The original RollerCoaster Tycoon was released as a PC/Windows game in early 1999. It is older than one of my children. Despite RCT’s modern reputation, it was a well-regarded but not uniquely-celebrated title. The game did particularly well in Britain and Europe; most likely due to the original release version, written by Scottish programmer Chris Sawyer, being largely based on British and European theme parks. Much is made of the fact that Sawyer wrote the game entirely in assembly code. We’ve discussed this before; this means the games “code” was written in the actual instructions that could be fed directly to the hardware; rather than in a programming language that had to run through *another* program run by the operating system which translated the game into the instructions the *operating system* would use to communicate with the hardware. This was certainly less common in 1999 than it once was…the advantage of programming in this manner is the performance gained by skipping the middle man. You can find plenty of demonstrations on YouTube that show how significant this increase can be. This practice would, obviously, have been of tremendous use in the earlier, more-restricted days of computer hardware; and has gradually evolved into a tool with specific applicability and use.
RollerCoaster Tycoon had some interesting company in 1999: the hottest titles were all home console games; Pokemon Red/Green/Blue/Yellow/Gold/Silver, Final Fantasy VIII, Donkey Kong 64, and Super Smash Bros. Noted PC releases included Heroes of Might and Magic III and several clones, plus an original Baldur’s Gate expansion and a spiritual sister-game Planescape: Torment. These were accompanied by *many* PC-only role-playing games, noted first-person battle arena games Quake III: Arena and Unreal Tournament, and many well-known sims such as Age of Empires II, SimCity 3000, Sid Meier’s Alpha Centauri, Pharaoh, and even Sim Theme Park. Of particular interest is the publication of the 2nd and 3rd MMORPGs: Everquest and Asheron’s Call, one of which you can still play.
Continue reading 〉〉 “RollerCoaster Tycoon (the original)”
T w e n t y S i d e d

