How to play a really old game with a not-really-that-old computerA Jubal_Barca GuideSo, you saw a really neat review of a mid-80's computer game and want to have a go? Excellent! But wait. MS-DOS hasn't been a major operating system for about two decades. And your new 64-bit Windows 7 is not liking the look of those cranky old Sierra files...
Fear not - this guide is here to help in a few simple steps.
1. Get the game you want. Work out which file you need to run (there generally aren't many files so if you need to test different ones at a later stage, no problem.)
2. Get DOSBox. This program will, as its name implies, emulate an MS-DOS machine on your computer.
http://www.dosbox.com/3. Boot up DOSBox.
4. Okay, now, the technical bit. You need to mount the folder where you put your game (I'll imagine it's Space Quest 2 and I put it in a Documents folder called games/sq2).
To do this, use the following command:
mount W C:/Users/James/Documents/games
The
green is the mount command. This is always the same.
The
orange is a single letter name for your mounted drive. I usually use w but anything that isn't already a drive is a safe bet (so go towards the tail end of the alphabet).
The
pink is the line to the folder you need. You have to start with the drive letter and input the whole thing - it's not generally case-sensitive as far as I can tell.
5. Okay, now we can play! Firstly type W: to go to your new drive.
6. If your directory wasn't exact, as in the example I gave (I mounted games and the folder is sq2 below that) you need to use
cd sq2
(cd is the Change Directory command)
7. Type the name of the file you want to run - you don't need the extension. In my case I just type "SIERRA" and ta-da, I'm on the Arcadia and ready to die in amusing ways at the hands of Sarien Space-Pirates.
Hopefully this was helpful and will let more people enjoy these classic adventure games.