![]() ![]() There were a lot of sidescrolling shoot/hack 'em ups on the site I used (name sadly forgotten), many of them delightfully gibbulent. And a very violet hack 'em up where you play as Achilles and butcher endless armies of Trojans. I also played a rather interesting Metal Slug-style side-scrolling shooter, though again I can't remember its name. Age of War is one that I do recall, it was quite popular in the late 2000's, I think. Actually, I played a huge number of online strategy games, though I don't remember many of their names. ![]() The main reason I got so addicted was due to the presence of a level editor, so I could make my very own castles and promptly destroy them.Īnother example would be Star Dominion, a starcraft clone with a surprisingly-unique aesthetic. One I used to enjoy was Crush The Castle, a side-scrolling siege game where you control the ammunition type and firing trajectory of a medieval trebuchet, with the objective being to knock down the level's castle. I don't know, I played so many of them in the late 2000's. I think what I remember flash for more fondly was the cartoons people made, like Decline Of Videogames, and those various Newgrounds collabs, of Streetfighter, Metal Gear, Halo, etc. There's also various ones which I remember, not because they were good, in fact, because they were extremely shitty, such as Asshunter, Mario With A Shotgun, and various really crude and ugly porn games, by people who draw and code terribly. I guess also that PimpMyGun thing, which still functions and is hosted after so many years and no updates, though it's not so much a game as just a niche little art program online. Ran like shit on my PC at the time though, lol. There was also that Motherlode game, which had a very addictive formula. They had really pretty graphics and I liked looking at them. There wasn't really that much gameplay, but there was a logic to them, so depending on what you did, you'd figure out ideas they were getting at. I liked those Japanese(?) puzzle ones where a miniature world would grow as you placed various things, and depending on which order you did things, you'd get varying results, with only one path giving you the full end. I must admit that I haven’t played a flash game since at least 2014 :( ![]() So I’d say since I can’t think of any off the top of my head by name, I will say that newgrounds was the site I went to the most for flash games and videos, despite there being countless other sites at the time. I did play a lot of Wolfenflash 3D, which has been around long before we got the HTML port of the game. So many I can’t remember their names, or they have been removed already, etc. It is sadly one of the only flash games I can remember the name of. While I wouldn’t consider that to be my favorite. Looking back at this game, you can clearly tell the author was aware of the current allegations that existed at the time that flash game was made and that’s probably why his lawyers weren’t too happy about it at the time. The game is still able to be found online though, but with Flash’s demise this won’t be for long. Then, some of the sites that it was on had the game removed with a flash animation instead that claimed the game had been removed by the author because he was threatened with legal action by Bill Cosby’s lawyer. It was just so stupid of a game but enjoyable for the humor. The one I remember playing from time to time for a while back in the early to mid 2000’s was Bill Cosby’s Puddin’ Fun (this was post controversy-errr well, post everyone knowing about said controversy and him being held accountable for it that is). Kongregate recommends the use of Supernova SWF Enabler, available for free from the Chrome Webstore. If you are still experiencing issues, you can consider installing a plugin to run flash applets in your browser. This should prompt Flash to load, though you may receive one additional alert from the left side of the menu bar. When you return to Kongregate, you’ll need to click on the “Enable/Install Flash” button again in the game frame. Switch the toggle to “Ask First” or add the Site to the Block/Allow sections of this page. Clicking on “Done” closes this menu.īy clicking “Manage,” you will see the settings page related to Flash. By clicking on this icon, you can choose to “”Manage” access permissions for Flash. ![]() On, Chrome users may see this message:Ĭlicking on this message will bring up a “Plugin Blocked” icon in the URL bar. 76 or higher) will require users to configure access permissions for Flash every time they restart the browser. Starting on July 30th, 2019, Chrome browser (ver. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |