Dinosaur sightings: Build an empire with Master of Orion
Master of Orion from Microprose is a strategy game for strategy gamers. It was one of the first games to follow what is known as the 4X method of game play: eXplore, eXpand, eXploit, and eXterminate. It is also highly addictive. Most campaigns take almost 40 hours to complete, so playing MOO, as it is affectionately known, takes real commitment.
I always liked the front of the Master of Orion box. A very loud pronouncement of what the game was and that it was indeed a strategy game. Because, believe it or not, some people don’t like turn-based strategy games. I know it’s sad, but it’s true.
I had forgotten about this little gem from the past. MOO came with a pay-per-use phone number you could use for hints. The World Wide Web put these people out of business. Nowadays, if you want some hints on a game, google it. Invariably, someone will have a complete strategy guide and possibly cheats ready for you.
In the dark ages of 1994, when this game was released, you could tell a game was turn-based stragegy by the size of the manual that came with it. In MOO’s case, 86 pages complete with weapon damage tables, etc.
The opening flashes on the screen to the sound of a complete MIDI score. Like a movie, MOO started with the credits and a brief opening visual sequence to set the stage for the game.
To emphasize the need for technological advances, MOO gives you the opportunity to design your own ships. I remember designing a ship for the specific purpose of destroying enemy colony building ships. Destroying the colony ship in the enemy armada meant the aliens could not completely remove you from a planet — no matter how much stronger their forces. I love strategy.
This is where you manage your planetary resources and defenses in MOO. During the course of a game you’ll be looking at a screen like this quite often.
Mark W. Kaelin has been writing and editing stories about the information technology industry, software, hardware, gaming, finance, accounting, and technology geekdom for more than 30 years.