of them has replied with "OMF" so far. :(
OMF also got me more into understanding PC networking. I made my own null modem cable once (by splicing up a spare RS232 cable), connected my friends PC to it and we played OMF against each other, on our own PCs! No more having to share our keyboard! (gosh, I nearly forgot that shared keyboard multiplayer was a thing...) Those were exciting times.
OMF is by far the best fighting game I've ever played.
Absolutely unmatched.
I chatted with Kenny Chou/cccatch on IRC once (the guy who wrote the soundtrack to OMF) and he told me about the technology stack they used for music in that game, which I found pretty interesting.
He wrote the music in MultiTracker Module Editor and they had some proprietary software that would convert .MTM files into the music engine's native format and package them up.
The clever thing is that all the songs were saved together in one package, which means that if he reused the same samples in all of the songs (which he had to do), then the tool would be clever enough to have each sample on disk/in memory only once, so samples only had to be loaded when you started the game.
Then when the game switched songs, only the pattern data (notes) had to be freed/loaded.
I used to love Midwinter. First-person role-playing set in a future nuclear winter. 16 colour 3D graphics on an 8086 blew my mind. Was really excited to play it in VGA when my dad bought a 486, but it was too fast to be playable :'(
I used to play Midwinter on my Atari ST. In the manual it tells you that you'll need to travel around the game area and recruit various characters and vehicles, and that you'd never make it by just heading straight for the enemy base. I played the game so many times like that and never made any progress. So eventually I just said screw it and headed straight for the enemy base. And wouldn't you know it, I won.
Warlords was on a demo cd I had as a kid. You were limited to 40 turns and playing as the elves. But by god I learned how to win in 40 turns. I did eventually get the second one, it's one I still find ways to play.
A unique mix of real-time grand strategy over the planet, with a point-and-click adventure component which unlocks more of the game as you progress through it. It works well and is enjoyable to me.
The art style is wonderful, that gorgeous French Cryo feel with some visuals taken from David Lynch's Dune film.
One of the ScummVM developers is currently reverse engineering all the animations on Mastodon and it's fascinating to see.
I got into casually speedrunning the game when the Upper Memory Block podcast covered it all those years ago. I managed under 100 game days, another podcast listener got under 50 days, and someone on YouTube has something like a 24 day completion.
The music is also great. Remi Herbulot's HERAD music system used parts of Yamaha's OPL synth which literally nobody else did, it is easily the most advanced FM synthesis engine for DOS, and composer Stephane Picq took advantage of it to make a beautiful soundtrack.
Stephane released a CD quality album version called Dune: Spice Opera which is my favourite album of all time, of many musician ever, and is one of my most prized possessions.
Yes! I was contemplating using Hi-Octane as my pick, but went with normality instead. Great game. A little easy once you've got the hang of the controls though.
Not sure about underrated, but definitely mostly unknown anymore, would have to be Star Control 2.
The exploration, combat, and humor are all just so involving. I can pick it up now and enjoy it as much as I did decades ago.
Add to it, Marble Drop and Full Tilt from Maxis. Marble Drop was a fun puzzle game with marbles in intricate machines, and Full Tilt was three Pinball games, one of which was the original Space Cadet Windows later used with XP. The other two tables were pirate and dragon slaying based, but equally as engaging for me
Supersolvers Outnumbered. Your character (my mom would call him Joe Cool) goes to a TV broadcasting station to stop the bad guy. You get clues as to his whereabouts by solving math questions like "song A was requests 10 times but song B got 27 requests. How many more times was song B requested?". Once you get all the clues you have to deduce which room the bad guy is hiding in. Initially figuring it out is easy but it gets harder. It still holds up in my opinion.
Dangerous Dave, John Romero's first "popular" game, predating Keen/Wolf/Doom. Three decades later, and I still haven't managed to beat this game (without using cheats or save states that is).
Bio Menace, An action platformer by Apogee, made using the same engine as Keen. You are Snake Logan, a CIA operative who needs to save Metro City, which has been invaded by mutants. A very fun game with good controls and smooth movements.
The Skunny series, A bunch of platformers featuring Skunny the squirrel, made by Copysoft. Save our Pizzas in particular was pretty memorable, where Skunny travels back in time to ancient Rome because an evil chef wants to destroy the invention of pizza so that he can make his own imitation. Very whacky and cartoony, kid me loved this game.
SkyRoads, A fun space runner. Think Temple Run, except you're in a spaceship that's... not flying and is on a road, in space, and it can also hop! In hindsight, it sounds weird, but trust me, it's fun.
Hands down, no comparison. I love that game. I played the shareware version as a kid, and the abandonware full version as an adult before it was open sourced.
Whenever I go to fire up some old games the first two, and the two I spend most of my time on are-
Ultimate Domain: a little slow but has an great city building and worker placement system and one of the coolest tech trees I’ve ever seen.
Space Bucks: also a little slow but is essentially a space sci-fi alien commodities shipping simulator. Start on a planet, win bids to ship to and from other planets, buy low and sell high, and improve the planets ability to produce while also improving your space fleet, optimizing for speed, cargo, offensive and defensive abilities.
One I don't see brought up real often is Nova 9: The Return of Gir Draxon. It's a futuristic 3d tank sim with pretty snazzy graphics for the time, battlefield upgrade pickups, and gimmicky enemies like a plow that charges and has an invulnerable shield on its front face.
I'm not sure what's obscure to some, but ones not mentioned yet: Slicks N Slides, Scorched Earth, Hugo House Of Horrors, Super Hero League Of Hoboken, Framed, Network Q Rally.