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 Home » OlderGeeks.com Freeware Downloads » Searching Files   
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  File Name Rating Downloads
Last Update/Developer
525 DOS Games From The 1980s
525 DOS Games From The 1980s One giant zip file containing all of the games in this list. Run on an old computer or in a DOS virtual machine. See Virtualization Software in our download section. 007 - Licence To Kill (1989) (Quixel) 10th Frame Bowling (1988) (Access) [v2] 20000 Leagues Under the Sea (1988) (Coktel Vision) 2400 A.D. (1988) (Origin Systems) 3-Demon (1983) (PC Research Inc) 4th and Inches (1987) (Accolade) 4x4 Off-Road Racing (1988) (Epyx) 8088 Othello (1985) (M.W. Bayley) A Mind Forever Voyaging (1985) (Infocom) A Nightmare on Elm Street (1989) (Westwood Studios) A-Maze (1989) (Wizard Games) A10 Tank Killer (1989) (Dynamix) Aaargh! (1988) (Arcadia) Ace (1987) (Cascade) Ace 2 (1987) (Cascade) Ace of Aces (1987) (Artech) Action Fighter (1989) (Core Design) Action in the North Atlantic (1989) (General Quarters) Adventure Construction Set (1987) (Electronic Arts) Adventures in Math (1983) (IBM) [v1.00] Adventures in Serenia (1986) (Sierra) African Raiders-01 (1986) (Tomahawk) Afterburner (1989) (Unlimited Software) Air Trax (1983) (Presearch Incorporated) Airball (1987) (MicroDeal) Airborne Ranger (1988) (MPS Labs) Aldo Again (1989) (David & Benjamin Ibach) Aldo's Adventure (1987) (David & Benjamin Ibach) Alf (1988) (Alien Productions) Alice in Wonderland (1989) (Robin Johnson) Alien Syndrome (1987) (Sega) Alley Cat (1984) (Synapse) Alter Ego - Female (1983) (Activision) Alter Ego - Male (1983) (Activision) Amazing Maze (1983) (Donovan W. Foster) [v1.2] Amnesia (1986) (Cognetics Corporation) Ancient Land of Ys (1989) (Kyodai) Andromeda Conquest (1982) (Avalon Hill) Annals of Rome (1986) (PSS) Antarctic Adventure (1984) (Friends Software) Anti-Ballistic-Missile (1982) (Davis Disk) AntiXonix (1985) (D. Pavlovsky) Apache Strike (1989) (Activision) Arcade Volleyball (1988) (Vladimir Zakharov) Archipelagos (1989) (Logotron) Archon (1984) (Mission Accomplished) Arctic Fox (1986) (Dynamix) Arkanoid (1988) (Taito) Arkanoid 2 - Revenge of Doh (1989) (Taito) Arnhem (1985) (Cases Computer Simulations) Aspar GP Master (1989) (Dinamic) Astro Blaster (1988) (Rolf Franzon) Astrotit (1987) (Rudeware) Autoduel (1988) (MicroMagic) Avoid the Noid (1989) (BlueSky Software) [cga] Avoid the Noid (1989) (BlueSky Software) [ega] Axe of Rage (1989) (Palace Software) Backgammon (1987) (ShareData) Bad Cat (1988) (Rainbow Arts) Bad Street Brawler (1987) (Beam Software) Ballyhoo (1986) (Infocom) Barbarian (1989) (Mastertronic) Barbarian 2 (1989) (Palace Software) Batalia (1986) (The Right Brothers) Batman - The Caped Crusader (1988) (Ocean) Battle ...
5/5 7,769 Oct 06, 2023
Various <img src="https://www.oldergeeks.com/downloads/gallery/thumbs/SilentService_th.png"border="0">
BZFlag v2.4.18 for Mac
BZFlag v2.4.18 for Mac BZFlag is a 3D multi-player tank battle game that lets users to play against each other over a network. There are five teams: red, green, blue, purple and rogue (rogue tanks are black). Destroying a player on another team scores a win; being destroyed or destroying a teammate scores a loss. Rogues have no teammates (not even other rogues), so they cannot shoot teammates and they do not have a team score. There are two main styles of play: capture-the-flag and free-for-all. In capture-the-flag, each team (except rogues) has a team base and a team flag. The object is to capture an enemy team's flag by bringing it to your team's base. This destroys every player on the captured team, subtracts one from that team's score, and adds one to your team's score. In free-for-all, there are no team flags or team bases. The object is simply to get as high a score as possible. History of BZFlag (as told by ChrisSchoeneman) BZFlag began back in 1992 while I was a Masters student at the Cornell Program of Computer Graphics. I was an intern at SGI for the summers of '90 and '91, working on a prototype Indigo during the second summer which was a blast. So by 1992, IRIS GL was an old friend. At the Cornell PCG, essentially the only computers available were HP 700 series workstations. While CRX-24Z graphics wasn't too bad (around XS24-Z performance), HP's graphics library, Starbase, wasn't quite as easy to use as IRIS GL. In the words of fellow student Rick Pasetto, "Starbase sucks rocks." As a result, very few students wrote interactive graphics tools to assist their research. If you wanted to make an image you usually had to at least ray trace it. So Rick and I wrote an IRIS GL-like ...
5/5 5,473 Jan 05, 2020
Scott Wichser <img src="https://www.oldergeeks.com/downloads/gallery/thumbs/BZFlag1_th.png"border="0">
BZFlag v2.4.18 for Windows
BZFlag v2.4.18 for Windows BZFlag is a 3D multi-player tank battle game that lets users to play against each other over a network. There are five teams: red, green, blue, purple and rogue (rogue tanks are black). Destroying a player on another team scores a win; being destroyed or destroying a teammate scores a loss. Rogues have no teammates (not even other rogues), so they cannot shoot teammates and they do not have a team score. There are two main styles of play: capture-the-flag and free-for-all. In capture-the-flag, each team (except rogues) has a team base and a team flag. The object is to capture an enemy team's flag by bringing it to your team's base. This destroys every player on the captured team, subtracts one from that team's score, and adds one to your team's score. In free-for-all, there are no team flags or team bases. The object is simply to get as high a score as possible. History of BZFlag (as told by ChrisSchoeneman) BZFlag began back in 1992 while I was a Masters student at the Cornell Program of Computer Graphics. I was an intern at SGI for the summers of '90 and '91, working on a prototype Indigo during the second summer which was a blast. So by 1992, IRIS GL was an old friend. At the Cornell PCG, essentially the only computers available were HP 700 series workstations. While CRX-24Z graphics wasn't too bad (around XS24-Z performance), HP's graphics library, Starbase, wasn't quite as easy to use as IRIS GL. In the words of fellow student Rick Pasetto, "Starbase sucks rocks." As a result, very few students wrote interactive graphics tools to assist their research. If you wanted to make an image you usually had to at least ray trace it. So Rick and I wrote an IRIS GL-like ...
5/5 5,500 Jan 05, 2020
Scott Wichser <img src="https://www.oldergeeks.com/downloads/gallery/thumbs/BZFlag1_th.png"border="0">
FMIT (Free Music Instrument Tuner) v1.2.13 (Mac)
FMIT (Free Music Instrument Tuner) v1.2.13 (Mac) FMIT (Free Music Instrument Tuner) is a graphical utility for tuning your musical instruments, with error and volume history and advanced features. Features Estimation of the fundamental frequency (f0) of an audio signal, in real-time. (the f0, not the perceived pitch) Waveform shape Harmonics ratios Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT) Microtonal tuning (supports scala file format) Statistics All views are optional so that the interface can be as simple as possible. (make it easy to see on a distant screen) Can support OSS, ALSA, PortAudio and Jack sound systems. Credits Developing an open-source software would be impossible without external, direct or indirect help. Thus, 1000 Thanks to the following geeks: Florian Hars for the tunning scales; Arnout Engelen for the JACK issues; John Anderson for the microtonal module idea; Scott Bahling for the scales in cents; Jacob Shapiro for his help to make FMIT working under Windows/Cygwin. Translators: Omega9 (Russian), skarmoutsosv (Greek), Pindaro (Portuguese), Florian Maier (German). Packagers: Toni Graffy and all the PackMan team, Ludovic Reslinger, Edward Tomasz Napierala, John Wright, dsboger. Disclaimer: This software comes with no warranties of any kind and the copyright owner and contributors can be liable for nothing. the simplest configuration with volume view and previous notes shown with the microtonal view statistics module wave form view harmonics view DFT module settings: general settings: capture settings: analysis Version 1.2.13 New note names: Hindustani, Byzantine Use unicode flat and sharp signs. Use custom save settings and pause icons that better fits the other icons design. Flexible transposition key selection. Added symbolic icon for high-contrast setup. Switch to Weblate for translation: https://hosted.weblate.org/projects/fmit/ Added translation for application information. Click here to visit the author's website.
5/5 4,872 Oct 03, 2019
Gilles Degottex <img src="https://www.oldergeeks.com/downloads/gallery/thumbs/FMIT2_th.png"border="0">
FMIT (Free Music Instrument Tuner) v1.2.13 (Windows)
FMIT (Free Music Instrument Tuner) v1.2.13 (Windows) FMIT (Free Music Instrument Tuner) is a graphical utility for tuning your musical instruments, with error and volume history and advanced features. Features Estimation of the fundamental frequency (f0) of an audio signal, in real-time. (the f0, not the perceived pitch) Waveform shape Harmonics ratios Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT) Microtonal tuning (supports scala file format) Statistics All views are optional so that the interface can be as simple as possible. (make it easy to see on a distant screen) Can support OSS, ALSA, PortAudio and Jack sound systems. Credits Developing an open-source software would be impossible without external, direct or indirect help. Thus, 1000 Thanks to the following geeks: Florian Hars for the tunning scales; Arnout Engelen for the JACK issues; John Anderson for the microtonal module idea; Scott Bahling for the scales in cents; Jacob Shapiro for his help to make FMIT working under Windows/Cygwin. Translators: Omega9 (Russian), skarmoutsosv (Greek), Pindaro (Portuguese), Florian Maier (German). Packagers: Toni Graffy and all the PackMan team, Ludovic Reslinger, Edward Tomasz Napierala, John Wright, dsboger. Disclaimer: This software comes with no warranties of any kind and the copyright owner and contributors can be liable for nothing. the simplest configuration with volume view and previous notes shown with the microtonal view statistics module wave form view harmonics view DFT module settings: general settings: capture settings: analysis Version 1.2.13 New note names: Hindustani, Byzantine Use unicode flat and sharp signs. Use custom save settings and pause icons that better fits the other icons design. Flexible transposition key selection. Added symbolic icon for high-contrast setup. Switch to Weblate for translation: https://hosted.weblate.org/projects/fmit/ Added translation for application information. Click here to visit the author's website.
5/5 5,787 Oct 03, 2019
Gilles Degottex <img src="https://www.oldergeeks.com/downloads/gallery/thumbs/FMIT2_th.png"border="0">
lessmsi v1.10.0
lessmsi v1.10.0 A free tool to view and extract the contents of a Windows Installer (.msi) file. This is a utility with a graphical user interface and a command line interface that can be used to view and extract the contents of an MSI file. Features Windows Explorer Integration Lessmsi also integrates with Windows Explorer so that you can right-click on a Windows Installer file (.msi file) and select "Extract Files" to extract it into a folder right there: Just select Preferences from the Edit menu to enable (or disable) the explorer integration: GUI In addition to allowing you to extract files from the command line and from inside Windows Explorer, lessmsi has a graphical user interface that allows you to view detailed information about any MSI file. MSI Table Viewer Windows Installer (.msi files) are based on an internal database of tables. Lessmsi features a viewer for those tables. Useful for people who work a lot with installers. Click here to visit the author's website.
5/5 4,461 May 04, 2023
Scott Willeke <img src="https://www.oldergeeks.com/downloads/gallery/thumbs/lessmsi3_th.png"border="0">
Naev 0.6.1
Naev 0.6.1 Naev is a 2D space trading and combat game, taking inspiration from the Escape Velocity series, among others. You pilot a space ship from a top-down perspective, and are more or less free to do what you want. As the genre name implies, you’re able to trade and engage in combat at will. Beyond that, there’s an ever-growing number of storyline missions, equipment, and ships; Even the galaxy itself grows larger with each release. For the literarily-inclined, there are large amounts of lore accompanying everything from planets to equipment. Naev 0.6.1 Release By bobbens, on November 13th, 2015 It’s been a while, but we’re proud to announce Naev 0.6.1. This is a minor release that has a slew of fixes, improvements and missions. It fixes some important issues that cropped up in the previous release and thus we highly encourage everyone to update to 0.6.1. This release would have not been possible without the help of both onpon4, nenau, and Ian D. Scott who have been very active of late. We would like to once again thank all contributors for making this release possible. Changes since 0.6.0: Improved AI (nenau) New Misisons (onpon4, nenau) Changed how action loss is handled (onpon4) Lua AI rewrite (Ian D. Scott) Misc fixes and improvements.
5/5 5,088 Jul 21, 2016
Bobbens <img src="http://www.oldergeeks.com/downloads/gallery/thumbs/Naev2_th.png"border="0">
yWriter 7
yWriter 7 yWriter is a word processor which breaks your novel into chapters and scenes, helping you keep track of your work while leaving your mind free to create. It will not write your novel for you, suggest plot ideas or perform creative tasks of any kind. yWriter was designed by an author, not a salesman! If you're just embarking on your first novel a program like yWriter may seem like overkill. I mean, all you have to do is type everything into a word processor! Sure, but wait until you hit 20,000 words, with missing scenes and chapters, notes all over your desk, characters and locations and plot points you've just added and which need to be referenced earlier ... it becomes a real struggle. Now imagine that same novel at 40,000 or 80,000 words! No wonder most first-time writers give up. (Although yWriter was designed for novels, enterprising users have created their own translation files to customise the program to work with plays, non-fiction and even sermons.) Who designed it? "I'm Simon Haynes, the designer and programmer. I have twenty-five years computer programming experience and I'm also the author of a science fiction comedy series and a new middle-grade science fiction comedy for ages 9-12. ALL of my novels were written in yWriter." "Hands down the easiest and most versatile writing software I've tried and used" M. Scott Rogers Because I'm an experienced programmer AND a published author, yWriter contains a bunch of tools a working novelist will find useful, and nothing some marketing expert came up with to promote additional sales. What's so special about yWriter? I really struggled with my first novel because I wrote slabs of text into a big word processor file and I just couldn't make sense of the whole thing at once. No real overview, no easy jumping from scene ...
5/5 4,919 Dec 27, 2020
Simon Haynes <img src="https://www.oldergeeks.com/downloads/gallery/thumbs/yWriter1_th.png"border="0">
   
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