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Nowhere does the us "center of the universe" mindset shine more through, then when to expect the world to remember the presidential dogs name.
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That wasn’t the era of global releases via the internet. You had to either buy it in person or, order by mail or get a copy from a BBS. It was an American game made for Americans.
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Well, the main hurdle was that we were 7-9 years old iirc and didn't know any English at all, beyond the memorized "knock knock" etc. So the topic of the questions wasn't on the table :-)
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I love this story. I remember seeing two pre-literate kindergarten kids playing on a gameboy or similar handheld, one of them teaching the other strings of button presses for things like “save game” - just navigating through all the menus by memory.
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I played through the entire Pokemon Yellow without understanding a lick of english. You just remembered what the commands did, and you learnt by experimenting.
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Even as an English speaker the Pokémon all sounded gibberish to me so it wouldn't have been much help
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I think everybody does this to some extent.

Like, I remember someone telling me at one point that the thing in Head over Heels was a Dalek with prince Charles head. I didn't know either of those.

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I don't think that the larry games where to be released to the whole world.
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Life is sweet, when you life in the cultural nexus that is a English speaking country and do not have to pay the translation tax.
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Same same!

My brother and I had a notepad with all the questions and possible answers, and we'd run the game several times until we got through, then make a note of the answers. Eventually we had all of them.

"Ken sent me" is buried in my brain for that same reason. :)

Thanks for bringing back the memories!

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> Ken sent me

I also remember the joke that was written on the same wall 'it takes leather balls to play rugby'.

I didn't get the joke till much later, but somehow it stuck with me.

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I learned to read very early because I really wanted to be able to start the games on the family computer (instead of having to ask an adult to do it for me).

And only then I realised that it was all in English :-).

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