I lived with “1746 DOS Games” for a month — here’s what actually happens

You know what? I didn’t plan to fall down a rabbit hole. But I did. I spent four weekends with a big pack called “1746 DOS Games.” It’s a giant menu of old PC games that runs through DOSBox. Click a title. It boots. Boom. You’re in 1993, give or take.
Curious what living with that many retro titles really looks like day-to-day? I broke it all down here.

If you’d rather dip a toe before downloading a multi-gigabyte archive, the browser-friendly catalog at DOS Games Online streams dozens of these same classics in seconds. For an even shorter sampler, my own one-week plunge into a smaller collection shows how much fun you can squeeze into just a handful of evenings.

I used a plain Windows laptop, a cheap USB gamepad, and a quiet Sunday. Well, not that quiet. My cat walked on the keyboard more than once. Felt right.

Setup that didn’t make me cry

I’ll be honest. I feared setup. Old PC stuff can be touchy. This was easy. If you need a primer, the official Basic Setup and Installation of DOSBox page walks you through the whole process. It came with DOSBox already ready. A simple launcher sorted the games by name and genre. I didn’t have to hunt for drivers or weird files.

A few games asked me to pick “Sound Blaster” in their setup screens. I clicked it. Music played. That was it. For slower games, I bumped up “cycles” in DOSBox a bit. If that sounds scary, it wasn’t. Two arrow taps. Fixed. For a broader crash course, PCWorld’s walkthrough on how to use DOSBox to play classic games covers tips like these in detail.

First week: the “oh wow, I remember this” run

  • DOOM (shareware): I picked Sound Blaster in the setup and heard that crunchy E1M1 track. Arrow keys felt clunky, so I mapped my gamepad. The shotgun still thumps. Doors still whoosh. I grinned like a goof.

  • Prince of Persia: Timing is tight. I missed a jump. Then another. I slowed DOSBox a little so the moves felt fair. Landing a perfect grab? Still magic.

  • Commander Keen 4: Bright EGA colors. The pogo stick still rules. I forgot how many hidden goodies Keen packs in corners.

  • Wolfenstein 3D: Fast, flat, and loud. I kept tapping walls for secrets. Found chicken dinners and ammo piles like it was 1992.

After that opening sprint I started wondering what other essentials I’d missed; a quick skim through this “beige-box” best-of list gave me a fresh queue.

Second week: the “one more turn” trap

  • SimCity 2000: It ran fine after I nudged speed up a bit. I built a river town. Then taxes. Then a weird traffic mess. The tiny icons are a pain with a touchpad. A mouse helps a lot.

  • Dune II: Harvest spice. Build Wind Traps. Lose a harvester to a sandworm. I forgot the right-click quirks, but it came back fast. The slow build pace still feels good.

  • Lemmings: I set one as a blocker and felt bad. Then a little proud. Then bad again. The music gets stuck in your head.

If strategy sandboxes and city builders are your vibe, this MS-DOS greatest-hits list is a goldmine of more turn-stealing classics.

Side note: sound that hits your chest

PC speaker beeps in Alley Cat? Sharp and funny. Sound Blaster FM in Jazz Jackrabbit? Warm and buzzy. Some games even had MT-32 music files, which most folks won’t use, but the pack let me switch. I didn’t, but it’s nice it’s there.

Third week: deep cuts and school memories

  • Oregon Trail: I bought too many bullets. My kid got dysentery. Classic. I named the party after my cousins. They laughed, then yelled when I sank the wagon.

  • Stunts: Loops, jumps, clean fails. I kept flipping the car. Pressing F1-F5 to change views still feels cool.

  • Tyrian: Smooth shooter. Great music. I didn’t expect to like it this much, but I did. Power-ups feel chunky in a good way.

  • King’s Quest VI: Text version here. I used a walkthrough for one puzzle. I don’t feel bad. The charm holds up.

The one that fought me

MechWarrior 2 ran, but it was fussy. It needed extra tweaks and felt heavy on my laptop. I got it to work. It wasn’t smooth. That’s the thing with big packs like this. Ninety games feel great. Ten feel needy.

Controls: keyboard, mouse, or pad?

Old games love the keyboard. Some love the mouse. A few feel best with a gamepad, even if they didn’t ship that way. I used:

  • Keyboard for DOOM, Wolf3D, Keen
  • Mouse for SimCity 2000, Dune II, Lemmings
  • Gamepad for Jazz Jackrabbit, Tyrian, Prince of Persia (surprisingly nice)

Swapping controls in DOSBox was simple. I saved two profiles and switched when needed.

The launcher: boring in a good way

The menu isn’t flashy. That’s fine. I could search by title, sort by year, and tag favorites. A few entries had short notes or manual scans. Those helped with odd copy-protection screens (“What’s word 4 on page 12?”). When a game needed a code wheel, the scan was right there. No wild goose chase.

What made me smile

  • The curation: It’s not just the big names. Alley Cat, Jill of the Jungle, The Incredible Machine. So many small gems.
  • The saves: DOSBox save states are handy for kids, new players, or sleepy adults. Ask me how I know.
  • Couch play: I plugged the laptop into my TV and used a wireless mouse. Family night turned into a Keen night.

I kept cross-referencing my discoveries with another collection of “best ever” DOS tales, and it was fun to spot overlaps and oddballs.

What bugged me

  • Some titles are tricky with modern touchpads. A wired mouse helps a lot.
  • A few games run too fast or too slow until you tweak speed. It’s quick, but you do have to learn it.
  • Manuals aren’t perfect. Most are there. Not all. You’ll wing it sometimes.

Who this pack is for

  • Folks who grew up with DOS and want the real feel.
  • Parents who want to show kids where games came from.
  • Anyone who likes short, clever ideas over big, shiny worlds.

If you hate fiddling even a tiny bit, you might bounce off it. But if you can handle a simple setup screen, you’re golden.

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Small, odd moments that stuck

I paused Prince of Persia to sip tea and set the cup down wrong. The saucer clinked. The guard stabbed me. I laughed. Later, my cat stepped on F10 and quit DOOM right before a tense fight. I sat there like, wow, I guess that’s the real final boss.

The quick take

  • It works out of the box, with tiny tweaks here and there.
  • The game list is huge and honest. Not every game sings, but enough do.
  • Sound and control options let you shape things to your taste.

My verdict

“1746 DOS Games” made my weekends bright. It felt cozy, like finding old patches on a jacket and sewing on a few new ones. Not perfect. But true. If you want a big, playable time capsule that still respects your time, this hits the mark. And when I just want a quick nostalgia hit,