Shareware Heroes Audiobook By Richard Moss cover art

Shareware Heroes

The Renegades Who Redefined Gaming at the Dawn of the Internet

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Shareware Heroes

By: Richard Moss
Narrated by: Richard Moss
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About this listen

Shareware Heroes is a comprehensive, meticulously researched exploration of an important and too-long overlooked chapter in video game history

Shareware Heroes: The renegades who redefined gaming at the dawn of the internet takes listeners on a journey, from the beginnings of the shareware model in the early 1980s, the origins of the concept, even the name itself, and the rise of shareware's major players—the likes of id Software, Apogee, and Epic MegaGames—through to the significance of shareware for the "forgotten" systems—the Mac, Atari ST, Amiga—when commercial game publishers turned away from them.

This book also charts the emergence of commercial shareware distributors like Educorp and the BBS/newsgroup sharing culture. And it explores how shareware developers plugged gaps in the video gaming market by creating games in niche and neglected genres like vertically-scrolling shoot-'em-ups (e.g. Raptor and Tyrian), or racing games (e.g. Wacky Wheels and Skunny Kart), or RPGs (God of Thunder and Realmz), until finally, as the video game market again grew and shifted, and major publishers took control, how the shareware system faded into the background and fell from memory.

©2022 Richard Moss (P)2023 Tantor
Engineering Programming & Software Development Software Development Software Programming Video Game
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This is just a customer reminder that if you are doing audio book narration and you have little to no experience with speaking or performance, just hire a voice actor. Every time I hear that the book is narrated by the author, I say "oh no" - it's so rare for that to turn out well.

And in this situation I feel like the narration did the contents a great disservice. The voice is dulcet and gentle, so you want to like them, but then you have trouble understanding, get stuck on weird voice quirks, and worse, sometimes you hear a different take of the same line right after one another. Sometimes the voice sounds confused, like it's asking you if the information is correct.

The content is well done, if organized a little odd. It lacks narrative flow, but you can treat it more as an encyclopedia than a story. But because of the narration, I found my mind wandering or distracted by the voice itself.

I only recommend the written version, and would recommend checking this out if a voice actor ever steps up the plate.

Hire Voice Actor

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This book is filled with the intriguing and interesting story of shareware, and the content itself is quite good, but the audiobook experience is destroyed by the author's self- narration of his material. His heavy accent, hesitant and off-putting phrasing, frustrating pauses and poor audio editing made the book an absolute chore to get through and hard to focus my attention on at several points while I listened. There are MANY instances where the author reads a line... and then does a second take on the same line immediately, yet the first take was never removed.

My advice: read this book, don't listen to it. Your experience will be so much the better for it.

An interesting history marred by horrible narration.

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I hard a very difficult time understanding the narrator. "Beta" was pronounced "beet-uh" for instance. I had to really concentrate to understand the narration, which just isn't going to work for an audiobook. Maybe the Kindle version is better.

Narration is hard to stomach

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