Hangaroo is still available on a couple of sites. And there's been a Star Trek Hangman game going on TrekBBS for years (in the Admirals' Lounge, a mere 11,000 posts needed to access it). Which reminds me that the people who were supposed to take over from me haven't posted in 4 days, and the rules say they have to post within 48 hours. So I have to either go on down the list for another person, or I might just post another one to get the game moving again. The idea is that you have to figure out lines of dialogue from the shows or movies, which can be really short, really long, involve just one character or multiple characters. There are a couple of transcript sites we use to verify the accuracy.
Wait, who had a Magnavox Odyssey?
I am just curious about everyone's gaming roots. Sorry to hijack.
Who played Avalon Hill wargames?
Back in the late '80s/early '90s there were some of us in the local SCA who would have either a Saturday or a holiday evening (ie. New Year's Eve) of playing the Civilization board game.
I still have fond memories of the time I was playing with a couple of guys (my boyfriend at the time and the guy who owned the game) who were so determined to beat each other down to bare scorched earth that they didn't notice me quietly sneaking up the middle, acquiring more tech in the trading round, building another city here, another there... and on the last turn I slipped a Civil Disorder card into the trading round.
You need a good poker face to pull off a successful Disaster in the trading round, and my boyfriend never saw it coming. Boom. He lost half his cities, and I gained enough tech and points to win.
The other guy wasn't used to losing that game, and I was afraid he'd be upset. But this time he took one look at the

expression on my boyfriend's face, and beamed at me: "Beautiful! Just BEAUTIFUL!"
That's one of the most satisfying game wins I've ever had, because while I really enjoy that game, I'm not that skilled with strategy or pulling off those sneaky moves. And of course if you get hit with multiple disasters in the same turn, it can be impossible to recover.
The last time I played this game was in a PBEM Yahoo group. Annoyingly, the group broke up during the second-last turn, since our host up and vanished. We never did finish. I was in no danger of winning, but would have liked to see how far I could have gotten.
I tried. My best friend's older brother owned some. We tried. But the rule books were like 32-pages long. Reading that much was not beyond us, but taking it in so as to imagine how you would strategize within a game was. I'd like to try it again some time. I never see the games around.
It's a learning curve, definitely. But even after learning a game thoroughly, I always kept the rule books handy, whether we were playing one of the Mayfair rail games, Diplomacy, or whatever else.
I have played a computer adaptation of Avalon Hill's Civilization.
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But back then I was using XP, and the game was infamously bugged.
Definitely not as attractive as the real board game, but better than nothing, I suppose.
I played lots of games before that. Zork (1 & 2), Dragon's Lair (1 & 2), Microdot, War in Middle Earth, Rick Dangerous, Populous (1 & 2), Sim City, Bubble Bobble, Rainbow Islands, Turrican, Midwinter, Golden Axe, Lemmings (1 & 2), Shadow of the Beast, Syndicate, Elite II: Frontier - why, even Civ 1 - all kept me going for many hours. All released before Doom. I'm sure I've forgotten a whole lot more, too!
I bought the Zork games on Steam last year. I really wish the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy game could be available. I had it for the Amiga, and never did manage to get off Earth before the Vogons came. There's so much of that game I never got to play because I kept dying!
I had Civ I, as well. A French trireme took out my battle cruiser, so I can completely sympathize with this situation:
I played a lot of Steve Moraff's games in the late 80s until Civ came out.
You mean the board games? If so, I had them all beginning with the original Gettysburg and Tactics II. On a computer i played the SSI wargames and the TalonSoft Battleground series. I was a consultant and playtester on their Borodino game Napoleon in Russia.
Those Moraff games were a hoot. I could never play Ringjongg without thinking about donuts.
Anyway, to answer the OP's question... my gaming habits are pretty tame in comparison to everyone else's here. Last week I cautiously took the plunge into online multiplayer gaming... with Cluedo. So now I can say I did it, got the Steam achievement, and after one more multiplayer one when an invitation popped up, I went back to solo gaming. I don't like the sense of having to hurry.
Awhile back I joined the admin staff of a Fighting Fantasy group on FB, and it's nice to swap stories and tips with veteran players (the game turned 40 recent-ish and I played it from the get-go) and help out the new players. I've still got plenty of the gamebooks I haven't solved, so I've been thinking about digging out the graph paper, pencils, and trying to find a couple of d6 and seeing if I can solve any of the later ones or the ones that kept killing me earlier. These gamebooks are available on Steam, but after trying a couple I've concluded that I prefer the physical books, and making my own character sheets, charts, and maps.