<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[GameUP24]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[https://gameup24.wordpress.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[William A.]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://gameup24.wordpress.com/author/louzwate/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[What is your oldest game&nbsp;save?]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<div><img src='https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/ppOg9uC8Hv9SauRF8jEsGj1iMLE=/0x0:1920x1080/640x360/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_image/image/55085541/ghostbusters_game_video_wallpaper_high_87259.0.jpg' style='max-width:600px;' /></p>
<div><img alt="" src="http://ift.tt/2stjfWf"></p>
<p>Semper paratus</p>
<p><a href="http://ift.tt/2rnXJRn">Two weeks ago</a>, I saw that <em>Ghostbusters: The Video Game</em> — the 2009 adaptation by Terminal Reality for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 — was among the nearly 300 titles of the Xbox backward compatibility sale. I nearly peed on myself. First of all, <em>Ghostbusters: The Video Game</em> was a good movie adaptation, especially for a franchise so old. Second, I was amazed its license was still in effect. This is now eight years after launch. Terminal Reality, the studio that made it, went bust in 2013.</p>
<p>But there it was, for 75 percent off, and I went and fetched it and smothered myself in ectoplasm. Part of my fondness comes from the happy memories of where I played it: Living with my grandfather for four months, getting to know him better, trying to explain the business I covered and why it made billions of dollars. &quot;It all seems like a great waste of time,&quot; he told me, and that was mainly because he thought &quot;visual games,&quot; as he called them, were still rooted in the design of the 1980s. </p>
<p>Ghostbusters was the breakthrough. So was <em>The Godfather II: The Game,</em> which was awful but it fascinated him nonetheless. &quot;It&#8217;s like making movies,&quot; I told him as we played cribbage after dinner. &quot;Someone has an idea, a studio gets a deal to make it. They do it and both make money. That&#8217;s all.&quot;</p>
<p>When <em>Ghostbusters: The Video Game</em> went back on sale on Xbox One I downloaded it and played it a little and remembered my romp through the fun times. The showdown in the museum, with Winston&#8217;s uh-not-cool-man dialogue about the Confederate soldier ghosts, still busted me up. <em>Ghostbusters: The Video Game</em> was better as a multiplayer title but the campaign was still delightful. That jaunty piano theme always takes me back. I know I am not the only one who feels a very vivid sense of place when a piece of video game music comes up.</p>
<p>Today I went down to my Xbox 360 and was shocked to discover an old save file for <em>Ghostbusters: The Video Game</em>, on my Xbox 360. I hadn&#8217;t played that console in &#8230; months? And I gave my physical disc to Adam Barenblat when I passed through Colorado on my journey back west from my grandfather&#8217;s home in 2009. </p>
<p>That was a pretty sensitive time for us both. Lots of uncertainty. But for July 4 we went to the home of one of his wild-ass friends somewhere out around Niwot and I put Ghostbusters on the Xbox 360 and everybody laughed and played along.</p>
<h3>Good times, long gone</h3>
<p>I haven&#8217;t had the game in my possession since 2009, but somehow that Ghostbusters save survived three hard-drive transfers: the original unit, the Xbox 360 slim I bought after it in 2010 and the slim I bought after that one&#8217;s optical disc drive failed in 2012 (there could be no worse engineered console than the Xbox 360. Ever.) </p>
<p>The only piece of data I can conceive of being more valuable and unreplaceable is the demo for <em>NBA Elite 11</em>, with the<a href="http://ift.tt/2kb1B52"> infamous Andrew Bynum &quot;Jesus&quot; glitch</a> that put that series on a four-year hiatus from which it has never recovered. If my house was on fire and I was naked, clutching my bed comforter and panicking for an escape, I would still race downstairs to yank the cords out of my Xbox 360. I don’t have children, so I could probably do this without loss of life.</p>
<p>Years ago on another site, we asked readers the longest they had left a game on pause. This answer <a href="http://ift.tt/2rUaAz4">absolutely floored me</a>: A PS1, game unspecified, disc in the tray still spinning. Plugged in for ten (10) years. &quot;It was burnt out. It could have been a power surge at some point, but it won&#8217;t turn on any more, and the disc has a big black spot,&quot; the reader said.</p>
<p>Modern consoles, with suspended states and cloud uploads, may moot the possibility of such a thing happening, or needing to happen, again. But it always made me smile to think of a video game living for a decade, instantly ready, there to play if only someone would pick up the controller. </p>
<p>So anyway, what&#8217;s the oldest game save file you have? Why do you keep it? Why is it special? </p>
<p>Will you play it again?</p>
<p><em>Source: <a style="text-decoration:none;" href="http://ift.tt/2rTZ4DG">Polygon &#8211;  Full</a></em></div>
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