Just Play the Classics! (February 16, 2017)

Bandit LOAF

Long Live the Confederation!
In 1994, Electronic Arts hit on a sales trick that has since become commonplace: re-release your recent back catalog as budget 'classic' titles using simple packaging and digitized manuals to lower printing costs. The original cost of producing these games could be further amortized, ultimately helping further support the ever-growing game development budgets needed for new titles to stand up. You could call it GOG's great, great grandson!

Initially priced between $7.99 and $14.99 each, the first wave of 'Electronic Arts presents CD-ROM Classics' contained a host of mid-1990s Origin titles alongside other EA favorites such as Chuck Yeager's Air Combat. The idea was a hit, and these and other Origin classics would go on to be re-released in several series over the years, with some Wing Commander games still being available at retail today! A simple collector's guide to these releases follows.





Black Series: Also known as the original or black series, these classics came in a one-piece cardboard package similar to Origin's add-on disks. Each box included a printed install guide booklet and a CD-ROM containing the game and digital copies of the original manuals. The black series were released in several waves over multiple years. Wing Commander games represented are Wing Commander II Deluxe, Privateer, Academy and Armada. Other Origin games in the black line included Strike Commander, Shadowcaster, System Shock, Ultima Underworld I & II and the Complete Ultima VII. The Wing Commander Academy release is among the harder classics to find.





Gold Series: In 1996, Electronic Arts began issuing the CD-ROM Classics in gold bordered boxes. These versions came in more traditional two-piece boxes made of a heavier cardboard. In some cases, these versions of the games were updated with scripts to assist in running older titles using Windows 95. Wing Commander II Deluxe, Wing Commander Privateer and Wing Commander III were released in this series. Other Origin titles included the Crusader: No Regret, CyberMage, Bioforge, Complete Ultima VII, Ultima Underworld I & II and Ultima VIII: Pagan. Completists take note: the gold series version of Privateer's cover promoted a $10 rebate for the newly-released Privateer 2: The Darkening in some printings!





Gold II Series: The second gold series of EA classics began in 1997 and ran for several years. These releases included slightly larger two-piece boxes distinguished from the earlier gold series by having only a single band at the bottom of the game box art rather than a full border. The only Wing Commander games released in this series were Privateer and Wing Commander III. Other Origin titles included the Ultima Collection, Ultima VIII: Pagan, Crusader: No Remorse and Jane's AH-64 Longbow. Other release continued into the 21st century in a similar box design dropping the 'CD-ROM' from the label; no Origin games were reissued this way.





Silver Series: The Silver Series of EA classics launched in 1997 and is, improbably, the one you are most likely to discover in stores today. These minimalist releases included only a single, silver-bordered jewel case, designed for sale in the walls of budget video game options at places like Office Depot. Three Wing Commander games appear in this format: Wing Commander II Deluxe, Academy and Armada. Keep an eye out!





Orange Series: Meanwhile, in Europe Electronic released two equivalent lines of CD-ROM classics. The first was the orange' series, a which were released in individual jewel cases. These were traditional 'English/French/German' releases with all three languages represented on the back of the box. Three Wing Commander games were included: Wing Commander II Deluxe, Armada and Privateer. Other Origin games represented include System Shock, Crusader: No Remorse, Strike Commander, Ultima Underworld I & II and the Complete Ultima VII. Depending on the country, a different install guide was included (making a total of nine total versions for anyone interested in catching them all.)





Blue Series: While the later, multi-disc Wing Commander games were generally not released as classics in the United States, they were re-released in Europe. 'Blue' packaging includes a smaller generic two-part box with a slip cover for the relevant game. Like the orange jewel cases, these are English/French/German boxes with region-specific manuals in each country. Most impressively, these versions included printed manuals rather than PDFs! FOUR later Wing Commander titles were included: Wing Commander III, IV, Prophecy and Privateer 2! Other Origin games include System Shock, Bioforge and Ultima VIII: Pagain.

Did we miss any EA classics? Have you collected them all? Let us know on the forums!

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Original update published on February 16, 2017
 
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I want to say that my first copy of Privateer was a Black Series copy; I do remember picking it up at the Sears at Washington Park Mall in Bartlesville, Oklahoma. Man, those were the days when they at least attempted to put things in shopping malls that were of interest to young adult males...

Did they not do any of these for Wing Commander I, LOAF? I could've sworn that I purchased a Gold Series copy of WC1 at a Best Buy in Tulsa. I could be mistaken though; that one definitely was 3.5" floppies...
 
Years ago, I bought out someone's substantial WC collection on Ebay just to get a copy of Kilrathi Saga. In the mix, I got a black border (but flattened out and missing the manuals) copy of Privateer and a UK blue box copy of Privateer 2! I also had a devil of a time finding WCP Gold and had to order it from a weirdo boxed set from Europe? I think it was this one...

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(I think Chris or LOAF did a mention of this some years back?)

(Also, I only found an American copy of WCP Gold *last year*! Case and discs only but it was $3!)
 
Did they not do any of these for Wing Commander I, LOAF? I could've sworn that I purchased a Gold Series copy of WC1 at a Best Buy in Tulsa. I could be mistaken though; that one definitely was 3.5" floppies...

The short answer is no, at least not as part of the CD-ROM Classics lines. By the time it started, the average PC was too fast to run Wing Commander I properly... and the existing CD-ROM version of Wing Commander I, developed by third party company Software Toolworks, wouldn't even install correctly because it needed specific batch files that were no longer included in MS-DOS 6.

You WILL find the Ultima VI/Wing Commander CD listed on some sites as part of the black series. I took the idea that it might exist seriously going into this, but have established pretty conclusively that it wasn't a thing. It traces back to an incorrect listing at Underworld Dragon's Collectible Ultima. (Which is otherwise wonderful and an amazing resource; you can tell he hadn't seen this supposed release either as it's the lone edition without a serial number/ISBN.)

I will expand this into another one of these articles in the future, but the history of Wing Commander I re-releases are a little different (partially because of the tech issues mentioned above, partially because the games were never intended for CD-ROMs and partially because they were released before Origin sold to Electronic Arts.)

In 1992-3, Origin licensed Wing Commander (and the first six Ultima titles) to a company called Software Toolworks for release as some of the first budget CD-ROMs (budget at the time meant a $49.95 MSRP.) As part of the deal, Software Toolworks would develop their own disc-to-drive installers as the games had never been published on CD-ROM before. They would release the games themselves, and also provide the work they did back to Origin.

Software Toolworks released two budget versions of Wing Commander (and many of Ultima): Wing Commander Deluxe Edition was a CD-ROM release that came in the same (black) box as the original game... with red 'Software Toolworks' stickers on the front. Then there was the first Ultima VI/Wing Commander compilation, which came in a new, smaller box.

Origin then put out their own SKUs of each of these: Wing Commander Deluxe came in a blue box (similar to the Wing Commander II Deluxe) and then their Ultima VI/Wing Commander came in a larger two-piece box than the ST version. These releases all included the original manuals and documentation, though sometimes slightly cheaper--for instance, some include only two blueprint sheets printed back to back instead of four.

That was pretty much it for the PC-CD version of Wing Commander I! The CD-ROM did show up again twice more in 'shovelware' packs, the 'EA Top Ten Pak II' and the 'Mile High Club' (ten flying games, also included Academy.)

(Oh--and EA put out a Wing Commander I/II compilation in 1994, had a full box with all the manuals. If you've seen Strike Commander/Privateer, it's the same. Was released in the US and in a tri-language in Europe.)

Years ago, I bought out someone's substantial WC collection on Ebay just to get a copy of Kilrathi Saga. In the mix, I got a black border (but flattened out and missing the manuals) copy of Privateer and a UK blue box copy of Privateer 2! I also had a devil of a time finding WCP Gold and had to order it from a weirdo boxed set from Europe? I think it was this one...

Close! That one is a US release that includes the standard Wing Commander Prophecy. The UK compilation that has WCP Gold is this guy: https://www.amazon.co.uk/EA-Compila...&sr=8-3&keywords=wing+commander+prophecy+gold

(With Command and Conquer: Red Alert, Sid Meier Alpha Centauri instead of Blade Runner and Dune 2000; but every game in both version is a winner!)

I will have a couple of these articles on different types of compilation releases in the future, too!
 
Close! That one is a US release that includes the standard Wing Commander Prophecy.

!!! This explains why I had a C&C game and Alpha Centurai floating around a PC Game box but I had no memory of buying either of them!
 
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