SUPERJUMP

Celebrating video games and their creators

Follow publication

Member-only story

Replay Value and the Joy of Rediscovery

Playing an old game can be a new experience — one that teaches you a little about your own life

Andrew Johnston
SUPERJUMP
Published in
10 min readJul 4, 2021

Lately, I’ve been playing a lot of Sid Meier’s Alpha Centauri, the 1999 science fiction spinoff of the legendary Civilization series. I’d really never expected to play this title again — it was one of several “archive” games in my GOG library, titles from my youth that I picked up for pocket change during sales solely so that I would always have access to them. But for a brief period, I had a minor obsession with Alpha Centauri that I’ve had a chance to re-examine.

My original copy was a second-hand disc that I bought in high school. It came with no box, no manual, not even the original case — just a CD in a plain jewel case, easily lost among others in the bin. What drew me to the game was Meier’s name first, the sci-fi setting (easily gleaned, even with just the screen printing on the disc) second, and it was an easy purchase to justify.

But actually playing the game was a trial. Alpha Centauri features more complex mechanics than the Civilization games of the time, and without proper documentation I really had no clue what I was doing. Yet I was determined, meandering numbly through one unfortunate game after another, picking up a little more about the mechanics…

Create an account to read the full story.

The author made this story available to Medium members only.
If you’re new to Medium, create a new account to read this story on us.

Or, continue in mobile web

Already have an account? Sign in

SUPERJUMP
SUPERJUMP

Published in SUPERJUMP

Celebrating video games and their creators

Andrew Johnston
Andrew Johnston

Written by Andrew Johnston

Writer of fiction, documentarian, currently stranded in Asia. Learn more at www.findthefabulist.com.

Responses (2)

Write a response