What videogame jumps into your mind when you think of couch multiplayer?

Halo? Goldeneye? Overcooked?

For me, couch multiplayer gaming will always be California Games. It was a game that my friends and I played endlessly back in 1989. Couldn’t get enough of it… To this day, it remains one of my favourite Sega Master System games.

It also got a ton of ports… but were are any of them any good?

Join the hack and find out, my dude…

The C64 version of California Game

California Games was originally developed by Epyx for the C64 and Apple IIe. It’s an event-based sport sim, of the kind that was popular in the late 80s. Think Hyper Sports, but with more 'tude.

Events included: half-pipe, foot bag (hacky sack), surfing, skating, BMX and flying disk (frisbee). Each involves various combinations of skilful control and button mashing.

Overall, it’s colourful and moreish, with just the right mix of DudeBro and SportsBro…

Let’s start with the original C64 port.

Honestly, it’s hard to overstate how much better this version is than the other 8-bit micros. It has it all - smooth controls, relatively colourful graphics, great sound. It also has far more interstitial graphics and menus than the others, as well as the “correct” list of sponsors.

Some events are better than others - half-pipe is terrible, no matter which version it’s on; while surfing is a lot of fun.

Overall it’s still worth a look today.

The Spectrum version of California Games

At the other end of the quality spectrum, is the actual Spectrum. Crash Magazine gave this version 36%, and I think that was somewhat generous.

The graphics ruin this one, lacking even that classic Speccy-charm. One event in particular (BMX) looks like a borderline hate-crime. Sound is nonexistent, all of the colour and life has gone from the menus and control is pretty terrible.

Buuuut, all the events are in there, and it moves reasonably well… So it could have been worse, I suppose…

The Amstrad version of California Games

Speaking of “worse”, we come to the Amstrad version…

Oh boy.

Basically, it’s the Spectrum version, with a bit more colour and a lot less speed.

The lack of speed really ruins this one, making it the sick relative of the already ailing Speccy port. It just makes the timing impossible… foot bag is suddenly painful, half-pipe ends up being impossible. Even surfing loses any joy.

And, for some reason, the foot bag character is an out-of-shape, middle-aged man in a vest… This isn’t the escapism I’m looking for in my games!

Sorry Amstrad fans.

The Amiga version of California Games

Next up is the Amiga version.

Not a lot to say about this one. It’s the C64 with a 16-bit lick of paint. It has the full menus and sponsors, some really funky Amiga-esque music, and generally plays well. Flying disk swaps a lady thrower for a buff dude, but that’s about the only difference.

A good, solid port.

The Sega Master System of California Games

My personal favourite is the Sega Master System port. Something about this game really fits the Sega blue-sky aesthetic.

The addition of a second joystick button adds some much-needed flexibility to the BMX event, and the console fluidity helps the timing on the half-pipe and foot bag events, making them both far more enjoyable.

If you’re going to play California Games, this wouldn’t be a terrible place to start.

The NES version of California Games

There’s a NES port as well, which has all of the elements of the game, but just doesn’t feel as “together” as the SMS version. It’s a lot more drab, and the controls feel fiddly in places.

Also, in the flying disk event, you seem to be throwing to your mum. And she doesn’t look at all happy with you.

Overall, not terrible, not brilliant.

The Megadrive version of California Games

The MegaDrive version pretties up the graphics a lot, being by far the best looking port. Unfortunately, it seems to lose something of the simplistic charm of the game. It goes it’s own way on sound and presentation in a lot of places as well. It also, bizarrely, omits the flying disk event…

It’s not a bad port by any means, it just feels like more of a re-imagining rather than a remastering.

The Atari Lynx version of California Games

If you lived your late 80s teenage life in computer magazines, as I did, you’ll probably have an imprinted recollection of Californa Games on the Atari Lynx. It seemed to be the game that was running in all the photographs - that or Blue Lightning.

This port cuts the events down to four, losing Skating and Flying Disk. It has it’s own aesthetic and some funky scaling effects. And surfing goes to the left, weirdly. Overall, it controls and plays really well.

The Atari 2600 version of California Games

Finally, and most surprisingly, the Atari 2600 got a port, probably one of the last games to be released for the system. And, somehow, it isn’t terrible!

Don’t get me wrong, it is cut back significantly, and some of the events are unrecognisable (BMX for example). But it plays like California Games, and it feels a bit like California Games.

It’s something of a miracle that it exists at all really… but if you were somehow still on Team 2600 in the late 80s, this would have brightened your day.

If you’re going to play one version: give the C64 port a go!

  • AcornCarnage@whatyoulike.club
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    1 year ago

    To me California Games IS a Lynx game. Not that I haven’t tried it on other platforms. It just doesn’t feel as right as it did on the Lynx hardware.

    Nice write up!

    • strongarm@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year ago

      Yeah I played the hell out of this on my friends Atari Lynx, this and Ramparts. The graphics in California Games were lush on that brilliant little screen.

      The Lynx is the Neo Geo of handhelds

  • busydoinnothin@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Played this on c64 and nes and absolutely loved it! I think surfing was my favorite event but really any event was my fav at any given moment. Played it recently on my nes emulator and it’s still as fun.

    • Num10ck@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      you might want to check out Surfy on ios, which is inspired by the surfing event in california games.

      also does anyone remember the c64 game T&C Surf Designs? from the Town and Country surf label…

      • busydoinnothin@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        I’ll have to check it out, and I definitely remember t&c, played that on nes as well! The cover is so vivid, with the gorilla surfing wearing shades, ha!

    • Lemmy.ml@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      There was Winter Games and Summer Games as well, although I’m not sure who made those.

      And wasn’t there a PC port of CG, as well? I’m somewhat sure I’ve played it on some amber screen at some point…

      • xycu@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        The “Games” series was made by Epyx. First was Summer Games, followed by Summer Games 2, Winter Games, World Games, California Games, and California Games 2. They also released The Games: Summer Edition and The Games: Winter Excision. All of these games follow the same basic format.

        California Games did have some more versions, Apple II, Apple IIGS, DOS, MSX, Atari ST etc.

  • Data's Cat Spot@startrek.website
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    1 year ago

    Great write up! I’m amazed that I’ve never played this game. Although the first consoles that I played were the NES and especially the SNES, so maybe I was born too late.

  • AncillaryJustice@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Wow, I totally forgot about this one. I used to play it all the time when I was a kid. I think I bonded with it because my family moved to California around that time and I had trouble fitting in (a-la Daniel-san), so I think partially it was my way of simulating being a native as silly as that sounds. Anyway, I had the NES version, but your write-up is making me want to try a Sega ROM of it. Thanks for the nostalgia blast!

    • Dave@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      It’s intriguing to hear that this game was used as a teaching tool to help kids learn the ways of Californian culture :)

      • AncillaryJustice@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I mean, I didn’t take notes or anything, but given how much I played, looking back I think it was some sort of coping mechanism. Moving can be tough on kids.

  • beforan@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    An absolute classic of the C64 for me. That version really does shine, though the Master System also looks great!

    I feel the Amiga (can you tell we were a Commodore family?) looks put to shame by the Mega Drive a little, for the 16bit ones, but it’s interesting to hear your thoughts on it being more like a reimagining.

    Thanks so much for doing these write ups, they’re really fascinating and in depth.

  • Statlerwaldorf@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    I remember renting the NES version from the grocery store 30+ years ago. I remember the half pipe was a pain to control, BMX and Hacky Sack played well, and if you went over the top of the wave on surfing, the Jaws theme would play and a shark would show up. Can’t remember if that was every time or just occasionally.

  • doofy77@aussie.zone
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    1 year ago

    Master System version for me. That seagull in the footbag event. Also that neck break after axing yourself on the front flip in the BMX event.

  • demonsword@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    you nailed the multiplayer thing, I remember being a kid and being in a room with five other brats playing this game all day :)

  • BlueSquid0741@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    I loved Summer Games, Winter Games and World Games on c64. But I never played California Games until I got it on Mega Drive.

    Works Games is also fun on Master System, but I think the c64 version beats it slightly.

  • Stiltonfondu@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I’ve played the Lynx version most out of these and it’s probably my most played game on the various retro handhelds I’ve owned. Especially BMXing I just love it

  • jonne@infosec.pub
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    1 year ago

    I had it on PC, it was definitely fun, but with some events like surfing it was sometimes hard to tell what was going on on a monochrome display.

    Especially surfing didn’t make sense to me at all, having no concept of what a pipeline was.