rdeford wrote:
After a look, I realized that most of my H3 maps were on an old Mac computer I donated to a good cause many years ago. I believe a couple survived on a ancient Windows lap top I gave to a friend's kids to play with, but they are not my best work. Anyway, I will see if I can rescue and revive them for your archive, if the kids haven't lost or ruined my H3 disks that is..
Well, neighbor, I'm glad you donated the computer rather than use it as landfill.
If you can get the maps, no hurry, that would be cool. Despite what many people think, H3 is still huge all over the world. 5100 members on 10 sites that are 2 1/2 years old ain't too bad! So, your maps would get played.
rdeford wrote:Hummmm... you've started me thinking...
Yeah, I drew a blank for a story, So history lessons are fun for me. And, apparently, others think so too.
rdeford wrote:I would love to see an old pro like you making and playing H5 maps, especially my maps. BTW, I built my current computer myself to save money. My old one, which barely ran Morrowind, wouldn't run Oblivion or H5. I am sure glad I did it because it runs both games, and I just love H5. And, don't pay a lot of attention to the H5 editor's many detractors. Once you get past the learning curve, it isn't so bad, especially if you are someone with Byte in their name. The scripting language opens up almost infinite possibilities, and creating the 3D landscape is a pleasure. My first H5 map, The Virgin of Ponce, Episode 1, was so much fun to make that I could barely sleep at night until I finished it.
It'll be awhile before I get H5. I'm still getting used to H4. I'm slow, I know, but finances are upon other urgent acts, so newer games and lack of high end computers hold me back a bit.
But I know the feeling of when you are making maps with something new. Because that's how it was for me with the combination of the H4 Utility and Equilibrus. Up all night making these 4 maps. It was fun to do, and the people helping me test and changing things made it feel like a real team deal. In other words it was all involving and an interesting experience.