![]() Then last year, I bought a Sega Saturn on a whim at an odd-lots store to check out some animated role-playing games. As a result, I ignored the second video game boom, the Nintendo craze, the Super NES, and the Sega Genesis. By the time the first video game boom went bust, however, my family had purchased a Macintosh 128 - and even on a black and white 9-inch screen, the sharpness and superior play of games like Lode Runner, Ancient Art of War, Tycoon, and Lunar Rescue convinced me that the future of gaming was on computers, not televisions. I was a child of the Atari generation, growing up when the Atari 26, Intellivision, and ColecoVision ruled the gaming life of the nation's TV sets.
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