Yeah, I myself discovered the rather interesting world of Mac games only last autumn. I began fiddling with Mac emulation and was really astonished by what unique games (not only RPGs) have been made for Macs exclusively. I made my own Mac RPG-Collection, assembling the (in my thought) best Mac-RPGs (or such ones whose original version appeared on Mac or that had technically superior Mac versions). The older black and white ones running with MinivMac (a brillant emulator - if you pay the very small sum to use the generator on the website), the newer ones with BasiliskII or Sheepshaver. There really is a world of fun to be discovered. I already planned to get The Secret History of Mac Gaming soon. It looks like an excellent book.Classic Mac gaming is something completely foreign to me, I never had even seen a Mac back in the 80s! I tried out the Mac versions of a few classic RPGs and adventures last year and I'm quite fascinated by these monochrome early Mac games. Therefore, I also bought The Secret History of Mac Gaming, you might like it as well. It seems to be an extremely well-written and comprehensive book so far, just like the CRPG Book. It's a work of art.One thing I do miss however: Classic Mac-RPGs. There are some interesting games there too - Cythera, Jewels of Arabia, Taskmaker 1 and 2, Quarterstaff, Citadel, Xyphus, Odyssey: The Legend of Nemesis,... not to mention the enhanced versions of the M&M games or Ultima III.
Thanks, very happy that even Codex veterans are enjoying it!This is an amazing book, felipepepe
I thought I'll read through the cRPGs I've played, maybe a few other and put it on the shelf to appreciate from afar, but I started reading from the start (the oldest cRPGs) and got completely hooked up. I've read it for several hours today. It does go through the history in a pleasant chronological way.
Still waiting for the report from the publisher, but seems to be doing well, lots of reviews coming in every dayHow are the sales?
It's honestly for the people who enjoy that kind of stuff. The PDF will always be freely available, updated and has things like hyperlinks, don't feel pressured to get the hardcover version if it doesn't work for you.Is there any point to buying the new edition physically? I received an update to my digital edition (which was part of the original physical one) which probably covers everything, so in terms of content I should be good.
Sure: https://www.bitmapbooks.com/collect...g-book-a-guide-to-computer-role-playing-gamesIs there a link to the physical version?
Got the report now, very good results! I can't give all the contract details, but I can say that since launch we raised £8,754! For reference, the previous edition raised £22.84 in like three years or soHow are the sales?
Update 31 – The Last Update
It has now been two months since the Expanded Edition of the CRPG Book was published by Bitmap Books, and I’m very happy to share that we made £8,754 since, bringing us to a total of £31.599 raised for charity. A huge thanks to everyone who supported the project!
I also finally finished updating the PDF to include the proofread text, and made some changes for it to work better as an ebook: DOWNLOAD THE LATEST VERSION HERE
- The font colour was changed, so that accessibility / high-contrast mode works now (I had no idea this would cause issues, sorry);
- Clicking on the table of contents or the cover art gallery now takes you to the review page;
- A few games had screenshots in the wrong aspect ratio or with the wrong scaling applied, they’re now fixed.
- Some screenshots had been converted to CMYK, I restored all of them to the RGB originals, so colours are much more accurate:
There are some small content changes too: due to new findings, I’ve re-written part of the PLATO RPG section, Nox & Anito: Defend a Land Enraged were added to the book, and I changed the layout of the non-English RPGs page to squeeze in ناناولهپ صرع / Age of Pahlevans and Свод Равновесия: Бельтион / Beltion: Beyond Ritual.
To be clear, this is 99% the same as the hardcover version that was released by Bitmap Books in August. Please understand that we will not make a new print of the hardcover version just to add these changes.
Finally, this is the last big update to the CRPG Book. Yes, we could always add more games, as well as post-2019 games. But the book is already way too big, and the goal was to make a curated overlook, not a full catalogue or a collection of modern reviews. I’m happy to stop here.
I want to focus on personal stuff now, maybe finally get my “Online RPGs / MMOs / MUDs around the world” project going. But that will take years, don’t expect anything soon.
Thanks again to everyone who supported the project – it’s crazy to think it all began with a Best RPGs list, almost 10 years ago…
I liked it no-bloat features too but the reason I don't use Sumatra anymore is because it doesn't have a dark mode/theme, or at least the version as of about a year ago I use didn't. I have an OLED display and white backgrounds can be downright painful to view on a 65" screen. So I go with the high contrast green font on black background now. Plus it looks like a Fallout CRT monitor so I can geek out with thatI use SumatraPDF, which I think is the least bloated & fastest PDF viewer all around that just does the job and nothing more.
Exodos is cool, but unlike AmigaVision I don't think it's a friendly way to start someone into DOS emulation... Better to go to GOG or get DOSBox / D-FEND + My Abandonware first.Are you going to mention the exodos project in a new update or have you already mentioned it in the newer versions?