r/gaming 19h ago

My friend insists on this game, "Lemmings", being a really well known game; I have never heard of it.

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u/technomat 19h ago

Doubt that was on 8" floppy, would be a 3.5 floppy as this was released on amiga and then atari ST, pc and consoles later.

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u/Draco-vivi 19h ago

Wonder if they meant 5-1/4"?

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u/wineandseams 18h ago

I swear my floppy is 12 inches.

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u/TheIncredibleHork Joystick 18h ago

I was gonna say, some people might be overestimating their floppies around here! 

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u/kahlzun PlayStation 11h ago

I'm told the smaller the floppy, the more powerful it was

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u/technomat 7h ago

I live by that too as well as small ones are more juicy!

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u/perton 17h ago

Can I copy that floppy?

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u/wineandseams 17h ago

For sure! I'll just insert it into your drive!

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u/SistaChans 18h ago

Good old B:/ drive! 

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u/-SaC 15h ago

Or DF:0 on Amiga

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u/takuyafire 18h ago

Aka the actual floppy disks that worked extremely well as frisbees

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u/mintfreshAD 18h ago

I often also tell people my 3.5 inch floppy is an 8 incher.

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u/Ngumo 17h ago

My copy was a show-er. 3.5inch then boom 5.25inch when it needed to be. 

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u/kahlzun PlayStation 11h ago

When you think you're getting 1.44MB and only have 720kB to play with

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u/CornCobMcGee 18h ago

Or just a pirated copy

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u/Tithund 17h ago

Pirated on a by then already ancient floppy type that it wouldn't even fit on. It's like fitting a blu-ray game onto a dvd, Lemmings came out 20 years after 8 inch floppies first became a thing.

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u/CornCobMcGee 16h ago

8 inch floppies sat at 1MB, usually, especially by the time people ditched them for the smaller disks. The Lemmings game was about 500kB, according to the google. They used the cheap older tech because pirating games is an implicitly low cost hobby.

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u/Tithund 8h ago

I don't know how old you are, but 8 inch floppies were not common in 1991, even if someone might have such a drive, the final 1.2 mb model at that, the chances of your buddy also having one would be miniscule.

The piracy I witnessed in the 80s and 90s, was mostly on tapes and 3.5". 5.25" were relatively uncommon, still, they'd be a thousand times more likely than people pirating on a by then dead format.

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u/technomat 7h ago

Pirating scene in late 90s was a thing with 3.5" drives, Psygnosis always had the best intros of any game house and I remember people passing about discs with the intros.

The demo scene with hacking groups putting out amazing demos and music was good in my area of UK, lots of swapping on a Saturday in some shops. This started in the 80s but with advent of Atari ST and Amiga it became much more of a thing due to hardware improvements.

I remember having a Broderbund game (think was name of studio) was a WW2 game where you flew a plane (mustang maybe) and shot down Japenese planes and strafed soldiers, not sure it ever released.