OK, it's 1995 here in FLimitsville, and I need your help. I have a 1995 Packard Bell with a Socket 5 motherboard that I want to refurbish. Right now it has a Pentium 75MHz, an unknown amount of RAM, an 850MB hard drive, a 3.5" floppy drive, a read-only CD drive that's slow by today's standards, and a generic sound card/CD controller. It has PCI and ISA slots, and currently it has no graphics card (it has integrated graphics with 1MB VRAM, I think). It's honestly kind of a boring machine, so I want to give it more character and turn it into a decent little DOS/Win 3.1 or DOS/Win 95 gaming PC -- the PC some guy remembers having when he was 15 back in 1995, but with a few tweaks to make it tolerable to a present-day user.
So this is where I need your help. I've done all kinds of things, but I've never been an adolescent guy and I've never been a big gamer. I have a feeling those two things might be related... Anyway, I can't draw on my own experience to choose the right hardware -- especially the sound and graphics cards -- to create that "awesome" early 1990s gaming experience. I'll max out the RAM (to a whopping 128MB :S), I'll put in a faster CD drive and faster/bigger hard drive, and maybe I'll bump up the processor to a Pentium 133. If any of you were (or still are) hard-core 1990s gamers, tell me what sound and graphics cards you would pick. I know the names and specs of a lot of them, and have even owned and used some of them, so I'm not totally clueless, but I do kind of feel like Mom trying to pick out her teenage son's gaming rig. And we all know how that kind of thing ends...
Bookmarks