So many found memories of Red Alert 2 and Quake 2 playing at lan parties in the 90s.
I was lucky enough in the early 2000's where I could use my love of video games and lan parties as part of my job. I was responsible for the Flash community at Macromedia, and we would set up 4 xboxes with split screen for 8 player Halo 2 and 3 tournaments in conference rooms (which has multiple plasma screens already set up).
I quickly realized that we could use this to make friends in the broader community, so we bought a bunch of LCD monitors and pelican cases, and began to take our setup on the road to Flash conferences. During the day we would hang out at the conference, learn new programing / visual techniques and generally see super cool Flash stuff, and at night we would invite everyone over to our hotel room and then play Halo all night. We made so many friends and close contacts in the community through this, and it really help us meet a lot of people, and build strong, personal relationships.
I remember we were on a 6 week bus tour in North America doing events for Adobe AIR, and making a detour to NYC for the Halo 3 launch at at Best Buy. We then played on the bus all night long.
Here is a clip of me walking to the launch, so happy and singing about it being my Halo birthday (whatever that means!).
I remember I played a fighting game (a local one without English version) at LAN parties. It was very fun. My friends were all about the same skill level so fights were even.
Later on, there was a tool enabling "virtual LAN" and you can play against players online, over the internet.
And random people beat the shit out of me. Then I just realized that I actually knew like 10% of the game machanism even after hundreds of LAN matches. That was where I stopped playing.
This was my general experience with first person shooters. I was almost always first among my friends. Then Xbox Live came around and turned out I'm pretty bad at first person shooters.
I remember writing a tool that blared a siren wav every time someone connected to your network share. It would be quiet at the start of a round, and then as people died you'd hear sirens going off left and right.
Remains one of the few contexts where nerds would do drugs. Speed mostly. You ever played Quake with a bunch of dudes on speed? It's fucking nuts.
The smells. Some LANs would go on for a week. Lots spanned several days, most lasted upwards of 12 hours.
People didn't game with laptops. You had to bring you whole case, your monitors, accessories. It was great when LCDs came about. Lots of people had intricate setups too, heavy Thermaltakes with watercooling shit.
ICQ, AIM, MSN Messenger and that annoying Windows service that let you send pop-up messages to any IP if you hadn't disabled the service.
Once upon a time, I owned a 19" CRT that weighed less than a typical 17" CRT. Such good fortune. Still, I never did have the courage to carry my tower on one hip and my monitor on the other (and everything else in a backpack), so I guess it didn't really benefit me that much after all.
> most lasted upwards of 12 hours.
You're damn right. Imagine carting a CRT around and then only staying for half a day. Ha!
Might as well get the metal trolley to go with that bag then. And their elastic band + hooks to hold stuff inside.
I use these regularly for big groceries, even the bag itself lasts years when the usual flimsy mostly plastic trolleys tend to break after half a year.
A lot of people also got into case modding and added physical LAN handles to their rigs (always called "The Beast"; along with Perspex and cathode tubes https://tinyurl.com/LANhandles ). Good times :')
For years my monitor was a 22” Sony CRT which took two people to carry, which went with my to LAN parties. That thing was terrifying to carry down a flight of stairs.
> that annoying Windows service that let you send pop-up messages to any IP
Winpopup. I loved that tool, showed it to my entire class in school so we could comfortably cheat during exams. I was hailed as a super hacker with mad skills.
> Remains one of the few contexts where nerds would do drugs
Leaving aside the nitpicking of "umm actually, caffeine is a drug" (I infer from context that you mean "hard"/illegal drugs, which is reasonable), this one doesn't quite ring true for me. There's a particularly flavour of nerdery that views drugs as a means of hacking one's own body - "bio-hacking" is already a bit cringey and over-used, but it's not inaccurate. There's significant intersection between the nerdier people I know, and those who are interested in chemically expanding their experiences and perceptions. Maybe that's a more-recent development? (For context, I'm in my early 30's)
Novell had a similar messenger util. Each message popped up in it's own window. When you sent a message, the input box didn't clear automatically.
Net effect: Hold down enter and full your target's screen with a hundreds of windows faster than they could clear them.
We called it bombing, so we usually just wrote the word "bomb" when doing it.
The one time I was ever really disciplined in school was after I accidentally targeted a service account instead of my friend's account. Every screen in the school was filled with the word bomb and my username was on each window title.
I dunno, I think Adderall was pretty easily available back then
our crew never really did illegal or prescription drugs
But we'd drink booze and/or achieve Adderall-like effects with caffeinated energy drinks. None of us drank coffee so we had like... zero caffeine tolerance. If you have zero caffeine tolerance and you slam multiple energy drinks the effect is NOT subtle
of course, TODAY, my ruined body is so immune to caffeine I can chug coffee directly before a satisfying REM nap lol
> of course, TODAY, my ruined body is so immune to caffeine I can chug coffee directly before a satisfying REM nap lol
Going on a tangent: it takes a while for the caffeine you drink to make it through your digestive system, so even for someone without any tolerance at all, they could take a few shots of espresso on a full stomach and then have about a 30 minute window to have a nap, before the jitter starts.
Okay, I always read this. And my brother is a proponent of the nap technique you mention!
BUT: On an empty stomach, or even if I've had a little bit of food, it feels like caffeine works fairly instantly for me? I'm the stereotypical "can't function until I've had a little coffee in the morning" type of guy. Is this purely psychosomatic?
The speed that caffeine starts hitting your body depends very strongly on how full you are when you consume it and how much food/water you’ve already had throughout the day. The timing after a meal will be very different than an empty stomach, which is probably just minutes. People are more used to noticing the same effects with alcohol.
We were young and would never even consider illegal drugs - I remember before a LAN we'd send someone, extremely nervous they'd be "caught"(?), going into a pharmacy to buy a pack of caffeine pills!
My last LAN party was back when everybody was still lugging around CRT's, but despite that being a long time ago, I remember the smell when you'd been inside for several days, pop outside to wake yourself up in the cold outside or to get some drinks when they'd ran out near the end of the event, and then walking back in.
I mostly organized events, so a lot of my time was spend on configuring networks and just general overhead of running events. Always fun: people who configured the wrong IP address so there'd be conflicts and you had to get up on stage, get everybody's attention, and get everyone to check they IP addresses at the same time. DHCP? Lol. After a few events we switched to peg DHCP, that worked remarkably well, as long as you had a few tech support guys who could help people out setting things up.
And also, people bringing extension cords on a roller, not completely unrolling it, plugging in several computers and the wires inside the coil melting as soon as the load was high enough. Smoke coming out, breakers going off, actual flames once.
And then there were the incredulous looks from parents or the occasional girlfriend who stopped by to see what was going on. I found some pictures from an event in a shoe box when I was clearing out my parents' attic a few months ago. I don't understand how any of us ever convinced a woman to have kids with us.
In the age of slick unibody aluminum slabs inset with a thin black mirror, in the age of fanless battery powered devices that last 10+ hours on a charge... people have forgotten the sound and smell of computing in the bygone age of the LAN party.
The heat of too many CRT screens in a room, of pentiums whirring away, their clacking harddrives and big PSUs filling the room with all sorts of olfactory detritus... the smell of nearly burnt dust being passed over and over again through a gauntlet of hot electronics... the sound and the physicality of powering up a room full of workstations.
And I'm not even talking about the humans using the machines.
Oh man. I forgot my ~2003 voodoo computer with athlon 1100mhz and a tiny fan (5cm or so?) which spun at 5 or 6k rpm... It was like a jet engine vacuum cleaner to power thay thing on :->. Brutal!
I remember at one of our LANs one of the "two hoses into an open bucket watercooling his Celeron" guys accidentally kicked out one of the hoses and went pumping water all over the floor. This was when an 8-port unmanaged 100 Mbit switch had just turned affordable to two early teens pooling their paper route savings together to buy one (finally! not three 10 Mbit hubs chained together!!), and of course it was lying on the floor in the middle of all the machines... The incident messed up all the LEDs and two of the ports but otherwise the switch kept working for years at my parents house.
We did have a DHCP server - my old Macintosh Centris 660AV running IPNetRouter. It was even routing a 56K dialup connection (that went down whenever someone ordered a pizza) which was completely useless.
I mostly just organized events with friends and my brother's friends. Biggest LAN party we had was around 20 people at our parent's house (back when we still went to high school). Networking was such a nightmare. Either it was trying to get everything configured right, or finding the right cables or getting the right network hub or switch or getting them hooked up right. Half of the first day was always wasted getting everything setup and up and running.
Overall though, loved the experience of playing together with 10-20 people in the same one or two room(s) over an entire weekend.
It's a shame that it's mostly died out. I don't even know who I'd invite to a LAN party nowadays. I certainly don't own a house, much less one as big as my parents'.
We had a long running adage that the games would start at LAN parties about 10pm. Didn’t matter when you arrived to set things up, could be 9pm, could be 9am, technical issues would conspire such that they weren’t resolved until 10.
> And then there were the incredulous looks from parents or the occasional girlfriend who stopped by to see what was going on. I found some pictures from an event in a shoe box when I was clearing out my parents' attic a few months ago. I don't understand how any of us ever convinced a woman to have kids with us.
Same...
My younger brother was still living with my mom... Once a year, around Easter vacation, our mom would leave for two weeks. We'd all (brothers and friends) load up our cars with 'em PC tower and CRTs and set up a LAN at my mom's home. Some of us didn't have cars, so those who did would go and fetch the others.
We'd play mostly Half-Life mods (lots of time on the "small" map: the little one kinda happening mostly inside a little house), Warcraft 2 and then the Counter-Strike beta when it came out.
Sometimes some parent would drive his kid and check that we weren't doing heroine or something and make sure their kid could stay sleep at night. Then tere weren't enough beds of course: so it was sofa, floor, FIFO queue for the beds etc.
Twenty meters long ethernet cables from the 2nd floor to ground level, hanging in the stairway.
I still have one of the Ethernet hub (yup, hub, not switch) from back then: a 10 Mbit/s Farallon hub. Still working fine (I'm not using it but I tried it with some 1 Gbps to 100 Mbps then some 100 Mbps to 10 Mbit/s and then eventually that old hub). Geez did many orcs and firearms shots transit through that hub!
Sadly I only have one picture from that era and it's only showing three CRTs and three people playing, zombie-faced (due to a very real lack of sleep): not the cabling or overall mess.
Then there were the food orders: "Who goes buy eight kebab this time?". Pizza boxes everywhere.
And then the panic two weeks later when our parents were on the road back to their house: a few hours to clean all the mess we left for 15 days.
Not just girlfriends: girls who wanted to hang out with us and maybe become girlfriends and we wouldn't even look at them... With all of us only understanding years later that, well, maybe for some reason they kinda liked us. So they'd drop at the LAN hoping to chill with us, but we'd just play the games nearly 24/7 and eat junk food, not understanding that we weren't very nice to them.
I remember the PC / GPU I'd take being a bit underpowered at first, so I'd mod Counter-Strike not to cheat but to have simpler models: characters made of very simplistic cubes... Game would then render faster.
And the sneakernet going strong: when we wouldn't be playing, we'd be hooking HDDs in the same tower and be copying directories.
We also had HDD "trays" to make copying simpler (who remember these?).
Speaking of reinstalling Windows as in TFA: we had a pirated copy of Ghost, before Norton were to acquire it. In german (none of us would speak german). And we'd image the entire C: drive as soon as Windows was cleanly installed, with all its drivers etc. Re-installs were then faster. My roommate (whom I'd take to the LAN with me of course) once mistakingly "imaged" his broken C: drive to his D: drive where he had all his backups. I remember him being highly pissed off.
Ah man Norton Ghost spun up memories of Norton Utilities, which had one of the few disk sensor apps (package in a nice enough widget to have a place on our desktops). The competition we had over HD speeds!
That's a part of LANParties that seems to be forgotten, and even here as I read all the replies. Sure, it was about games and file-sharing, but it was as much about "hey you see what this dude did to skin his Windows?" or "wait was this transfer really that fast?" or "did you hear what this guy just did?" little legends that developed in the time we had together and made us ache to come back better and have the cool stuff everyone would be talking about next time.
Before Google had all the answers, before all the hardware was centralized into a dozen corporations, before there was an index of tools and their purpose... we had each other, and that was pretty cool.
Now we have something even simpler than HDD trays : HDD duplicators that don't even need to be connected to a PC, where you place the (naked !) HDDs vertically.
They can also be used as USB HDD hubs, but since the copy button is unprotected, I'm always paranoid to only have one drive in it at once...
> If someone has shared their installation of Warcraft III over SMB it will run much faster if you copy it to your local machine first rather than execute it directly from the network folder.
This one made me laugh. I'm really surprised it started that way at all.
I think my LAN party time was a little later than most of what the author is describing (mostly Windows XP era), but I also remember the networking problems I had at the start of _every_ LAN party.
Once I also accidentally turned off a handful of PCs when I had to leave a party early, because I didn't notice my multiple socket outlet was powering several other PCs.
It's a pity that kids these days grow up without LAN parties.
It's 2011. You have 8 Steam accounts with Civilization V. Coronas are coming out the fridge. It's 4:30pm. Someone shows up with a macOS device. The first turn began at 8:05pm. You know the deadline is at 3am, because that's when they do last call at the Korean BBQ place that one of the guys looks forward to all night. There's only diplomacy rule: "No alien governors," you can't just walk over to some amateur's screen and fix everything wrong with their civ.
It's 2pm, October 18th, 2004. You have a hacked Xbox and the leak of French Halo 2. The line to play at the Holiday Inn for DECA State wraps around the hallway. A second hacked Xbox materializes. You play the first 8 player game at 2am.
It's the basement of the collectibles shop in 1999. You're hiding behind a plant in Zaphod's Estate. Someone notices you and you die instantly. It's still only 5pm. The 8 player match of Broodwar is 15 minutes in. Your beautiful base patrolled by battleships, it's untouched. You're 8 years old. Someone who is actually good is eliminated, and takes over your screen.
> but I also remember the networking problems I had at the start of _every_ LAN party.
Oh of course. It wasn't a LAN party until you spent hours fiddling with networking settings that you could make heads or tails of, just so computers could talk to each other.
Oh man, Hamachi somehow felt like borderline malware (I guess being owned by LogMeIn does that to you). But hey, it allowed your friend who had a good rig but didn’t know the first thing about networking to host a Minecraft server. :)
Around 10 years ago, I think there weren’t any other popular options despite its shadiness (well, either that or we didn’t know any better as teenagers). Of course nowadays, there are multiple good options.
We used to connect our hard drives to a "golden" PC to grab all the files and then reconnect them to our locals. Back in the IDE/SATA era this was pretty easy to do as some of us had controllers that could hot swap. About half of the time something would go wrong with this and we'd wind up teaching someone how to reinstall windows.
Even after a half dozen lan parties, my group of friends could never figure out how to get windows file sharing working reliably. Eventually I set up an http server so people could download patches and stuff. Worked great. I put a sign on the wall with my IP address, 10.1.1.32.
I had created a program in Delphi to remove and recreate network shares with a single click because someone copying files from your computer would wreak in-game performances.
And, before widespread broadband, LAN was 50% exchanging files :)
I remember being the first of my friends to owning an SSD, which was 60GB. Any game we played, my computer showed "ready" in mere seconds while the others needed upto a whole minute.
If you are found using a wallhack, you will be duct taped to your chair for the remainder of the LAN.
Buy the latest most expensive graphics card and return it after the LAN, but this trick only works a couple times before the computer store will only return your money by check after 3 months.
Real Lan Parties(TM) bring their own electrical distribution boxes to avoid surges in the commercial building's existing setup.
Don't leech the giant shared network drive while the kindly soul providing it is trying to frag.
The hottest girlfriend there is being ignored the entire time by the weird dweeb boyfriend who just wants to talk StarCraft.
There is a pecking order of games, and without question the most hardcore players are the gods of Rocket Arena 3, followed closely by anyone who is so good at Counter-Strike that it's impossible to tell if they're cheating. (they are.)
Irrespectively of the number of participants, there will only be a maximum of 1 terminators available for the BNC network.
It will take years until you can use Ethernet at a LAN party, because of the one poor guy who can't afford to upgrade from BNC.
There is always that one pr0n addict who watches it the whole weekend.
Everyone says they won't sleep the entire weekend, but at the first night all but one person are sound asleep.
At private LAN parties, there is only one person who has basic understanding of networking; it's never the person with the best PC, albeit the rich dude will talk like he knows more than the poor ones.
> Irrespectively of the number of participants, there will only be a maximum of 1 terminators available for the BNC network.
Haha, so true! It reminds me of a LAN party we had at a friend's house. We had a bag of spare parts but, of course, the guy bringing the bag was late. This was around 1992 or so, thus before mobile phones and nobody knew anything. Our host (the pr0n guy, but instead of watching porn he liked to put short porn mpgs into Windows autostart of unattended PCs) in desperation soldered a make-shift terminator from parts of his dad's model railroad. I know he used a t-junction, but I don't know how he did it. Took him half an hour and it worked good enough to set up the network (Personal Netware at the time) before the guy with the bag of parts showed up. Quite a feat, and good thing we weren't so much into drinking at this point of time. Later we established the rule that to participate you have to bring one terminator and one t-junction, that fixed that.
That's very impressive. Even with so many spare parts there were always a dud cable in the mix somewhere or someone's computer refusing to recognize the network for some reason.
It usually took a few hours just to set up and get everyone working, then the sharing and copying would start.
Yeah, at one time we had so many t-junctions that we build a 1m tall robot out of them. That was the time where whatever bag you opened you would find a t-junction quad assembly.
I went to LAN party where everyone had lugged their CRTs, except one kid who had a 15” TFT LCD screen, which were super rare and expensive at the time. It had a huge crack right down the center, but was still just about usable. I asked him how that happened. He said he was playing online (Counterstrike I think?) and lost a match, causing him to punch the screen in frustration.
That screen must have cost >$1000 at the time.
Sure enough, the guy was a tool - the kind of gamer that gloats over every win and questions the opponent’s sexuality after every loss. And he was every bit as toxic right there in the room with us.
The experience completely put me off online versus-stranger gaming forever, and in retrospect I’m very grateful to him for this.
In fact, I found another one
(same model) 10 years later on the streets and used the two for a ther 2 years, until I bought two 27" displays when I finally got a real job.
Kudos! You saved yourself from a ton of nonsense. I myself had a similar reaction when at my last LAN party (age 18) i got motion sick and also caught a flue. It stopped me from playing video games for 15 years. Lucky me.
I've only done a few LAN parties in the last handful of years, and they weren't quite as magical as doing it as a teenager where you spend 75% of the time deciding on what to play and then figuring out how to crack it so everyone can play.
Don't forget getting 10BaseT, NetBEUI and IPX to work on all players' computers [1]. Easily half a day was lost every time, but it was part of it, and almost fun.
[1] Extra points if a player had participated in another LAN party with other people and had changed some or the other Windows network setting for that LAN party. "It worked last month and I did not change anything!" was always only true until the "and".
I was fortunate that kids I grew up with had computers all over their house. network cables up and down the stairs.
one family had a room built on their garage setup for band practice and tables around the thing for lan parties since their dad was some high end coder or unix wizard or something.
later we took over an old single theater in north branch MN (the battle shack) and kids just lived there for the summer. 24/7 lan party and movies and music and just wild stuff going on. you'd show up with your PC and hook up and wander around trying to organize games, check out people's crazy setups (kids with crazy workstation CRT monitors for each color in as coax) and stuff like that.
After I got out of highschool we went to AWOL lans which I think died over the pandemic finally but they had like two days of games organized in a hotel with a huge arcade, laser tag, go karts.
I worked at a computer repair place that had a bunch of 16 port hubs (not switches) collecting dust. Naive teenage me thought "that's a lot of ports!" and I begged the owner to let me have them for my LAN parties. He gave me a funny look and said sure why not. The chaos that ensued having those things involved, not understanding collisions, really kickstarted my networking career.
I remember the same issues but don't know why we had to enable IPX/SPX over TCP/IP. I have a specific memory of troubleshooting for an hour and then clicked IPS/SPX and StarCraft worked.
Does anyone remember a specific reason why? I was too young to know or care.
For a while, before TCP/IP really became "the" network protocol, IPX/SPX was also around and a lot of games used it. Red Alert 2, Descent 1 & 2, etc all used IPX/SPX.
Yeah, setting up IPX circa 2010 to play Dungeon Keeper 1 in multiplayer 15 years late was quite the puzzle ! Especially since I didn't have admin access to those computers... at first.
Easyly solvable by booting some very early linux flom floppy disk(s), doing that 192.168.x.x/255.255.255.0 shit, pinging and arping around, making notices. Rebooting into Windoze and resetting shit according to those notices. Done in 30 mins max.
The last time I did a LAN party was in the 90s and you would spend at least an hour diagnosing network issues before you could play a single game with everyone.
> If you’re using a 10 Mbit hub and copy the same directory to two Windows SMB hosts simultaneously it is somehow smart enough to make the transfers coincide so it can transmit the same data to both at once. To this day I have no idea what heuristic it used but honest to god, it slowed down the earlier transfer and then went in lockstep file by file for the remainder.
I think it was more likely an emergent effect of rubbish file system and disk cache behaviour, little or no prefetching, etc, than any coordinated activity in SMB?
It's neither an accident nor planned mechanism. It had nothing to do with network, the transmission wasn't switching to multicast.
Probably the author observed that reading different files from disk simultaneously was slower, until the copy process catches up to read the same files.
Seek time on mechanical hard drives sucks, and was much worse back in the prime LAN party days.
System RAM or Drive cache REALLY helped, so yes, the lagging copy would drag down the leading one until they both caught to within that buffer and things zipped along.
Im that case, how does one transfer catch up to the next one? Shouldn't the seek time from switching files have the same impact on both and keep the first one in the lead?
The disk cache is what lets the second one catch up. It would only happen if the copies were started at nearly the same time; soon enough that what's been copied so far is still in the cache.
I've observed this same behavior on modern operating systems with big rsync jobs and spinning drives. If you have lots of small files then reading the metadata and directory structure takes a while but fits in the cache, so a second rsync will catch up very quickly to the first.
The note about running SC2 over a file share reminds me of my own experience:
In my first professional job I realised their overnight job runs of a custom mission critical optimisation software was actually a VBA program run in MA Access and was also being run over the network share. The databases themselves were small, maybe dozens of MB but not bigger, but the way Access worked is that it would constantly re-read the data over the slow network share.
It was also just generally really flaky and would often run into data quality issues. So you'd cue up the routine and half way through it would crash it require restarting everything from scratch. A lot of cursing was heard* around 9am when people started work and found their overnight job had failed.
All the developers in the company were distracted trying to develop the "proper" replacement, coded in a "real" language (C# iirc) and server based, but the impression I got was it was stuck in development hell, with all the features anyone wanted always being pushed out to "phase 2", while delivery of "phase 1" was nevertheless always slipping futher away any time anyone asked. As a result the old tools were just left to us "analysts" to use without any maintenance (and most these tools had organically grown out of the analyst team's efforts with spreadsheets rather than being developed by the devs anyway).
So I had a poke around and taught myself enough VBA to do some "optimisations", the biggest of which was to simply copy the data locally before executing all the scripts.
I also put in an "integrity checker" which checked for common data errors pre-launch.
The runtime went from overnight to ~10 minutes, with a ~30 second data check you could run first. I looked like an absolute genius.
It eventually dawned on me how disfunctional everything was and I stopped turning up to work, but the impact of those first few weeks of work definitely let me coast the next couple of years.
* This detail is an embellishment, the company was oddly strict about this kind of thing. They also still required jacket and tie in their dress code.
Me and some friends host a pretty weird event, the name of which loosely translates to "Field Lan". We set up tents, generators and an antenna in the middle of a field in Estonia and compete in various games for 72 hours straight on an open field in fresh air. We sleep in tents. Its a private event once a year, but we have 30 - 50 people there every year. Next year is the 10th year we do this.
The most well known (and I think long lived) LAN in The Netherlands is Campzone, where the LAN is on a camping and people being their tents and caravans as well as their PC's in the middle of the summer. I always wanted to go as a kid, but could never make it work with my parents. I bet there's multiple people here who are gonna comment how cool it was and possibly still is.
edit: Just checked their website and it looks like they tried to reboot it after COVID but the tickets got too expensive and they couldn't get enough people.
It's a pretty fun read on Wikipedia. Honestly I had no idea, there were other people doing something similar. Well, somewhat similar. We take a 2 hour break and shut down the computers in case a thunderstorm is passing overhead :D.
Sure thing. So a few notes, you can host CS:GO and Dota 2 games on lan. You do have to be logged in to steam and have a network connection, but the games themselves can be played on lan, so the outbound connection doesn't have to be fast.
As for some other games, I highly recommend a cracked version of the original WC3:FT, Starcraft, Battlefield 1942 and Vietnam.
Some more insane people, start up a 3-day game of Civilization or Heroes of Might and Magic 3.
If you have enough people, I also recommend Enemy Territory (2003 version) with some mods, its awesome. But you need at least 20 people for this.
Just for laughs, if we end up with a tie, our tiebreaker is Liero behind a single keyboard.
Edit: Oh, forgot about Age of Empires 2, Rise of Nations. But if you want a good Lan-only experience you kind of have to use cracked versions of old games. I make up for this morally by buying a newer version if there is one even available, then use a cracked old version for playing.
Hell even online multiplayer games are waning, there's just nothing good anymore that isn't "free to play" and every game is desperately trying to create its own ecosystem to "make it big".
The last decent one I played was among us, and that was only during the pandemic. Simple gameplay, no dlc, accounts, microtransactions (at that point at least).
Now when I have people over we just break out a ps1/xbox/360...
I started out (ca 1995) in "network" gaming playing DOOM (the shareware copy, I think we could only play 3 levels). My buddies would come over after school. We'd hook up my dad's work laptop and our home computer with a parallel cable and play 2-player (2 kids playing and 5-10 other kids watching along).
I think next came Command & Conquer, which we played over IPX/SPX also, but I believe by that time I'd set up a coaxial network, where it would just randomly stop working every few months. I'd replace the BNC terminators and it was good to go again.
Next, a lot of "C&C: Red Alert" over direct modem connection (2 player).
Finally, I got ethernet on my PC. It was a game changer, since it was much more common for PCs to have ethernet than coaxial networking. We'd lug our PCs and monitors (think 15" CRT monitors, Sony Trinitrons for the lucky ones) to each other's houses for Starcraft. Running ethernet wires from various rooms to the Ethernet hub (not switch, those were too expensive).
I won't miss carrying those huge things around just to play multiplayer.
> There were websites which aggregated downloads of keygens for various games. These worked more often than you would expect.
What did I expect? The "warez = trojan" thing is mainly corporate propaganda. Commercial products are just as likely to contain malware.
> Alcohol 120% was the free tool of choice to emulate a CD drive for ISOs of games which required the CD to be inserted for copy protection, or rip a CD for that purpose. This only became popular once hard drives became big enough for people to spend many gigabytes imaging their CDs.
>What did I expect? The "warez = trojan" thing is mainly corporate propaganda. Commercial products are just as likely to contain malware.
How do you define "malware"? I'm quite sure most commercial products don't contain embedded trojans that steal your browsers passwords, join a spamming operation or encrypt your disk. For pirated software it absolutely does happen (one easy way to start a botnet is to upload something like "BaldursGate3Installer.exe" and wait for careless gamers).
Oh no it wasn't, I remember a 3 day LAN that I went to where we were on the LAN file sharing software (DC++ or something like that I think).
Bunch of people were sharing cracked games/cracks for games and can't remember which game it was now, but there was quite a popular one. Unfortunately it came with something extra and people were finding their PCs were slowing down to a crawl, blue screening, simply not turning on anymore, etc.
It was a 90s and we met through our BBS systems. there was no debate what to play, doom. Warcraft came soon after. The Internet sounded cool, too bad actually kind of destroyed everything. some of us had pagers. we made plans, over land lines, and everyone actually showed up.
we didn’t take photos because that would be stupid. our parents would find out what we were doing. which was mostly drinking and smoking way too much and playing video games until the sun rose.
also, we didn’t get bored of it. we figured out how to make custom maps. yes including our school, and picked appropriate demon for each classroom to represent our fabulous teachers. Columbine hadn’t happened yet. even if someone found out, you weren’t gonna go to jail.
I made an Unreal map of my high school. Was really awesome and had pretty much all the nooks and crannies. Even had that weird stairway hidden in a crevasse of a hidden tunnel. Hadn't been opened in decades with the amount of rust. I mean, I did a hell of a job.
Next month, Columbine happened. That put an end to me releasing that map anywhere.
In the early 90s, my LAN parties were going to the school where my dad was principal and playing with my friends in the computer lab. They had a bunch of Mac Classics and we would play Bolo. So much fun.
Oh heck yeah, I put Bolo (and a custom HyperCard stack to circumvent At Ease and launch the game) onto floppy disks for my friends and I and we'd sneak into the Mac lab and play during lunch. We only did so a few times but.. so fun!!
I did LAN parties in the early '90s when a bunch of BBS nerds would show up at a local pizza joint cradling Mac LCs, IIsi's, and Powerbooks, bust out some PhoneNet connectors and play some intense Bolo [0] or Spaceward Ho [1] games. Later, Spectre [2], Marathon [3]
Maybe someone would demo some app they were working on in MPW or Think C, or demo a funny postage stamp-sized quicktime (new video format) of an exploding whale or dumb Dan Quayle quotes.
That sounds like an amazing time. I sunk a ton of hours into networked Bolo, Spectre and Marathon... probably not quite to the scale that you experienced! I often tell people how the game mechanics in Marathon are still present in basically all multiplayer FPSes today- the "Post-Game Carnage Report" exceeds what you even get in many games today, for that matter.
A switch might explode by using the wrong power adapter and still work afterwards somehow.
At my high school, every computer was on unrestricted LAN divided by floors. Four classrooms playing Armagetron (the open source tron clone) was a LAN party I didn’t expect.
At mine, we had Warcraft 3 installed on the macs in my programming class. The greybeard teacher didn't really care, but his TAs would fuck with us because they were upper classmen. So they'd uninstall it.
We had admin creds, though, so screw you Jordan and Phil.
Our teacher actually gave us the keys, because he knew our "type" (ie the same kinda geek as him). We'd play cS1.6 etc (almost) every lunchtime, it was great.
Still dont know how it managed to work, but my buddy had an XP box that he was gonna use for our lan party, but it went sideways. The only thing i had was a win 2k cd. We repaired using the 2k cd, got the system up, in a really fubar hybrid mode, where parts of the system acted like XP, and other parts acted like 2k
Ah, yes, the manual repairs in the primitive recovery console. Look for .SYS and .DLL files with suspicious dates (unlike the others), overwrite them with EXPAND'ed originals from the setup disk, try booting the system. Had to do it recently on an old XP system after testing early 2000s tool that had no idea service packs existed, and “updated” system files.
A buddy of ours has the nickname gremlin to this day. If he touched your PC it was guaranteed to bsod or just die. he spent lan parties trying to get his PC working, reinstalling windows...etc
We had a friend like that too, actually. We all made some mumbling explanation about "electrostatic discharge" so that we felt less uncomfortable being so superstitious, but yeah people would leap in front of him to avoid him touching their stuff. But yeah, he was one of the crew, so it's not like we were gonna not-invite-him.
> Also managing to have everyone on the same patch for $GAME could waste hours.
This one hits close to home.
IIRC, in some games it was not even that obvious that someone had a different version (e.g. maybe they just wouldn't be able to see the server in the list), which made everything take even more time.
That just reminded me that circa 2010 I created a Google Sheet with a list of all the games we used to play, which patches to download and from where. By that time it was getting quite hard to find some patches to older games.
> The cool kids had a Barton Athlon XP 2500+ and a Radeon 9600. The rich kids had a 9800.
This made me chuckle. For my computer I went though a bunch of local computer stores, going through all their CPU boxes and got lucky on the second day. There it was, an Athlon XP with AQZFA stepping. Overclocked twice as fast as the other models, and the coolest of CPUs in that generation.
Overclocking of an AQZFA Athlon XP was as easy as using a pencil to draw a line in between the two right pins. The mods I've seen on LANs to cool this thing were something else. From custom-built PLC radiators to water cooling setups, which were the new hot stuff at the time.
The BIOS recognitions were kinda funny when you overclocked them. My one told me it's a 3800+ because they probably just made it dependent on the base frequencies x multiplier or something similar.
I remember being terrified of applying my aftermarket Thermaltake cooler on my Athlon XP, so I waited until I went to a local LAN so I could get someone more experienced than me to install it.
To this day I still get anxious applying CPU coolers, even though they're a lot easier to install. Thanks anonymous person from Auckland's LAN at Upper Harbour stadium (I can't remember the name of the event).
Yeah those original Athlon era CPUs with exposed dies were nerve wracking to install coolers on. I read the manuals and was very careful, and managed to get it right the first time, and all the other times.
It's 2023 and AMD couldn't run a Halo Infinite tournament at Quakecon properly. And one of the teams was out getting pizza anyway because they were off by an hour. My friend won a 7800X3D though.
Cases must be windowed, very small or very large to be "credible" these days!
Alcohol120 and a hard drive full of ISOs was the only way to get a large group of people playing the same game. Such as UT2004.
Having Internet almost makes the LAN worse because unless you really plan it with your buddies, it has felt like a lot of people just do their own thing. So go into a LAN with friends having agreed on at least two games everyone is interested in.
My first LAN was in a church gym playing Battlefield Vietnam on 128MB RAM and a Celeron 1.1ghz (the family computer before I got into building). I drank 7 bottles of Bawls. I weighed 140lbs at the time.
I remember the day I jumped ship to Steam. it was such a cool Trainwreck. got the boxed upgrade thing for HL2 /TF2 or whatever and I could finally game without ISO cd images or a folder of cracks for nocd
LAN parties got me into casemodding. I was always more interested in looking cool (to this particular crowd) than actually playing games [1]. I always picked a seat at the end of a row, close to the catering so people would come over to take a look.
This quickly got out of hand with sponsors (Cooler Master, Silverstone, among others) and dragging my builds to casemodding contests and trade shows (CEBIT Hannover). I was still in high school. Good times.
My friends and I had only a few LAN parties that I can recall, at least ones that took place at any of our homes. There was, however, a PC repair shop in town that had a (pretty high-end for the time) LAN gaming room. I wanted to learn about computer repair, and so offered to work for them once a weekend or so, for a few hours, in exchange for learning about computer repair and free gaming for my friends and I. After raising an eyebrow, they agreed.
In the end, I don’t think I really learned all that much. (The solution was often to just backup what we could of a person’s storage and reformat.) But my friends and I had a good time at this shop, run by two computer geeks of an older generation, that was probably just a few years shy of being wiped out by the Geek Squad and Genius Bar.
Apart from that, my school district had a kind of magnet career skills center that offered a network administration course. On Fridays the instructor would let all of us in class play Counterstrike on the classroom’s LAN. I think that was put a stop to, however, after a district supervisor came into the room just as a student gleefully yelled, “Headshot!”
Before consumer LAN parties were a thing, there was xpilot on the university HP 9000 workstations. We’d play from 7pm until 6am. By then, our hands were completely cramped from pressing a million different buttons to navigate the space cave, shoot bullets and activate the ECM system.
> The cool kids had a Barton Athlon XP 2500+ and a Radeon 9600. The rich kids had a 9800.
I still remember trying to flash my 9600 bios to a 9800 because some were able to that. Unfortunately I didn’t have one of the lucky models that could do so.
From what I remember, some 9600s had the same hardware as a 9800 but had features/processors disabled from the card BIOS. Those could be unlocked with the right BIOS.
These are my favorite HN threads. Personal expenses that double ad historical accounts.
In high school a land center opened up and they would do 24 hour lans once a month. Being 15, we all loved it. So many new people that all loved the same stuff as us. It was a blast. It eventually closed due to lack of profitability but I'm very thankful for them taking that shot on that business.
Always check your beer bottle, you never know when someone is going to use it as an ash tray.
If you sleep in an aisle or under your desk, you will wake up with dicks drawn on your face.
If you ask the guy who draws dicks on peoples' face to not draw one on yours, he will make sure to know your sleeping location, so that when you sleep, he can come by and draw a dick on your face.
There is often a "magic room" where drink and food is abundant and free for admins. If you befriend an admin, by the end of the weekend you may get invited in the room and get a share because there is way too much for them anyway.
If you play a lot at a certain game (let's say Quake 3), and you want to hustle some LANs, make sure you know how to setup a dedicated servers ; some admins do not use the proper competitive settings like sv_fps and whatnot, so you can advise on that and avoid playing under sub-par conditions.
Make sure you have a lot of free space on your hard drive so you can leech stuff while you are sleeping and somebody else draws dicks on your face.
One of my finest memories was at a lan of around 150 people. We had everyone install Natural Selection half life mod and had a full match going for hours.
Similar happened at another even a few years later. Had about 30 people playing that revolutionary war half life mod on LAN. I think it was called BG mod or something. Good times.
I did LAN parties through out highschool in the late 00s. It's funny looking how different our era of lanning was. This was post Steam, and so the piracy was less rampant. By the time I went to college, they also had a lan club and I started doing that. It was the early 10s, and that's when the lan part of the lan party was truely dead. Everyone stopped playing TF2, and CS, and everyone moved to League of Legends. There was still SC2, and a bit of cs going on but the majority of the lan was just people grouping into fives/tens and playing league. Esports became a thing a few years later and sorta ate the lan club. I can't say I every lugged a CRT but games of UT2k4 and TF2 in a dingy basement full of nerds are core high school experience memories for me.
Finland still large LAN event going called Assembly. There is summer (demo scene + gaming) and winter (gaming focused). You just buy a ticket and go. https://assembly.org/en
- Some guys would show up and spend 10% of the time on gaming, and like 90% on coding. They'd mainly be at LAN-parties to collect tools and meet other coders. Sometimes they'd show some cool demos they worked on, or some game they were working on
- Shared folders of music, films, and pictures would get copied an masse. A LOT of the pictures were definitely not for the public eye.
- Some LAN-parties would drag on for weeks, and kind of just become LAN-clubs. People would practically live there...I remember a friend hosted one of the last LAN-parties right around the time World of Warcraft got released, and while it was meant to just last for a weekend, 5-6 guys ended up staying there for a solid month, gaming WoW since the host had high-speed internet. Owner didn't mind, as he was equally hooked on the game.
- The older games would only play Age of Empires, and not much else. The competitive gamers would grind StarCraft, and later on CS.
- Playing all the pre 1.6 CS versions was a fun time. They seemed to change quite a bit between each update, until 1.6 became the standard.
- If we encountered some networking problems, someone always knew a 40-year old networking dude that would gladly show up and fix whatever was needed. Same dudes would always have tons of spare parts lying around.
- Right around the time CS 1.6 became popular, we started seeing the first "pro" gaming e-sports teams. Back then, these teams would just play at LAN parties, and then go compete in larger regional LAN parties. The prizes were laughable compared to the modern ones...one clan I knew won like $5000, which was split on 5-6 members? Those guys decided to drop out of school and pursue CS full-time, which lasted around 6 months or so.
- We would have a national LAN party in Hamar (The Gathering), and traveling there from all the way north was a real bitch. Imagine bringing a full-tower case and 19" CRT onboard the plane. Even though the first flat-screens sucked, it was infinitely easier/more practical than those CRT screens.
This was THE prank we played at Uni in the computer labs. This was late 90s, when girls from the social sciences schools would go into the computer labs to check their email and shit.
So you turned their screen upside down, opened their tray and whatnot , then you would go their place and pretend to fix it (while your friend that was in charge of the lab actually fixed it).
It gave us nerds our 5 mins of "fame" with the ladies.
I stumbled upon the StarCraft CD key thing myself after my sister broke my original CD and case. I had a ripped copy and tried a pattern until it worked. I was maybe 12 and didn't know what an ICQ was.
I remember my earliest LAN game was the first Warcraft RTS, mainly because slower school computers could still run it and it allowed for "spawn installs". I got to experience real LAN gaming later in the 90s because I traveled to Europe. Sure, my friends in the US would play Tribes, Descent, and Quake, but we never had a room full of powerful enough computers to play it on a LAN.
When I got back to the states, I was hooked. I built my first PC (a Pentium III with an ATI RAGE 128, I believe). I must have been 14. A few years later, I made a video* about the LAN parties. It's a good time capsule of the experience.
i think remembering LAN parties is my sign of me becoming a greybeard. i would say missing from this list is that feeling of just tribal yelling in close proximity with your team and screensniping by turning around. i'm sorry for all the gamer kids that grew up without that in their lives.
I can still remember Marek Dubcek (I'm probably spelling his name wrong) bragging about his performance at Duke3d or Q1, and thinking "fuck him, he's too good-looking to be better than me at a video game", and learning to use mouselook back when you had to handwrite your own config file to use mouselook without holding down Shift.
I took the WAD files for Q1 apart, ripped out all the content for the monster AI and the campaign levels and stuff, so that I could make a zip that fit on 4 1.44 floppies, carry it in my pocket, install it on demand on computers on the Cap labs (I wasn't larcenous/brave enough to compromise the network share like some other people).
(PS: if anyone recognizes me from that much information, get in touch)
Minimal setup for playing q2dm1 is 8 MB compressed. Less if there's only a single player model without skins, but we can allow ourselves to be posh. Made the WinRAR-based installer, cut into floppy-sized volumes, wrote a convenient batch file (with optional dialogs and help screen) to automate copying sets of files to a pack of floppies. Not all computers in school had CD-ROM drives anyway, but they were fast enough, and all had network.
oh heck yeah, I actually had my own web hosting in those days and kept a zip file of a complete quake 1 install so I could run the game on any machine that had net access :) fun times!!
I worked at Chick-Fil-A for a year or so in high school. One of the ones in a free standing building in the middle of a parking lot of a much larger shopping center- bordering the interstate. A group of 6-7 of us, INCLUDING the General Manager, were big gamers.
At the time, Call of Duty releases were all the rage. The night of the Modern Warfare 2 release, we all closed up at 10pm, invited a few of our friends, and brought in our monitors (mostly 40inch TVs) and Xboxes. We set them all up on the Chick-Fil-A tables and booths and made several batches of Chick-fil-A nuggets and fries. We played 6v6 from about 11:00pm - 4:00am.
I remember thinking how ridiculous it must have looked from the interstate to see a Chick-Fil-A lit up with 12 screens inside through those translucent shades at 2:00 in the morning on a weekday.
That is one of the greater memories of my childhood. It delights me just to think about it!
Summer of college, working as a temp at a soulless company where all I did, all day long, was call doctors and ask if they still took a certain insurance.
Someone brought a cracked version of Quake to work one day and we all stayed late playing. Even the boss got into it - LAN parties were always amazing but going from call center temp job -> LAN party was like going from the lowest low to highest high.
Reminds me of the year LANs died, for my circle at least. One year we were lugging equipment for PC or Xbox LAN parties, the next it was hardly anyone showing up. Halo 2 had come out, GameSpy and other services had traction, so folks just got their fix online. Even when there was online voice chat it wasn't the same.
This list sounds like it's written a little after the time of my first LAN parties.
I recall really only having one game we could play (and really only one game we wanted to play)... Doom. And the network was fully 10BASE2 running IPX, not IP.
Fun fact: I have the BNC connector I used back then sitting on my desk in front of me as I type this.
So I'm younger than the person who posted this, but my high school did do something called LANfest where we all set up the computers on campus to connect to play games over the local network. But proper LAN parties sound like they were amazing, it's a shame they're not really a thing anymore.
My high school friends and I built a website and web forum for us to chat about our LAN parties. We also spent one summer turning a dirt space beneath one guy's house into an epic lan room - we put in floors and carpeting and lighting and tables. So awesome.
> The cool kids had a Barton Athlon XP 2500+ and a Radeon 9600. The rich kids had a 9800
Oh man. I had the 9800XT with aftermarket Zalman cooling. I didn't know what attention was before I went to a lan with that build. Got called the coolest things and the worst things
The first prize I won at a LAN was a 16 MB Corsair USB flash drive for winning a Call of Duty 5v5 tournament! That would have been around 2003?
During the 90's my older brother and I had a coaxial cable running between our two rooms through a hole in the wall. We used to play deathmatch DooM and Quake. If he wasn't home, I would invite my best friend over and we would play together. Of course, I got to play on my brother's PC which was superior.
My best friend and I would frequent Duke3D. I vividly remember a wide open city map with a fire truck driving around the perimeter. You would think that getting run over by the firetruck would kill you, but instead you would just appear on top of it.
> If you don’t have enough warez to reach the minimum share limit for the DC++ server you can always add the directories for your games installed under Program Files.
Not sure if it only started in the Windows XP days, but it's a bad idea to put games in that folder, one of the reasons being that they might not work unless you give them admin access, for instance to be able to write user files in their own folders (and you might want to mess with them too, also consider mods), and giving them admin access is not the best idea.
The joke is that uneducated users routinely shared whole drives or system directories, including personal files and configuration data with passwords, but it could also be used as a trick if you didn't have a big drive, or anything more valid to share.
As for file access, I doubt that many people have used non-administrator accounts on their own home computers. It was recognized when UAC was added to distinguish “real administrative tasks” for the administrator. TrustedInstaller limiting and 32-bit/64-bit virtualization divide happened later.
Lol, there is actually a 'gaming zone' (commercial space set up for LAN parties) still operating in Sunnyvale. I had a shuttle PC that I used for LAN parties and would re-image the disk when I got home.
* Packing a whole PC and CRT monitor into a suitcase
* Setting up DC++ and getting all the latest warez (and discovering there's always someone with the worlds largest hentai collection)
* Counter-Strike
I lived in a tiny rural Australian town during this era, still at school. We stole a bunch of network cable from our computer lab and had 2-5 person LAN sleepovers.
I got way into case modding, and daydreamed of the day I moved to the big city and could hit the massive LAN parties with my fellow nerds. I even built specific smalk and robust PC for it.
But by the time I made it to the city, broadband was a thing and our city is also pretty small, so the one big LAN event had already stopped.
Still, I think we captures the spirit of it all in our pokey town the best we could.
The outdoor lan parties that quickly popped up in the Netherlands is where I have my best memories of. Also, modding levels of Shadow Warrior or Quake and then telling your friends that they had to copy this newer version as it had a patch and then pranking them for an hour in game by completely destroying them with hidden passages and explosions… all the while hearing them in disbelief.. and then sharing the secret… also FTP Servers with more music, movies and games you could ever put on your own hard drives..
Some of my fondest memories are LAN parties. We used to play all sorts of games, some of the usual suspects like Counter-Strike, Age of Empires II, etc, but my favorite is when we did 3v3 DotA.
We had three people in one room on a team, and the opposing team in another room. The winning team would walk into the room after the match to talk about the highlights, but the losing team would say "Nope, get out, let's run it back!"
Best party I ever attended had someones girlfriend jump onto the table in only brah and thong and yelling at her boyfriend "just stop that and ... me already!" and he looked up "I will but we're in a match right now", my 15 year old mind was blown away on multiple levels. I also met my to this day best friend there, we still laugh about the girlfriend episode once every while to this day.
I have fond memories of lugging our desktop machines and CRT monitors to someone’s college apartment to play Age of Empires all afternoon in the mid 90s. Good times.
I feel like this spanned at least a decade, but still got me right in the feels. Nobody had a Barton Athlon XP 2500+ while BNC was still running around.
Ooooh yes.. Fond memories of attending a few events that were hosted by Hurricane Electric on folding tables in some conference room annex of their data center. And the marvel of finally having an Ethernet connection to the Internet instead of dialup! I'm not sure I balanced "game time" with "download-all-the-things time" well enough.
Author here - I did have that problem in the distant past while battling a dodgy BNC terminator but luckily we were mostly on CAT5 by the time I was doing networks with friends. I won't put in writing the ill-advised technique I used to avoid getting shocked.
We used to call these "copy-parties", because not a single person had a network capable computer. It was the late 80ies and besides a demo competition (or two) it was basically copying floppies and playing games with two joy-sticks attached to a single computer.
For my circle of colleagues LAN parties have not died out, but evolved to couch coop.
Computers are strong enough to host the same game N times. Playing Left4Dead2, FlatOut 2, BeamNG drive on one PC with a couple of monitors in split screen gets 8 people into a room for a lot of fun.
very familiar points except the part about stealing hard drives. Totally unthinkable scenario.
You just don't ever, EVER, touch another persons computer without them inviting you in for help, or some kind of showoff. Atleast one of your boys would look after your computer while you were afk. Someone would always be there
Author here. The victim was a mate of mine and we were just as shocked. No idea how the perp got away with it let alone had the audacity to try. It was so bizarre I had to include it.
Did you run undelete on the 80 to look for traces of the owner? the demand for justice had to have been overwhelming. I feel it even now as I write this
We always played Starcraft at LAN parties. My poor desktop could barely keep up, especially when everyone would decide to all have giant Protoss carrier battles.
As soon as I exited the match, the game performance for everyone else on the LAN significantly increased.
I remember my first LAN party. No Internet, just one continuous 10Base(something) coaxial network where I was on the one far end. I brought down the entire network more than once when I needed to disconnect my BNC connector and terminator, in order to troubleshoot some hw/driver issues.
There was this one guy that didn't sleep very much and had to much caffeine pills and jolt cola, he started having severe hearth problem and he passed out so they had to call an ambulance, he survived.
The following in monday in school the teachers were condemning caffeine consumption
Good times. Lug your big ass computer and monitor. Setup and install everything you need, someone has a pirated copy. Break out the energy drinks. Game all day and night (most likely counterstike and call of duty) until it’s time to head out for early morning breakfast, then crash.
Fun memories. I remember when we had to borrow internet from a city building across a field, using some weird antenna setup. When it rained the internet went down.
And of course the random rage quits of keyboards being thrown across the entire hall.
Used to organize LAN parties at my college as a fundraiser for the newly minutes ACM chapter I helped run. Learned more from running the LANs than I did from my networking, leadership and general computing classes.
I feel like most of west missed out on internet cafe around the street corner, lan gaming whenever you want culture. Fancy bars with VIP seating and way too many unhealthy people.
Back in the early- to mid-2000s, I used to frequent a yearly recurring LAN party ("Hobslan") for up to some 100 people hosted in Germany, about 1300km away from my home. Of course, my midi tower PC that was specifically geared towards attending LAN parties was riding with me on the train(s) going there, and after a refreshing 14 to 18h trip (depending on the year's train schedule and my monitor-and-ride-providing German buddy (thanks, Han! :)) giving me the last-200-mile lift to the proper place), it arrived with me in all its glory: A Pentium 4 "Northwood" 2.6GHz (overclocked to 3.5GHz) on an ABIT AB-AI7 motherboard, a Geforce 4 4200 Ti AGP-based GPU with 64MB of VRAM, 512MB of dual-channel DDR-SDRAM at a frequency I cannot remember, and, of course, my trusty 160GB RAID0(!) SATA HDD array to store all the things you could leech on the sweet, sweet Fast Ethernet (100Mbps) fully-switched LAN that I was going to plug this thing into! The little beast had Gentoo Linux installed, and its hardware was perfectly balanced to provide that highly sought-after stable 125fps (where a certain physics bug in the game engine allowed for maximum jumping distance) under all possible conditions in Quake ]|[ Arena ;)
The events were a blast, and even the tournaments I did majorly suck at (playing Super Street Fighter II Turbo on an original SNES, hooked up to a projector that illuminated pretty much all of one of the walls of the school gym that the event took place in, for example) are forever etched into my memory.
One year, the network was plagued by the infamous W32.Blaster worm, and most of the Windows-based machines the local admins had provided fell to it in short order. People were starting to get desperate - most of their gameservers and DC++ hubs AWOL or even FUBAR, and many were going through the motions of redoing the Windows XP setup left an right, only to see their machines becoming infected again on the first network-enabled boot-up. It was mayhem, and a weekend of pure Quake awesomeness was threatened to be reduced to a week of reciting FCKGW-... from (muscle) memory ad nauseam. Luckily, my Gentoo machine was invulnerable to that particular problem, and my little gaming beast ended up on a separate network segment for "vetted", provden-clean Windows machines only, providing FTP and several Quake ][ and Quake ]|[ game servers at the same time for those who HAD machines that still worked, or were brought back from the dead. I even saved a relevant screenshot from back then as a cherished digital artifact: https://coloss.us.to/blaster.jpg
I worked at such venues and helped friends who worked at such venues back in the day. What I remember mostly is having to move from one computer to another setting IP addresses and the annoyance of having to restart Win 98 after setting an IP. I still don’t understand why that was a requirement.
Later during Win XP days, most places started having a dedicated set of machines and you didn’t need to lug your computer along anymore, those were actually the days I remember I had most fun, playing UT and C&C Red Alert 2, god damn the music was exciting!
I was lucky enough in the early 2000's where I could use my love of video games and lan parties as part of my job. I was responsible for the Flash community at Macromedia, and we would set up 4 xboxes with split screen for 8 player Halo 2 and 3 tournaments in conference rooms (which has multiple plasma screens already set up).
I quickly realized that we could use this to make friends in the broader community, so we bought a bunch of LCD monitors and pelican cases, and began to take our setup on the road to Flash conferences. During the day we would hang out at the conference, learn new programing / visual techniques and generally see super cool Flash stuff, and at night we would invite everyone over to our hotel room and then play Halo all night. We made so many friends and close contacts in the community through this, and it really help us meet a lot of people, and build strong, personal relationships.
I remember we were on a 6 week bus tour in North America doing events for Adobe AIR, and making a detour to NYC for the Halo 3 launch at at Best Buy. We then played on the bus all night long.
Here is a clip of me walking to the launch, so happy and singing about it being my Halo birthday (whatever that means!).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QVQKgui28O8
So many good times.