>It's 1998
>You go to school
>You turn on the computer
>See this logo
What are you playing?
>>387963740
SIM
ANT
Woah shit, nostalgia
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vBPg22n6gwU
Nothing. I won't even be born for another year.
>>387964359
>Kids born in 1999 are now old enough to post on /v/
>Kids born the time you graduated from High School are now old enough to post on /v/
Congratulations. You've made me feel old.
>1998
I was playing this in 1993, although our shitty teacher wouldn't let us use the 'Let Me Play' option unless it was free time. Our computer lab teacher made a couple of us copies using an ancient CD writer tower, so I could do it whenever I wanted at home
>>387963993
MY BONNIE LIES OVER THE OCEAN
But I think they said body because ghosts were singing it.
>>387963993
Lowkey scary nostalgia
But I didn't start school until 99
DK stuff was absolutely patrician edutainment
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bbQg1jT7GKE
>>387964840
I think I had one of those books too
>>387963740
I've never seen that in my life
To be fair in 1998 I was like 2
Why were the nineties so great /v/?
>>387963740
man i remember having the sample CD of practically all of the software. that and the learning company games.
>>387966547
The future seemed bright and inviting, everyone was full of hope that so many solutions to the great problems of civilization were right around the corner, and the culture reflected that.
>>387966547
>>387966683
Pro wrestling reached its cultural nexus in the late 90's because being an anti-authority badass like Stone Cold didn't seem like a big deal.
>>387966547
I remember that part in the nineties where putting talking animals in movies/shows where as big as superhero movies now.
green eggs and ham fuckers
anyone know the british pc game where you did different stuff for each level
like one stage you'd be sawing logs to build a raft
the next stage you'd be diffusing a bomb
circa 1997-2000 i played this shit at school
>>387963740
>1998
DOS, last senior highschool year, we used to write basic programs like a calculator and shit, and when the teacher went out we printed nudes of Pamela Anderson with the dot matrix printer in the room. I think one of those is still folded in one of my notebooks.
>>387966867
We really liked talking babies, considering the Look Who's Talking trilogy and Rugrats. Talking object movies like Toy Story 1 and 2 as well.