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Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: October 7th, 2012, 5:00 pm
by MrFlibble
I've re-organized the list the other way round, so that for each renowned game one or more free alternative is given. The list now also includes shareware and liberated titles, which are marked with either an
S or an
L.
If you guys have further suggestions, especially concerning obscure DOS shareware games, feel free to post 'em here
Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: October 7th, 2012, 9:49 pm
by leilei
Chris Jones (of Adventure Game Studio fame) made his own Command & Conquer clone in 98-99, but i'm not sure if he has it available anymore or intentionally pulled it off.
He also made a Dungeon Keeper clone in space (!)
I actually do still have the archives, but the authorization is what bothers me. I don't want to feel any guilt for posting them.
Also, T2002 could be added to the Turrican series on the list, as that's a "blessed" freeware recreation of Amiga Turrican II's engine with a level editor. Hurrican doesn't seem to be available for download.
SuperTuxKart could be added as a counterpart to Mario Kart 64.
Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: October 8th, 2012, 2:51 pm
by MrFlibble
leilei wrote:Chris Jones (of Adventure Game Studio fame) made his own Command & Conquer clone in 98-99, but i'm not sure if he has it available anymore or intentionally pulled it off.
He also made a Dungeon Keeper clone in space (!)
I actually do still have the archives, but the authorization is what bothers me. I don't want to feel any guilt for posting them.
Interesting! Would it be possible for you to at least post some screenshots if/when you have the time?
leilei wrote:Also, T2002 could be added to the Turrican series on the list, as that's a "blessed" freeware recreation of Amiga Turrican II's engine with a level editor. Hurrican doesn't seem to be available for download.
SuperTuxKart could be added as a counterpart to Mario Kart 64.
Thanks! I forgot about the SuperTux Kart thing.
Searched a bit,
Hurrican can be downloaded
here.
Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: October 9th, 2012, 8:57 am
by MrFlibble
I've added
Skunny: Special Edition as a
Sonic the Hedgehog alternative - hopefully I'm not that far off the mark
Also,
T2002,
Red Alert: A Path Beyond and
Chaos Reborn are now on the list.
Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: October 13th, 2012, 1:26 pm
by MrFlibble
There's yet another Super Mario Bros. clone, called
The Great Giana Sisters, which was, however, never published on the IBM PC platform. The interesting thing is that a German developer, Rainer Sinsch, made an unofficial DOS port of the game called
Giana Worlds (later renamed to
Giant Worlds for copyright reasons). Eventually Rainer Sinsch contacted the creator of the original
Giana Sisters game, Armin Gessert, who gave official permission to develop and distribute
Giana Worlds:
Copyright questions have been solved (07-07-01)
Yesterday I had a nice phone call with Armin Gessert (the original c64 author and inventor of The Great Giana Sisters). It turned out that he has the rights for Giana Sisters and he was so kind to give us the permission to continue publishing giana worlds (I am very glad that issue has been solved). In case you may want to have a look at what Armin Gessert does now try out the web-site of his game development company:
http://www.spellbound.de.
(
source)
Both the older
Giana Sisters clone (1998) and the
Giana Worlds game are available from download.
Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: November 2nd, 2012, 9:26 am
by MrFlibble
Added the
Giant Sisters/
Giana Worlds games as
Super Mario Bros. alternatives, and also Holistic Design's
Battles of Destiny as a counterpart of
Empire Deluxe.
Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: November 30th, 2012, 11:05 am
by MrFlibble
Added the following titles to the list:
Robot Odyssey
Scorched Earth
Wing Commander series
I've also found a couple of neat community-made
Doom episodes that work nicely with
Freedoom as a first episode replacement (the internal
Freedoom levels are okay but they often have a noticeably different style):
CH Retro Episode
This is a creative reimagining of the shareware episode of
Doom, with immediately recognizable yet subtly different visuals, and overall clever level design. It starts as a relatively straightforward thing but the levels quickly get interesting, and are full of puzzles and secret areas. The download link at the review page does no work but the file can be obtained
here.
Simply Phobos
Another
Knee-Deep-themed episode, but quite different from the one above. The author of
Simply Phobos has a preference for vast, spacious areas, and also isn't shy of almost literal visual quotations from the original levels. It's equally fun to play nevertheless, and captures the atmosphere of the original game quite well too. In addition, this episode comes with an optional music pack in a separate WAD.
Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: December 2nd, 2012, 6:42 pm
by MrFlibble
Here's a couple more
Doom Episode 1 tributes that work with
Freedoom:
Phobos Revisited
The aim of the author was to create a "same but different" kind of feeling, following the original levels quite closely yet introducing something new at every turn.
Phobos Revisited was designed to run in the original game as well as with source ports, and it won the
Cacowards award in 2004. Screenshots can be viewed
here at the team's website.
Phobos Outpost/Planet Phobos
Another interesting work, this one deviates a lot more from the original - for example, the first level is nothing like
Doom's E1M1 - however later on similar details and areas become more frequent. The levels here are supposed to represent a single, coherent installation (the eponymous outpost), and at the end of each level the starting area of the next one can briefly be seen. Difficulty is a bit higher than in other similar works, or in the first episode of the original game for that matter, but clever design makes them interesting to play. For some reason, the author renamed the episode to
Planet Phobos at some point, although no content was apparently changed.
The same author also released an Episode 2 replacement,
The Base of Evil (which was also renamed to
Planet Hell later), however it doesn't seem to work with
Freedoom for now because of a missing textures issue.
Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: January 1st, 2013, 10:56 am
by MrFlibble
Added Jazz Jackrabbit as another counterpart to Sonic the Hedgehog.
Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: January 8th, 2013, 11:37 am
by MrFlibble
Added
Star Lords as an alternative to
Master of Orion, and
onEscapee as a counterpart to
Another World and
Flashback.
Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: January 10th, 2013, 12:53 pm
by MrFlibble
Added a working download link for Giana Worlds.
Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: January 25th, 2013, 6:41 pm
by MrFlibble
Nazghul is a very nice-looking RPG modelled after
Ultima V.
Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: June 27th, 2013, 7:48 am
by MrFlibble
I've just realized that
Alien Carnage bears a lot of similarities to the Amiga/Genesis version of
Alien 3: the levels are timed missions during which you need to rescue captives
and reach the exit, and one of the weapons is a flamethrower; not to mention several direct references to the
Alien franchise.
Also, added
Amulets & Armor to the list.
Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: June 28th, 2013, 9:16 am
by MrFlibble
Following some
constructive criticism in another forum, I've decided to drop the liberated games part from the list altogether. I've come to realize that thinking of liberated games as some kind of Ersatz for other titles is counter-productive, and this topic should be addressed elsewhere.
Further on, I've separated the list into three sub-lists:
1. More or less straightforward remakes or clones of well-known games. In many cases the authors will openly point to the game that they are trying to remake, and if not, the similarity is often quite obvious anyway.
2. Shareware clones of popular titles, mostly from the DOS era. These are generally of historical interest.
3. Games that are definitely inspired by famous titles, but the authors have added enough ideas of their own to make these games something more than direct recreations. As usual, this is the grey area as YMMV what makes for a simple clone and what constitutes an "inspired by" game.
Also, the following titles were added:
Crayon Physics
Dungeon Keeper
Elite
Lemmings
Natural Selection
RPGMaker
SimCity
X-COM: Enemy Unknown
Bos Wars, Command & Conquer: Red Alert
Diablo
Empire Deluxe
Frontier: Elite II
Puzzle Bobble
Ultima series
Wizardry VII
Re: Free alternatives to classic games
Posted: June 29th, 2013, 9:34 am
by MrFlibble
Added some more titles:
A-Train
Carrier Command
Duke Nukem
Escape Velocity
Half-Life: Counterstrike
Quake III: Arena, Unreal Tournament
Star Wars: TIE Fighter, Descent: Freespace
Super Monkey Ball
Also added another section to the list, with the liberated games that have both the source code and all assets released for free, thus making it possible to create new builds of the entire game.