This is interesting but the site is missing many important game technologies and incorrectly attributing some.<p>The site lists Descent 3 as being the first to have procedural texturing and yet Unreal had it in 1998.<p>Doom is only listed as "first game to present panoramic skies". Doom may have been the first to have ambient lighting and built to be moddable. Probably also the first LAN-based multiplayer 3D first-person shooter.<p>Quake is only listed as "advanced 3D first person shooter" and yet Quake had many technologies that were probably firsts as well. First ip-ip client-server 3d first person shooter, first true 3D environments in first-person shooter, first to use pre-generated lighting in combination with dynamic lighting using a surface cache, and probably more.<p>I may have some of these wrong, but you get the idea. The site is missing a lot.
I have a great supplement to this.<p>Back in 2000 I had a subscription to the UK PC Gamer magazine and they did a huge "Complete History Of Games" poster, with connections between everything that influenced everything else.<p>Imgur won't let me upload my scan of it in full resolution, but here's a lower res and still readable version of my scan: <a href="https://i.imgur.com/eZPLvMR.jpg" rel="nofollow">https://i.imgur.com/eZPLvMR.jpg</a>
The Space Wars (1977) gameplay video is me playing my old arcade game with my son. The video is copied from my YouTube channel -- maybe this guy should attribute the source of his gameplay clips...<p>I sold the game years ago as it is rather large. I also worked with a few ex-Cinematronics engineers back in the day. They claimed it was a "hack shop" but a lot of fun at times.
Not sure why it says that Mystery House is the "first game with an ending". Hunt the Wumpus from 6+ years earlier certainly has an ending (you catch the Wumpus). Colossal Cave Adventure and mainframe Zork certainly do too. Adventure for the Atari 2600 and Star Raiders for the Atari 800 both predate it by a couple months. It's not even the first commercial home computer adventure game to have an ending, since quite a few of the Scott Adams adventures predate it. At a guess, I'd say it could be the first "graphical adventure game with a text parser interface", but I wouldn't swear to it.
It's weird that Zork doesn't feature on such a list, though I'm not sure what category it might hold, as it was a re-imagining of the Colossal Cave Adventure (also missing from the list).<p>I have two relevant memories from the 1970's - first, my friend's dad brought home a stonkingly large desktop machine. My first experience with an actual, albeit doubtlessly feeble and tedious computer by contemporary standards.<p>I am pretty sure Wumpus (or a clone) was what kept us amused for hours there.<p>Second, a few years later another neighbour - Greg Dubois - employed me to sit and make copies, on a high-speed tape duplicator, of games he'd written for the TRS-80, that he was selling direct to Dick Smith (one of the few retailers of such wares in Australia at the time).
I’m sure Cunningham’s Law will deliver some improvements to this list as people trawl their youth for innovations. But one thing I think is equally interesting is the list of _lasts_ in video games. For example I’m pretty sure Frontier: Elite II was the last commercial game written by a single person, in assembly language, released on a single floppy disk. And it’s been nearly 15 years now since a single game was released without a crafting system, nobody remembers what the last one was.
Surprised Ultima VII isn't there for the day-night cycles and AI scripting, etc.<p>I think only Oblivion caught up with this some 15 years later.<p>Also Baldur's Gate, Thief, Deus Ex, Jagged Alliance were all genre-defining with their own huge improvements (e.g. 3D sound and lighting in Thief).
I used to play Hunter on Amiga for hours (first open world 3D game). I never understood why it took so long after Hunter for the concept of open world to really stick.<p><a href="https://ultimatehistoryvideogames.jimdofree.com/hunter" rel="nofollow">https://ultimatehistoryvideogames.jimdofree.com/hunter</a>
Pong is in there of course, but on this "list of firsts," its claim to fame is ... "Third arcade game." Though "Second arcade game" is not listed.<p>Made me chuckle (:
Also see this video of games that pioneered 3D:<p><a href="https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=hTehcvSgyWI">https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=hTehcvSgyWI</a>
>This [Berzerk] is first videogamegame that kiled [sic] a player (at least 3 players)<p>I thought this meant "killed the avatar on the screen", but no, they are referring to real life deaths. I spent a lot of quarters on Berzerk during my lunch hour at my first white-collar job out of college (alongside Missile Command).<p>Also glad to see Xevious listed, my grad school buddy and I both got pretty good at that one in the arcade near campus.
Title typography fix: 1940s–2010s<p>No apostrophes for decades—apostrophes are for contractions and possession. En dash with no spaces for ranges or relationships.
There are a few games where I’d really like to know how the graphics or some aspect of them was achieved. These articles always fall short. What was novel and how was it done when (in the cases I’m thinking about) you had nothing more than a Z80 and a few KB of RAM.
Fun list to read, lots of memories.<p>On a side note, why do they use nbsp's for columns? Wondered why the right column didn't align perfectly and had to "inspect". As a developer I know not to use tables for layout, but this is a list.
Hmm, I have the feeling this game [0], was a "First real time 3D adventure game", before Blade Runner?<p>Yeah, seems to be, according to Wikipedia Atlantis was from March 1997, Blade runner from November that year. I played both, liked Atlantis more, sucked me in for a summer, a very new experience at that time (didn't really realize it at that time). I was translated to dutch with some "famous" Dutch voice actors. Really well done.<p>[0]: <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantis:_The_Lost_Tales" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantis:_The_Lost_Tales</a>
One first I’ve been curious about is the first game to us a ‘Tetris’ style inventory system where you had to fit different block shaped items in a grid representing your inventory. It is very common, but someone did it first.
The pace of firsts is decreasing over time and 2017 seems to have been the first empty year and since 2020, there has been nothing new? Or is the list not up to date?
Ahoy did a great video[0] about this as well. Really nice production value and also takes on the question of 'what is considered a video game'.<p>[0] <a href="https://youtu.be/uHQ4WCU1WQc" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/uHQ4WCU1WQc</a>
Sinistar had a number of industry firsts … for the stereo/surround sound and the joystick at least … however it was released just before this market tanked in the early 80’s. Chilling and addictive at the time.<p>(And hungry!)
Surprised not to see Metroid on here for “first metroidvania” when categories line “first postmodern game” are a thing. Metal Gear Solid should probably get some credit for its advanced cutscenes too.
What exactly is meant by “crowd AI” for Days Gone, because there were plenty of games before that which I would consider having “crowd AI” for some definitions of the term.
The list seems to have a blind spot regarding the UK 8 bit scene.<p>Find it hard to believe no Beeb or Speccie games have a claim to being on that list. Elite or Virus at the very least.
speaking of history of game consoles this blog post is also good but more birds eye view:<p><a href="https://pikuma.com/blog/game-console-history-for-programmers" rel="nofollow">https://pikuma.com/blog/game-console-history-for-programmers</a>