Author Topic: How did you get started in Aces High?  (Read 9667 times)

Offline mechanic

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #45 on: August 24, 2004, 03:11:26 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by JB73
LOL alot of really old hands here. i always knew that, but it really makes me feel like a newbie still knowing guys were in this game last century,


last century??

try last millenia     :rofl

i found AH1 on a free game download site and spent 1 hour trying to find something to kill in the offline mode :)

even tried setting up a mission offline and thought it might send all those planes up against me

lolol

then i worked out the free trial bit and went online and have never been able to stop since.

Damn thing is so addictive yet easily affordable.

the worst drug i can think off yet a way of life we cannot deny ourselves.

AH2 is such an improvement from AH1 and AH1 was superb.

HTC and all you lot that make it fun.

Batfink
And I don't know much, but I do know this. With a golden heart comes a rebel fist.

Offline Box1

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #46 on: August 24, 2004, 03:57:40 AM »
AARP magazine:eek:

Offline Heater

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #47 on: August 24, 2004, 05:21:20 AM »
HiTech,
called said he was working on a new game... the rest is History, and HiTech well he is still the one & only PUTZ!
HiTech is a DWEEB-PUTZ!
I have multiple personalities and none of them like you !!!


Offline LYNX

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #48 on: August 24, 2004, 05:58:52 AM »
It was the first Saturday I'de had off in months but the Mrs was at work.  I'de done about 2hrs trawling the net and was bored to tears.  As I was about to close AOL I noticed on their front page a link to Games.  Me thinks ping pong, space invaders or the like.  Anyway there was a link to a Combat Fighter Sim called Fighter Op's.  Firstly, my curiosity was salamandered and whats a sim?  So having checked out the blurb and looked at the amazing screenies I had to have a go.

56k didn't help but 2 hrs later "Stevex" was crashing on take off in a Spit.  I asked the newb question and white text said that reading the help file may help.  Another hr later + a joystick (no hat switch) I HO (cringes thinking back) the 1st bad guy i came across.  I got the kill and was well impressed.

A few months later my squad The League of Gentlemen was born and quickly maxed out at 36 squadies.  We were second only to the Krauts (ebola fame).  AOL Fighter Op's was sold / given / transfered or whatever to Warbirds FO.  19 of us made the change being pleased to find it CHEAPER had a blast for a year or so but then WB2 came out and as some of you know FO turned to crap.  Poor gamey play, reduced numbers, the good bad guys and the good good guys started to leave.   It got very samey.  Spending less time on line I gave command to Davejh. I'de heard from some players about a sim called Aces High so upgraded my AMD 475 with a Gforce card and made the switch.  This was cool cv's gv's guns ect + CHEAPER still.  Ok, my FPS was 14 to start with but I manged to get it to push 21 on a good day.

My wife regretes my Saturday off while she had to work but she did buy me a mini fridge that holds 4 cans for me Friday nights.

Question though... has anyone done Physiological research on compultion / addiction with regard SIM.  My wife thinks I have a problem.  I try to reassure her that keeping "E" in a T&B fight ain't no problem.... :aok
« Last Edit: August 24, 2004, 06:29:16 AM by LYNX »

Offline jay1988

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #49 on: August 24, 2004, 07:15:27 AM »
It was Dec of 2000 and I asked my parents for a computer for Christmas. Well anyways my friend came over my house and was teaching me how to download on my new computer. So he takes me to cnet. Well after a few days of learning how to download, I had gone throgh at least 50 flight sims(on a 56k modem).

Then I came along to Aces High. I Downloaded it and played it offline. At this time i had a piece of poop joystick that my dad got for free after rebate, so taking off would not work. I remember taking off in a p-51d taking off then spining and hitting the ground. This was real fun lasted me at least 2 weeks of fun.

So I stoped playing because my joystick was crap. 3 years later (Aug 2003) on that old beat up system i installed Aces High again(lucky for me i had it on a cd which was like one of the original versions). Well anyways I got online and was thinking this  game is cool. My fps were 10 im thinking that was good and im play a choopy game. Well im flying around and some guy named ZIP53 asked me if i wanted to join his squad so i did.

I played my two week trial had 13 kills i was so happy.  THat same week my mom said i could not use the computer till my grades got up. So i would sneek in the h2h arena when my parents  left. Preety soon i started to get kills. Then in november my internet was cut off. I was so pissed.

During my Aces High Break somebody at my school gave me a Pentium 600 with a ATI Rage. I started to get 60 fps in AH now. So I would practice offline. Then in March my mom finally got my cable internet hooked back up. I went strait to the H2H areana and was landing 7 kills a sortie (thinking  I was good).

THe same week I begged HTC to give me a free trial for AH. THey did, So i decided I would get in touch with Zip. I left a message on his squad website. Then Jetb123 e-mailed me to tell me the squad was disbanned and to join Airraiders. I really did not want to join but Jetb123 found me and i didn't want to be mean so i joined.

Then I became best friend with Jetb123 we even formed our own squad. I started playing this game every day. My grades improved in school. So i could play Aces High this year of high school.

Thats how i joined Aces High. I also left out alot of stuff because i would be writing for days.:)


Sorry for the bad spelling

Offline vatiAH

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #50 on: August 24, 2004, 08:03:30 AM »
I flew a sim called Falcon 3.0 with a bunch of Falcoholics that called themselves the F3 group.   This group was made up of people who had a love for Falcon 3.0 and also posted regularly in the Falcon forum on one of the major online services back then ( the name of the service escapes me at the moment).     Anyway,  two of the members of this group (Bebop and Shebop) put together a little get together at there home so we could all meet and have a Falcon tournament.   I drove down to Northern NJ to meet my "online" friends.  Not only did I have a great weekend of playing Falcon but I was also introduced to SVGA AW on genie.   When I got home I joined Genie and downloaded AW.   I was hooked!!   I normaly tell people that the CAF was my first Squadron I flew with, but in retrospect, this is not true.  Bebop got me into the squad he flew with, The Warhawks.    Now back then it was a per hour charge and if I remember correctly it was like 10 bucks an hour after you figured in your Genie online time and your AW online time.   I tried hard to limit my time online but the addiction was just to great.  After a few months of carefull control, I sliped over the edge.  My bill hit $500.00 that month.  Well,  that ended that for awhile.     To make a long story short,   the F3 group moved to Genie online and soon after  AW opened on Delphi.     Some of the members on delphi decided to Start a new Squadron so that when AW went live on Delphi we would be ready.   The name of this Squadron was the Cactus Airforce.  The first squadron that I took a real active roll in.  

I flew with the CAF when I could ( it was still exnoodleive to play) but was eventualy forced out do to the high cost of this addiction.  Some say Crack will force you to economic disaster.  Brother, it has nothing over a SVGA AW addiction!!!    That ended that untill AW moved to AOL and was a no charge game!!  
 
   I played AW up intill I heard about Aces high.    I moved to Aces high just after the beta and have never looked back.    Anyway,  thats my story and i'm sticking to it.  

< S >

Vati66
Ductus Exemplo:  Lead by Example

Offline FDutchmn

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #51 on: August 24, 2004, 08:13:24 AM »
Thanks JB73 for sharing with us your story.  It was great reading, and it reminded me of my story that I wrote while I was still on AW when it was still on GameStorm.

Here's that write up again, although some things are obsolete, links do not exist anymore, but it was the frame of mind then... I hope you enjoy my story too...

=====From GameStorm=====
GameStorm: Around the World

Air Warrior and its International Community: It's Bait and Getting Hooked

By Flying Dutchman



To My mentors, squadmates, and friends on AW:
 

Greetings all you Air Warriors (and players on GS) from the other side of the Pacific (Japan)! In this article, I would like to demonstrate that regardless of who or what we are, we still share the same passion and desire to have fun in a similar fashion, which can also be life-threatening all at the same time.

My start on online gaming began with MegaWars I, made by a U.S. company, Kesmai. The game is basically a space war done all in text format. All read-outs come out in text every time you enter a command. It was offered on "Nifty Serve", a Japanese counterpart of CompuServe run by Fujitsu. Although it completely lacked any sort of graphics, it was extremely fun interacting with all the people there. The key word here is interacting. Unlike in the standalone computer games, with online games there are people on the other side of the of your terminal. Every time, you beat someone, you can see the other guy screaming "aaaarrrrrgggghhhh!!!!" just like you when you get beaten. This aspect of the gaming was so appealing, it was the only way to go, which I am sure most of the people who play here agree. The idea and the philosophy here is very simple, get back at the guy who got you!

Even with no graphics, it was so much fun, I stayed online for hours on end, picking a fight anywhere I could find. By the end of the first month, I had basically fought with everyone there and they gave me the Fighting Spirit Award of the Month. The only drawback was that I completely forgot about my wife and my bills. God knows what happened after that! (Ahem! . . . Sound familiar? hehehehe)

I started AW purely by chance. AW4W came with the CD-ROM I ordered for the upgrade of WinCIM. I had always been playing flight sims and AW4W interested me a lot. However, I knew I would get hooked on it. And I couldn't resist installing AW4W. At that time, I really wanted an excuse NOT to play. So, when I first went to the Air Warrior section on CompuServe and the menu came up which said "Click Here to Play", I kept mumbling to myself, "Please don't connect, please don't connect, tell me that the network congestion won't let me play half-way around the world, I am gonna get hooked . . . " . . . "SHEEPDIP, it connected . . . " This was the start of another Nightmare . . . hehehe (and the Squad I belong in too!)

The first thing that happened to me was that I was totally lost . . . I barely had an idea of what I was doing. Flipping through the .pdf file that I printed on the Flight Instructions and Operations Manual for Air Warrior (My God, it's thick!), the first thing I did was go to the radio and catch a glimpse of what it was like online through the Internet. There, the first online communication I heard was either in Dutch or German and not English.

I thought to myself "WOW, Europeans are playing too??" Talking about serving the entire world! The first thing I said was, "Do any of you speak English?"

After a week I gathered enough points and got kicked out of the newbie section and to the RR European theater. That was the start of my AW life. Soon after, I went shopping for a squad to get in. The AW community was so big, I needed a close-knit group to talk to first. The first squad I got in unfortunately went under. The CO suddenly disappeared. Well, maybe it was a blessing in disguise, because, after that I was able to get into the best squad there is! And there I met Root, a bloody British (ah no offense intended there:))

The Nightmares Squadron, like some squads, offers a forum for its members where we can discuss freely what we think and give feedback to other members. There I did my best to contribute to provide input for the community we had. At the time I joined, we started moving to FR from RR, and needless to say there was a huge discussion on how to fly there. For starters, we discussed stick scaling. We had all sorts of suggestions . . . and I eventually ended up doing an analytical review of it, which is posted at my Web page the Dutchman's Den, http://member.nifty.ne.jp/flying_dutchman/.

While in FR, I picked a fight with anyone who I could get my hands on. One was `Cat, my mentor, an American living in the England at the time. I also had a shock of my life when I dueled a guy who started AW at about the same time I did and who I enjoyed dropping eggs on over his head in his flak. This guy was 7blue and he outdid me every time I went up. Devastated by this, I sought training which `Cat with Nowi and `Badz had offered and 7blue was already a regular. There I sat there listened, absorbed all I can. Since then 7blue, a German, and I, a Japanese, have been winging every chance we get. We haven't met in real life, though I hope to someday, and we are very good friends. That goes for all my squadmates, who I have the joy of flying with every week. Some us are from Germany as well.

My squad had a Member of the Month Contest, which was to emphasize Situation Awareness. (It is taking a break right now as the transition to AW3 had been difficult for many of us in many ways, unfortunately.) won the first one; I won the second; won the third. It was great fun for all of us and did wonders to our way of flying. RTB alive and carry those kills with you.

I also have another project going with and . We started an informal training course offered every other week in ACMs and Plane Characteristics. Anyone is welcome to join BTW ;)

and the Nightmares Squad had another project going which was to write up something for each plane on AW3. I did my share by writing on the FW190-D9. It is currently posted on 's site at: http://home.earthlink.net/~burmma/.

Writing the post on the Dora wasn't easy BTW. While I was writing, my wife saw me and said, "how could you write so much for a VIRTUAL plane!" Oh well . . . But this same wife offered me coffee and and something to eat when I had to wake up at 3AM for the scenario "Target: Germany". There I met a lot of nice people whom I never got a chance to meet, like Lurkr, LW and =JW=.

In the arena, I have the honor of frequently flying against Raven, -MLM-, and Soota, an Aussie and a southern neighbor on the Eastern Hemisphere.

Well, I could still go on and on about my life in the AW community. As you can see, I have met a lot of people from all over the world and will continue doing so. Needless to say, I have a lot of fun participating in this community and I am trying to give back what I absorbed. I hope you share the fun that I have!

CYA in the SKY!!

Flying Dutchman

=====End of Story=====

AW was in its prime then, I think, and the internet became much more common.  Then it got bought by EA.  A lot of the players were waiting on further developments which brought about AW3 and subsequently AW3 Millenium (which was no different from the original AW3).  We had an ongoing discussion on what to do... no developments seen in the game, none expected in the future, people just waiting and hanging on to hopes.  Of course, people went out shopping for other games, one of which was AH.  Our squad got divided into two games, however, fortunately or unfortunately, the choice was made for us... AW went under.  I made my transition to AH slightly before AW died.  Most of us made this transition... Badz is Badboy, LW is LoneWolf, Raven I think is still Raven, is BFD...

memories, memories, memories... nice, isn't it :)

Offline Adogg

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #52 on: August 24, 2004, 08:57:21 AM »
My story isn't great but it is a case of self discovery and a tribute to my willingness to slack-off at work.

Bordom at work leads to surfing and where else will a flight enthusiast roam but to flightsim.com.

It was about a year ago, I'd recently come off a stint of flying with a virtual airline - getting a feel for what a real ATP pilot might do, racking up some 500 hours online. But its boring being a virtual bus driver. And hey I can land a 747 in a crosswind with two engine failures while doing an ifr approach and not come out too badly. I needed a challenge and the standard Flight sim wasn't cutting it.

Then i came across an article on flightsim.com explaining the basic concept behind MMORGs and despite mentioning Air Warrior and Warbirds the author only provided a link to HTC. Small problem... i did't have a joystick - my control yoke - while sufficient for driving my airbus I knew wouldn't cut it.

Finally one week after getting my tax return I found a stick on sale and treated myself, ran, skipped and jumped home and downloaded Aces High 1 ... the rest, as they say is history.

Offline TBolt A-10

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #53 on: August 24, 2004, 09:24:54 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by FDutchmn

=====From GameStorm=====
GameStorm: Around the World

Air Warrior and its International Community: It's Bait and Getting Hooked

 


:lol  I still have the GameStorm t-shirt that someone sent me.  :)
My g/f almost threw it out one day.....oooooooh, that was a bad move.  :D

Offline slimm50

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #54 on: August 24, 2004, 09:38:31 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Grits
I was wandering around in a software shop in 1993 and stumbled upon a box that said "SVGA Air Warrior". It was on sale, and looked kinda interesting so I bought it. ...

Hey, I believe that's exactly how I got started! But I couldn't afford to play online at that time. So I flew offline until AW for AOL came out and the cost was manageable. Man, I don't know how many hours I spent fighting those AI planes offline before finally making it online. By that time I was OK at flying, but ACMs against real people was alot different than against drones. I despaired of ever getting a kill. And then the 69th Shepherd's Fold took me in. They taught me team work and helped me in many other ways. Well, when AW finally caved I was in another squad (the WildCards) by that time and we made the decision to go to AH (instead of WB). Never looked back.
« Last Edit: August 24, 2004, 09:41:06 AM by slimm50 »

Offline Odee

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #55 on: August 24, 2004, 09:45:06 AM »
Like a lot of you, I too was drawn to Air Warrior...  Managed to get into the beta for it back in GEnie daze.  Even managed to get Kelton Flynn to remodel the gunnery for the p-38 at the expense of a road trip to UVA (just down the road at the time), and my copy of "Fork Tailed Devil"  This was when I had the Atari 520-ST.

Top monthly bill when GEnie went live with it, was over $2000.oo USD :eek:   and that was just to GEnie...  The long distance call to Rockville, MD was the killer that nearly cost me my marriage.  So I had to relent and just go LAN connection to feed my flight addiction at weekly ATARI abusers meetings.

Eventually, the NET took off like wildfire, and I followed it like a moth.  Did all the hardcore flight sims; SWATL, BoB, AW2, Falcon... then, when I was doing some game reviews and previews, Warbirds was brought to my attention.  OMG, this was back in what... '94-'95? I think, maybe later.  Anyway, I managed to get into the Beta for that, found myself sayin "Jawesome!" with each new update and improvement...  Stayed active in WB until about '99-00.  (Hey!  I'm 51 and long term memories shot full of holes where years come in :(  )

I found Aces High when the "big split" happened over the move to NC for the WB staff.  Got into the Closed Beta, and stayed there ever until 2001.  Had a lot of furballs, and yeahr, I whined a bit in the early years under various names best left dead.  I remember the paper tailed Runstangs, and when HT found out he had the gravity or weight of the .50's set to 20mm after a bunch of us were ranting about the balistics...  (HT, I love ya man...  well, like a brother... ya know?  ;)   I wonder if HT remembers our argument over who first modeled tracers in online flight sims? :p   HT was the first to accurately model the tracers balistics folks... this is fact. :cool: )

Did the wooTooll (WW2-Online) beta also, and suffered through the disastrous launch for 6 months, before bowing out of there...  Now I hear it's gotten much better, so I might take a peek at the ground pounder side of the game there.

Why'd I leave AH?  Bought a new house, moved  60 miles further south of DC and the commutes were killing me...  Couldn't devote my usual 20 hours in flight every week... :(   Then too, I found some other MMOGs, and bounced around like the red headed stepchild I am, only to wind up back home again. :)   So now that money and time aren't issues, I expect to be flying the unfriendly CT skies once more...

And looking forward to the cat calls;  "Runstang, turn n fight!"  to which I reply, "Mom's calling!" :D

And that is how I got into AH...
~Nobodee~   Get Poached!
Elite: Dangerous ~ Cmd Odeed

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Offline Blammo

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #56 on: August 24, 2004, 09:56:15 AM »
Well, my whole family has an aviation background, so I have always been fascinated with flight and flightsims.  I flew my share of offline sims, but never tried anything online.

One night, many, many years ago, I saw a little piece on a TV show about an multiplayer flight sim and how they got all the old WW2 vets together to try it out.  It got me hooked.  Can't remember what it was, but it might have been Air Warrior.  However, I still did not have an outlet to pursue it.

In 1999, my son David was born.  I was fortunate enough to have a lot of time off so, with my wife's approval, I bought a brand new 500 MHz eMachine (woo hoo).  As I began exploring, I happened across the Warbirds site.  The download was free, so I started playing it.  I sucked, but I had such a good time that I decided to go live and fly online.  I died, and died, and then died some more, but I had a blast.

During my time with Warbirds I hooked up with the Screaming Death Squadron.  They specialized in JABO and base closer.  While I had come into the game wanting to be a fighter jock, I soon fell in love with the JABO and strike roll.  I can't remember how many hours I flew with LB, rebel, slpsht and cuda (I think that was his handle), but it was a blast.  I still sucked when it ended, but I was spending less time killing myself (doing stoooopid stuff) and more time getting killed by the bad guys.

Ultimately, I had more desire than I had money to fly.  That combined with other demands that were being placed on my life caused me to have to leave Warbirds.  However, right at the end, I spent some time testing out a new online flight sim that everyone was talking about.  It was a free download and free to beta test.  It didn't have many planes at the time, but I figured it was worth a shot.  That was my first introduction to Aces High.  That was in early 2000.

I had to leave all the online stuff for some time.  Various financial considerations and all that.

In late 2002 a colleage of mine (who didn't even fly sims, but knew I liked them) turned me on to Fighter Ace.  I ordered the CD to get the 90 days free.  Once again, I loved it.  Powered with my AMD 1700+ PC and DSL it was a much more enjoyable experience.  I would spend hours online flying, kill, dying.  However, I never found a squad I really wanted to hook up with.  Because of that I closed out my account in 2003.

During the summer I won a free month on Warbirds during one of their free weekends.  It was like old times, but, of course, a lot of the old faces were missing and, having a different handle, most people didn't remember me.  Oh well, it was great.  However, much as I wanted it to be, at the end of the free month there was just not enough there to make me want to stay.  The numbers were way down.  There squads didn't seem as welcoming and there was just way to much silly stuff (like these two guys that were fighting in the arena so when I tried to help the friendly, he kept coming after me for the next half hour until I logged).  Anyway, I let the free period run out and have not played Warbirds online since.

Well, early this year the itch got me again.  I had just built a brand new PC and broke out my fighter and flight sims again to get my fix.  It was great for a while, but it just didn't cut it.  I went through the rollodex in my head of the online flight sims and decided (after monitoring all the various boards) that since I had not tried the current version of Aces High and since they were showing the greatest numbers on at any time, I would give them a try.  I downloaded the game, fly it offline for a bit and when I coulding stand it any more...went to my wife to beg her to let me pay for a subscription...lol.  Being the sweet woman she is, she consented.

I set everything up, logged on for the first time, and with few exceptions I have been going strong ever since.  I fly exclusively for Knightopia in the MA and probably will until I leave or they permenantly do away with the Knights.

After being on flying lone wolf for about 2 weeks, I was asked by JAMX if I wanted to join the Nasty Dead Men.  They had a two week evaluation time (for me and for them) so I figured I would give it a shot.  They are a great group of guys and I have learned an awful lot with them during squad and training nights.  KODA is the CO and I have move from peon (lol) to XO.

Anyway, that's my story and I'm stickin to it.

I really enjoy AH.  It has some bugs and its share of whiners, dweebs, prima donas and like, but it is a good experience and there are a lot of good people on here.  My recent experience during my sons disappearance proved that.  Not many people know this but I posted the information about my son disappearing on the AH board here because I knew there were all sorts of people from all walks of life that would be will to help.  That is the confidence I have it you guys (and gals).

Well, hope I didn't put you all to sleep.

Be seeing you in the virtual skies of AH! :aok
BLAMM0 - FACTA, NON VERBA!

Offline Charon

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #57 on: August 24, 2004, 10:52:01 AM »
I suppose you could trace it all back to a few barely playable (1-2 Seconds Per Frame) wire-frame missions of Airfight on the Plato system in the late 1970s, and most of the early boxed flight combat sims for the Apple 2 and PC starting in the late 1980s. Somehow, around 1993 I came across SVGA Air Warrior, which I played H2H with my roommate at the time (Yyrkoon) for about 6 months using a null modem connection and with a buddy from HS (Rutger, who still flys) and a few other friends. Made the move to the online arena using the cost-effective Delphi service, and realized how far I had to go to be competitive in an arena environment. I was pretty good on the actual 1-1 dogfighting, but there was very little 1-1 dogfighting and the whole SA thing was a major hurdle along with the finer points of energy management, which the human opponents easily exploited.

Transitioned to CRIS net when it came along (even more affordable), joined Genie with the absolute minimum plan ONLY to get access to the community support/combat tutorial materials (I seem to remember a few by Pyro). The goal was to get that positive K/D with a primarily stallfighting orientation -- which after a number of painful months eventually arrived. Managed to spend under $40 most months (20/20 plan) but had the occasional $200 month. Played FR, where a good night would have 70 people in the arena and you could find about 7 online at 9:00 on a Saturday morning. It was a fighting arena at the time (the limited “central/neutral” base capture was used to get closer to the furball action) so when the numbers were in the single digits you spent your time encouraging fair fights 1-1/1-2/2-3 or whatever, and you didn’t vulch (“I’ll give you wheels up a 2,000 feet) or gangbang because you didn’t want the limited opposition to get peeved and take his/her ball and go home :)

Followed AW to AOL and Win 95 (had to make the big upgrade to a Pentium 166 and a 3d Virge graphics card because of the performance hit from 95, but the game was free and essentially the same. And then came Gamestorm. I flew in the first “Bigweek” mission of the transition as a p-47 pilot (early CTD after takeoff) and was able to reup in as part of a p-38 flight to experience a full server crash right as I started diving in on some FWs. Flew 1-2 beta sorties and took a year off to let them sort out the system and to get rid of some personal burn out. When I came back it was a different game.

The central neutral capture model was gone (I believe Moggy said there were too many players to allow that kind of concentration with the existing server code). It was replaced by a huge “Big PAC” map with much enhanced land grab. There were also far greater numbers. On my first mission I followed a high P-51 for two sectors waiting for him to engage (a year earlier and a similar pilot would have engaged with agression 90 percent of the time, and engaged with caution the other 10 percent).  He ended up dying dive bombing a base with me unable to catch up as the only human opposition within 2 sectors. It was so odd I even e-mailed my buddy Yyrkoon who had also stopped playing about a year or so earlier. It quickly became obvious that this was a new game. You would have large groups from each country off in a corner of a map steamrollering bases with little opposition. Most of the familiar faces were gone (to WB likely) as was most of the fighting spirit of the SVGA and AOL days.

I can remember flying 2-3 sectors in a maxed fuel KI-84 just to try and catch a few enemies alone or in smaller numbers on their way to and from a poorly defended or undefended target. Fuel porking two sectors deep was common (then other forms of base porking when that was addressed). Furball Island provided somewhat of a solution some of the time, but during the last 18 months I was there I pretty much only flew in scenarios and maybe 2 hours a month in the arena (if I flew at all). The EA move didn’t change a thing, and even added poor customer service to the mix. This style of gameplay is what led me to AH. Helped along by an EA board moderator who said (paraphrase): “You should be thankful that EA even keeps the game running, you undeserving little peons). I started looking for a new home that day and found it here several months before EA made the big announcement.

If this sounds like some transition into a slam on AH… It’s not. The current gameplay has shifted in that direction, but even at its occasional worst AH steamrollering and porkage only reaches the average level of Gamestorm/EA. You can still, if you’re willing, switch sides and move around a bit to find a good, old school fight here or there most of the time.  

Also, what some of the newer online sim players may not realize, is that in the 8 years I played AW I saw far less development than in AH. Perhaps 8-9 new planes/models total (and none for years at a time), one significant graphics upgrade, no significant flight/damage model upgrade. You might complain that the FW-190 A5 is 5mph slower at SL than it should be in AH (according to this or that data) but you don’t see B-17s out turning Zeroes without losing E, etc. For me, AH2 has been bug free and fantastic. The KI-84 will bring it all home. So it’s not a slam on the HTC folks at all, but gameplay is something I certainly evaluate as part of my customer decision every time I fly. So far, well worth the $14.95.

Charon
« Last Edit: August 24, 2004, 04:29:13 PM by Charon »

Offline Paul33

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #58 on: August 24, 2004, 10:57:04 AM »
Been interested in flight sims since I was 11. Was looking for a good WW2 flight sim through Cnet a while back in June 2003. I found Aces High, downloaded it, played the 2 weeks out, and ended up paying the $14.99 a month. My handle back then in July was Paul33.

OoO I quickly became an AHAddict. I bought a Siatek X45 and logged in over 120 hours my first month. I also quickly realized that the learning curve was very high. So I used my useful brain to learn, study, and then try out what the better pilot's were doing. You could say my life was the Training Arena and Dueling Arena. My time eventually paid off... In just my second month of playing I had over 1,030 Kills in a fighter (August 03).

Then one very dissapointing day, my parents realized and decided my real life wasn't getting enough attention. They pulled the plug. (Your thinking, HOW COULD THEY??!!) Well, I thought the same way. So I found my beat up computer in the shed 4 months later, took it apart, and put it back together. I quickly looked for my addiction, clicked the little AH icon and tried to get back in only to find that my account was closed :( . But no worries, I asked my parents for a credit card and got back to playing in March 04. My new handle was Paul3333.

Then Art(artlaw) started making fun of my new name a week later and offered that I take a name he was holding, Paul. I thankfully took the offer and was on my way again into living the AH lifesyle.

The first squad I ever joined was with Spitfly. It was just me and him. I got bored with his squad and left looking for another more structured one. Then I met Chaingun, BigB717, 616766 (616Fubar), and the CO, which I cant remember his name, in the DA. I started to fly with them, shooting them down with my mouse, until they asked that I join their squad. I hung in there for a week and then left since it wasn't what I was quite looking for. Well a couple days after, I was flying with bulll in the DA when Damnname came in and started shooting at us. Being the Spit fighter pilot that I am, I upped my indestructable Spit-V and shot down damnname. Being the smart man Damnname is, he asked if I could join his squad, ~~~FATE~~~ Been there ever since  :aok  

The game might be good, but the people are what makes this game great.

HTC! :aok

-Paul
« Last Edit: August 24, 2004, 01:40:02 PM by Paul33 »

Offline Boat

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How did you get started in Aces High?
« Reply #59 on: August 24, 2004, 11:45:43 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Halo
In ye olde 1980s days of Atari ST (4k memory!) was browsing a shareware rack and found a plain little floppy with Air Warrior typed on it.  

 


Like Halo I started in AW a long time ago on an  Atari ST logged into Genie.  I got hooked on the concept of fighting real people and was seriously addicted for awhile which was a pretty expensive addiction at hourly rates.

I got away from it for some years and missed the whole AOL era. During that time I was flying Red Baron on and off line. When I rediscovered AW I found a great buch of guys in the Ghosts Squad.  The squad broke up when AW died and Aces High became the place to be but we reformed when enough of us got onboard.

Air Warrior broke real ground in this kind of simulation  but AH and technology have brought it to a whole new level.

Damn. With all this experience I should be a lot better stick!