[SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

2004-03-15 Thread Jim Leonard
To all Drash owners on this list:  How did you find yours?  To at least 
one person, I recall it fell into their lap -- for Edward, it was a 
3-year journey.  How did you all (including Edward) find your Drash?

Or any of your most prized software posessions, for that matter?  Any 
good stories out there?

For all my items worth over $80, ebay was my location.  But for at 
least two things, they fell into my lap:  Radical Rex, arguably the 
rarest Sega CD game published, was a Buy It Now for $9 (auctions for up 
to $80).  And I found a Central Point Option Board (used to auction for 
$130, now unstable) was found at a local used software store for $12.
--
Jim Leonard ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
World's largest electronic gaming project:http://www.MobyGames.com/
A delicious slice of the demoscene:http://www.MindCandyDVD.com/
Various oldskool PC rants and ramblings:   http://www.oldskool.org/

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RE: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

2004-03-15 Thread Feldhamer, Stuart

For me, it would have to be my Personal Software Zork. It wasn't easy
sneaking into that guy's house in the middle of the night. There was a dog,
and it was on the third floor...don't ask! And then when the lights came on
and the whole family started yelling for the police, well, I just couldn't
let them leave, now could I?

Stuart

-Original Message-
From: Jim Leonard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, March 15, 2004 12:02 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?


To all Drash owners on this list:  How did you find yours?  To at least 
one person, I recall it fell into their lap -- for Edward, it was a 
3-year journey.  How did you all (including Edward) find your Drash?

Or any of your most prized software posessions, for that matter?  Any 
good stories out there?

For all my items worth over $80, ebay was my location.  But for at 
least two things, they fell into my lap:  Radical Rex, arguably the 
rarest Sega CD game published, was a Buy It Now for $9 (auctions for up 
to $80).  And I found a Central Point Option Board (used to auction for 
$130, now unstable) was found at a local used software store for $12.
-- 
Jim Leonard ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
World's largest electronic gaming project:http://www.MobyGames.com/
A delicious slice of the demoscene:http://www.MindCandyDVD.com/
Various oldskool PC rants and ramblings:   http://www.oldskool.org/


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Re: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

2004-03-15 Thread Vincent Joguin
At 11:01 15/03/2004 -0600, you wrote:
Or any of your most prized software posessions, for that matter?  Any good 
stories out there?
My most prized possessions are not really software: original Dragon's 
Lair, Dragon's Lair 2 and Space Ace LaserDiscs. Got them off eBay a few 
years ago.

Vincent. 

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Re: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

2004-03-15 Thread AvatarTom
In a message dated 03/15/2004 11:06:11 AM Central Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


To all Drash owners on this list: How did you find yours? To at least 
one person, I recall it "fell into their lap" -- for Edward, it was a 
3-year journey. How did you all (including Edward) find your Drash?


Private sales, one I got by advertising to buy, the other someone contacted me through my web page.

Tom
Visit my web page for many games for sale/trade and screen shots of Ultima Escape from Mt. Drash, Tom's Ultima, Infocom and RPG page 


Re: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

2004-03-15 Thread Jukka Eronen
Or any of your most prized software posessions, for that matter?  Any
good stories out there?

Well, I might share some of my lucky fell into lap-stories (if anyone's
listening :).
Don't take it the brag-way - I enjoy reading
these kind of things from others too so come and share :)

I bought Ultima I remake for Apple ][ in an Apple ][ game lot.
When the package arrived that U1 (BTW does anyone else use
this acronym?-) game box revealed Ultima progame-release
with everything but the plastic bag.
As one can imagine my jaws dropped quite a bit.
http://koti.mbnet.fi/psychic/_eng_games_ultima.html

Since the cover art is the same (fortunate for me)
the seller had apparently thought it was manual for the remake,
which obviously wasn't the case.

It's probably not quite my rariest game (appears
more often on eBay than f.ex. Softporn Adventure)
but seems to be most valuable one of them on eBay.

On a side note the lot also included Time Zone [which
I bought the lot for], Enchanter Trilogy (and couple other Infocoms),
Bard's Tale I-III (with clue books for I-II), Archon I-II,
Ultima V, etc...

Other nice find has been Dragon's Lair 2 Laserdisc for about $55.
http://koti.mbnet.fi/psychic/pics/gamecollection/big/ld_dl2.jpg
What do these sell for nowadays? (not selling, just curious).
It's very worn but plays. I also have a Laserdisc-player
it was originally played on (Sony LDP-1450 Lasermax) but
I haven't been able to get the program work which controls
it thru LPT-port. The intro runs automatically.

And back to good finds... Two sealed Ultima IVs for
Sega Master System about $12 / piece, plus two boxed ones
without the two oversized manuals.

Smurfs Travel the World (Smurfs 2) (1996) for
Sega Master System was great too.
http://koti.mbnet.fi/psychic/_eng_games_segams.html
There are only couple handfuls of them known in existance.
A fellow finnish collector found a lot of these while
in Czech Republic in spring 2000.
They were previously been considered not released.
Wonder why these were produced but not officially released...
Maybe there's a warehouse full of these somewhere ;)

Finnish-version of Videopac's Quest for the Rings
Sormusten etsintä almost new and complete for about $18.
http://koti.mbnet.fi/psychic/_eng_games_videopac.html
(Videopac is European and don't know if I'm the only euro-person
here but anyone knowing is this possibly the rariest of Videopac-games?)

And couple euros for Intellivison Tutankham (loose, rare).

Flea market game and computer finds are fortunately quite
common, though usually the basic stuff I come across there isn't
for my adventure/RPG collection, but I can trade/sell them to get what I'm
interested in and everyone's happy .)

- Jukka

--
http://koti.mbnet.fi/psychic/eng_index.html  -  Synchronic Web


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Re: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

2004-03-15 Thread C.E. Forman
 Or any of your most prized software posessions, for that matter?  Any
 good stories out there?

Marco (Infocom-IF) and I just bought a box of film, slides, etc., of some of
the late-term (early- to mid-1990s) Infocom package designs from a guy at
Activision.  Photos they took for the package, some of the LGoP2 girls, etc.
We're gonna split it down the middle once I have time to catalogue
everything that's in it.  That was kinda neat, we found out about it from
helping him get the manuals and PC code for some of their more obscure
releases.  (I loaned him my Cornerstone and Fooblitzky... Yeah, even after
Kitchen... God help the universe if I get f***ked over again.  B-)

The other great story is probably the PC Sentient Cyborg, which I found
completely unexpectedly in a warehouse owned by a guy who let me dig around
and help him organize it.


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RE: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

2004-03-15 Thread Josh Lulewicz
 meeting.  The way my flights were
scheduled I would have approximately 6 hours to do this.  We agreed to
just meet in the airport and complete the transaction in one of the
in-airport restaurants.  

Everything was on time and he was where he said he was going to be so we
connected without any trouble.  We soon found a place and sat down.

It was great.  We talked about games, collecting, Sierra, Infocom, the
consoles, LucasArts, etc.  As I inspected Drash he told me he couldn't
believe I did this.  He said I have a couple questions if you don't
mind:

Since I didn't have a picture how concerned were you about doing all
this without seeing a picture...especially since you didn't even know
me?
- Extremely but I thought what the heck I will take a gamble

Will you ever sell it?
- Nope

What is it about this particular game that makes people so crazy over
it?
- (I basically explained its history, told him I was an avid Sierra
collector on a quest for a complete collection, it is big with the
Ultima crowd, etc)

What do you plan to do with it?
- Display it proudly in my Museum :)

Would you consider making backups of the tape and documentation before
it is lost forever?
- If I can figure out a way of course, I was thinking about making an
MP3 of the tape (not sure if that is possible)

So after a fun afternoon of talking games, politics and various other
things it was time to go home.  I was kind of worried about airport
security searching me and destroying Drash but there was no search
therefore nothing to worry about ;-)

As soon as I got back I had to e-mail Tom and Chris to brag a little :)
And Chris pointed me to this list so I joined with an introduction of my
latest acquisition!

Overall the experience definitely had its highs and lows.  A lot of
anxiety, a lot of fear, a lot of excitement, a lot of pacing, and an
incredible satisfaction when I held the game for the first time!  My 3
1/2 year quest for Drash had come to and end.  


It's funny because just a few weeks before the initial e-mail I had
e-mailed Edward (not knowing him at the time) asking if he would sell
his.  He politely responded with a NO WAY!  Heheh 

Of course after this was over I had to e-mail him back saying thank you
but I got one!!! :)

I have kept the identities of the parties involved secret I don't see
how anyone could figure them out from this story but if for some strange
reason someone does I would appreciate if he/she would keep it to
themselves.

Hope you enjoyed!

-josh

-Original Message-
From: Jim Leonard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, March 15, 2004 11:02 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

To all Drash owners on this list:  How did you find yours?  To at least 
one person, I recall it fell into their lap -- for Edward, it was a 
3-year journey.  How did you all (including Edward) find your Drash?

Or any of your most prized software posessions, for that matter?  Any 
good stories out there?

For all my items worth over $80, ebay was my location.  But for at 
least two things, they fell into my lap:  Radical Rex, arguably the 
rarest Sega CD game published, was a Buy It Now for $9 (auctions for up 
to $80).  And I found a Central Point Option Board (used to auction for 
$130, now unstable) was found at a local used software store for $12.
-- 
Jim Leonard ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
World's largest electronic gaming project:http://www.MobyGames.com/
A delicious slice of the demoscene:http://www.MindCandyDVD.com/
Various oldskool PC rants and ramblings:   http://www.oldskool.org/


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RE: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

2004-03-15 Thread Vincent Joguin
At 14:08 15/03/2004 -0600, you wrote:
Would you consider making backups of the tape and documentation before
it is lost forever?
- If I can figure out a way of course, I was thinking about making an
MP3 of the tape (not sure if that is possible)
NO MP3! ;-) It's a lossy compression, so only WAV files (and equivalent) 
are OK in this field.

Vincent. 

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Re: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

2004-03-15 Thread Jim Leonard
Josh Lulewicz wrote:
After a few more e-mails we agreed on a price, a place, and time to meet
and I booked the earliest flight I could.
Booked a flight?!?  Just how much did you offer/pay for your Drash?

Now keep in mind he did NOT have a camera so I did all this without ever
seeing the game.  I figured, though it was probably foolish, it would be
an adventure.  He seemed like a together guy and there was really no
advantage for him not to be honest since we were meeting in person and I
would have plenty of time to inspect it.
Good reasoning.  I drove 4 hours north once to meet up with a fellow old 
software hobbyist (Vincent will know him as Jeff) to talk with him, 
trade some stuff (Central Point Option Board, Wizardry, etc.), and I got 
a free pass to the gig he was playing (Goth, not my personal bag, but I 
was able to enjoy the show because their performance and music was very 
good).  It was a happy adventure.

- If I can figure out a way of course, I was thinking about making an
MP3 of the tape (not sure if that is possible)
See earlier conversation about Archiving audio tapes (I posted it two 
hours ago).
--
Jim Leonard ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
World's largest electronic gaming project:http://www.MobyGames.com/
A delicious slice of the demoscene:http://www.MindCandyDVD.com/
Various oldskool PC rants and ramblings:   http://www.oldskool.org/

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Re: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

2004-03-15 Thread Lee K. Seitz
Jukka Eronen stated:

Finnish-version of Videopac's Quest for the Rings
Sormusten etsintä almost new and complete for about $18.
http://koti.mbnet.fi/psychic/_eng_games_videopac.html
(Videopac is European and don't know if I'm the only euro-person
here but anyone knowing is this possibly the rariest of Videopac-games?)

The Videopac was known as the Odyssey^2 (that's a superscript 2) in
the U.S.A.  I know the author/maintainer of the Odyssey^2 Homepage
(www.classicgaming.com/o2home/).  I don't see that version of Quest
for the Rings on the list, but you might check out the rarity of other
European releases and see what you think of his ratings.  And send him
an e-mail; I'm sure he'd be happy to hear about and discuss it.  Tell
him I sent you.

-- 
Lee K. Seitz
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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RE: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

2004-03-15 Thread Josh Lulewicz
 this.  We agreed to
just meet in the airport and complete the transaction in one of the
in-airport restaurants.  

Everything was on time and he was where he said he was going to be so we
connected without any trouble.  We soon found a place and sat down.

It was great.  We talked about games, collecting, Sierra, Infocom, the
consoles, LucasArts, etc.  As I inspected Drash he told me he couldn't
believe I did this.  He said I have a couple questions if you don't
mind:

Since I didn't have a picture how concerned were you about doing all
this without seeing a picture...especially since you didn't even know
me?
- Extremely but I thought what the heck I will take a gamble

Will you ever sell it?
- Nope

What is it about this particular game that makes people so crazy over
it?
- (I basically explained its history, told him I was an avid Sierra
collector on a quest for a complete collection, it is big with the
Ultima crowd, etc)

What do you plan to do with it?
- Display it proudly in my Museum :)

Would you consider making backups of the tape and documentation before
it is lost forever?
- If I can figure out a way of course, I was thinking about making an
MP3 of the tape (not sure if that is possible)

So after a fun afternoon of talking games, politics and various other
things it was time to go home.  I was kind of worried about airport
security searching me and destroying Drash but there was no search
therefore nothing to worry about ;-)

As soon as I got back I had to e-mail Tom and Chris to brag a little :)
And Chris pointed me to this list so I joined with an introduction of my
latest acquisition!

Overall the experience definitely had its highs and lows.  A lot of
anxiety, a lot of fear, a lot of excitement, a lot of pacing, and an
incredible satisfaction when I held the game for the first time!  My 3
1/2 year quest for Drash had come to and end.  

It's funny because just a few weeks before the initial e-mail I had
e-mailed Edward (not knowing him at the time) asking if he would sell
his.  He politely responded with a NO WAY!  Heheh 

Of course after this was over I had to e-mail him back saying thank you
but I got one!!! :)

I have kept the identities of the parties involved secret I don't see
how anyone could figure them out from this story but if for some strange
reason someone does I would appreciate if he/she would keep it to
themselves.

Hope you enjoyed!

-josh

-Original Message-
From: Jim Leonard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, March 15, 2004 11:02 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

To all Drash owners on this list:  How did you find yours?  To at least 
one person, I recall it fell into their lap -- for Edward, it was a 
3-year journey.  How did you all (including Edward) find your Drash?

Or any of your most prized software posessions, for that matter?  Any 
good stories out there?

For all my items worth over $80, ebay was my location.  But for at 
least two things, they fell into my lap:  Radical Rex, arguably the 
rarest Sega CD game published, was a Buy It Now for $9 (auctions for up 
to $80).  And I found a Central Point Option Board (used to auction for 
$130, now unstable) was found at a local used software store for $12.
-- 
Jim Leonard ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
World's largest electronic gaming project:http://www.MobyGames.com/
A delicious slice of the demoscene:http://www.MindCandyDVD.com/
Various oldskool PC rants and ramblings:   http://www.oldskool.org/


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Re: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

2004-03-15 Thread Howard Feldman
I guess my luckiest find (that I can recall) was probably Softporn
Adventure.  I got it complete for $5 on USENET.  Ironically, although I
knew it was the precursor to LSL, I had no idea of its value.  Since I
mostly collect RPGs I was hesitant to even buy it!  Glad I did though :)

Oh, and I got not 1, but 2 copies of the original release of Beneath
Apple Manor - for free! (Donations to the 'museum' - which are welcome
anytime btw, lol) (someone on this list is the happy owner of one now :)
)  For some reason thats just not a popular game among collectors I
guess.

Also picked up tons of bargains from C.E. (does that count?)

Found Troll's Tale cheap too.  If anyone's in the Syracuse area, there's
a great little store (see http://www.waynes.com/) that still has tons of
Apple II software and hardware.  (But dont get too excited, I took most
of the good stuff already).  He's got dozens of old games though, many
still in the original boxes, for relatively cheap. He told me he had
crates more of the stuff in 'the attic' but he wouldn't let me go look
:(

 Or any of your most prized software posessions, for that matter?  Any
 good stories out there?
 
-- 
--
Howard Feldman, Author of The Search for Freedom
A Computer Fantasy Role-Playing Game
Visit its Homepage at http://home.golden.net/~feldman/SearchForFreedom/
Visit the Computer and Book RPG Museum at
http://vgmuseum.chaoticmonkey.com/


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Re: [SWCollect] How did you find your Drash?

2004-03-15 Thread Stephane Racle
I bought most of my Infocom grey boxes from a place called Compsult, in 
California, back in 1991. They still sell stuff on eBay as Software 
Outlet or something similar... I think I purcshased 15-16 titles, brand 
new, still in the shrink for $5 each... Sci-Fi classics with the 
slipcase for $15. Mind you, I unshrinked them all back then, but they 
are still in nice condition!

Also, probably my luckiest buy... Back in 1992 or 1993, I purchased 
brand new Infidel, Sorcerer, and Planetfall folios, and a Starcross 
saucer for about $50. The person from whom I bought these items had a 
few Personal Software Zorks - but I didn't know any better, so I never 
asked for one. But he decided to throw one in anyways!

Howard Feldman wrote:

I guess my luckiest find (that I can recall) was probably Softporn
Adventure.  I got it complete for $5 on USENET.  Ironically, although I
knew it was the precursor to LSL, I had no idea of its value.  Since I
mostly collect RPGs I was hesitant to even buy it!  Glad I did though :)
Oh, and I got not 1, but 2 copies of the original release of Beneath
Apple Manor - for free! (Donations to the 'museum' - which are welcome
anytime btw, lol) (someone on this list is the happy owner of one now :)
)  For some reason thats just not a popular game among collectors I
guess.
Also picked up tons of bargains from C.E. (does that count?)

Found Troll's Tale cheap too.  If anyone's in the Syracuse area, there's
a great little store (see http://www.waynes.com/) that still has tons of
Apple II software and hardware.  (But dont get too excited, I took most
of the good stuff already).  He's got dozens of old games though, many
still in the original boxes, for relatively cheap. He told me he had
crates more of the stuff in 'the attic' but he wouldn't let me go look
:(
 

Or any of your most prized software posessions, for that matter?  Any
good stories out there?
   



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