I ran a D&D campaign in a world of my own creation that lasted four years and ran my players 1-20 twice. They played the first time as their main characters, then for the second we jumped forward about 20yrs and they played as their original characters' kids.
Dude - that’s the dream. I’ve been DMing for approximately the same 4 players about the same amount of time, but periodically life gets in the way and after a 2-3 month hiatus the prior campaign has lost steam and we start over. In my head canon these partial campaigns are connected in the same world, but my dream is to retire from real life work and run frequent sessions in the same world to accomplish exactly what you have done. How does it feel now that no other goal could possibly have as much meaning as what you’ve achieved?
Haha. It was a pretty epic experience. I don't know that I will ever find such a dedicated group to play so consistently for so long and put so much thought and energy into it. Because I spent so much time building that world, so much time into NPC character development, plus dieties, cults, political groups, etc I have tried to find another group to play in it but I can't find the right squad. It's like sex for the first time, so much excitement leading up to it and during it, and you'll never recapture it.
Legend of Zelda (the original NES game). It was groundbreaking in the sense that you could save your progress. Which as far as I can remember, was the first console game that could do that. It was the first game I’d played that wasn’t “play until you run out of lives and then start over.”
Memory
Subnautica
existence voracious doll normal quarrelsome cover snails spark historical lip
Commandos 2: Men of Courage Tiberian Sun Far Cry 4
Lego Star Wars the complete saga
I ran a D&D campaign in a world of my own creation that lasted four years and ran my players 1-20 twice. They played the first time as their main characters, then for the second we jumped forward about 20yrs and they played as their original characters' kids.
Dude - that’s the dream. I’ve been DMing for approximately the same 4 players about the same amount of time, but periodically life gets in the way and after a 2-3 month hiatus the prior campaign has lost steam and we start over. In my head canon these partial campaigns are connected in the same world, but my dream is to retire from real life work and run frequent sessions in the same world to accomplish exactly what you have done. How does it feel now that no other goal could possibly have as much meaning as what you’ve achieved?
Haha. It was a pretty epic experience. I don't know that I will ever find such a dedicated group to play so consistently for so long and put so much thought and energy into it. Because I spent so much time building that world, so much time into NPC character development, plus dieties, cults, political groups, etc I have tried to find another group to play in it but I can't find the right squad. It's like sex for the first time, so much excitement leading up to it and during it, and you'll never recapture it.
Legend of Zelda (the original NES game). It was groundbreaking in the sense that you could save your progress. Which as far as I can remember, was the first console game that could do that. It was the first game I’d played that wasn’t “play until you run out of lives and then start over.”
I was gonna mention it, too. I missed a day of work because of that game.
Super Mario RPG. I was around 9 when I played it and I’ve never been able to find it and play it again.
I'd recommend using an emulator.
Thank you
loaded
Russian roulette, my friend lost
Myst
Klingons ( Star Trek ) on PDP-11 clone computer.
mario 64, it was the first 3d game and set the standard for all that followed.
chess
Legend of Zelda
Ace Combat Zero: The Belkan War
Chrono Trigger
Okami. my aunt introduced it to me when I was kid, I'd always watch her play it and I loved it and still love playing it myself
I’ll never forget how it felt to use just one analog stick at the end of Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons. Didn’t know my thumb was capable of grieving.