glowend writes “On 24 September 1993, computer users were introduced to Myst. Grantland takes a look at the game’s legacy, two decade on. Quoting: ‘Twenty years ago, people talked about Myst the same way they talked about The Sopranos during its first season: as one of those rare works that irrevocably changed its medium. It certainly felt like nothing in gaming would or could be the same after it. Yes, Myst went on to sell more than 6 million copies and was declared a game-changer (so to speak), widely credited with launching the era of CD-ROM gaming. It launched an equally critically adored and commercially successful sequel, and eventually four more installments. Fans and critics alike held their breath in anticipation of the tidal wave of exploratory, open-ended gaming that was supposed to follow, waiting to be drowned in a sea of new worlds. And then, nothing.’ Why didn’t Myst have a larger impact?”… glowend writes “On 24 September 1993, computer users were introduced to Myst. Grantland takes a look at the game’s legacy, two decade on. Quoting: ‘Twenty years ago, people talked about Myst the same way they talked about The Sopranos during its first season: as one of those rare works that irrevocably changed its medium. It certainly felt like nothing in gaming would or could be the same after it. Yes, Myst went on to sell more than 6 million copies and was declared a game-changer (so to speak), widely credited with launching the era of CD-ROM gaming. It launched an equally critically adored and commercially successful sequel, and eventually four more installments. Fans and critics alike held their breath in anticipation of the tidal wave of exploratory, open-ended gaming that was supposed to follow, waiting to be drowned in a sea of new worlds. And then, nothing.’ Why didn’t Myst have a larger impact?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.






Read more http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/UGznBi3AoFw/story01.htm