A lost Maxis "Sim" game has been discovered by an Ars reader, uploaded for all
We at Ars Technica are proud to be members of video game archiving history today. SimRefinery, one of PC gaming's most notoriously "lost" video games, now exists—as a fully playable game, albeit an unfinished one—thanks to an Ars Technica reader commenting on the story of its legend.
Two weeks ago, I reported on a story about Maxis Business Solutions, a subdivision of the game developer Maxis created in the wake of SimCity's booming success. Librarian and archivist Phil Salvador published an epic, interview-filled history of one of the game industry's earliest examples of a "serious" gaming division, which was formed as a way to cash in on major businesses' interest in using video games as work-training simulators.
[...] The anonymous Ars user returned to our comments section on Thursday to confirm that they'd uploaded the disk's contents, after an apparently annoying extraction process, to archive.org for everyone in the world to download and play.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 05 2020, @05:47PM (2 children)
The phrase you're looking for is "sock puppet".
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 05 2020, @07:01PM (1 child)
Another example is clockboy
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 06 2020, @04:48PM
That is so racist. Clockmed probably has built his first nuclear reactor by now and most likely has jobs lined up across the board from companies begging to hire him. That lawsuit brought by his family has nothing to do with money. Anyone who thinks otherwise is antiislamic nonhalal double plus ungood floof.
How can you think of attacking a brown person in this climate.