I never did play the original Unreal Tournament. I played "Unreal Tournament 2004" quite a bit in 2004. I was looking forward to the follow up, but Unreal 2004 was it for '05 and '06 until '07s, Unreal 3. Still had my previous system then which I don't think was up to the task for Unreal 3.
Give UT classic a spin sometime. The Game of the Year edition is very easy and cheap to acquire (or free, if you look hard enough) and there's no CD-key so you can LAN party with just one copy. UT2004 is a great game, don't get me wrong. But UT classic is, and always will be, the king. It's probably the best competitive shooter of all time (thus far.) It's also far more balanced than UT2004; it's much more dependent on skill rather than luck and weird double-jump prowess, which is why I like it. Every single weapon in the UT classic lineup is a brutal killer if used properly, unlike UT2004's lineup (the AVRiL, minigun, shieldgun, and assrifles are majorly weak and unbalanced, or have serious noobgun status.) And that's not to mention that the simplicity of the engine means that the maps are all built with BSP so there's no static meshes to get in your way. You should definitely play with us sometime. Contact me on Facebook and I'll help you get a copy and get set up with the latest patch and etc.
http://www.facebook.com/sinedevianceOn the subject of UT3 ... even I can't run UT3. It requires quite a high-spec rig to run playable. Basically, it's like this -- if you can run UT3 and Gears of War on high settings, you can run Crysis on high settings. Unreal Engine 3 is a beautiful engine, though.
Before your time, but you didn't mention consoles like Atari 2600, 5200, and Mattel's Intellivision. The 5200 had lousy joysticks but made a passing attempt at fielding Atari's late 70s/80s arcade games for home use. Intellivision's controls didn't even have joysticks but it did have good sports games for the day. 2600 was good for Breakout, Space Invaders, Pitfall and a few others.
Then what about the Vectrex? There you were talking Asteroids that looked like arcade Asteroids, Battlezone that looks like arcade Battlezone. That was kind of a high-end piece of gear for the day.
Well, I did have an Atari 2600 and an Intellivision, though I had them after NES. Then again you have to keep in mind that I was born the same year NES came out
My favorite Intellivision games were probably Astrosmash and Blockade Runner; I remember those two being the ones I played the most. I can't even remember what games we had for the 2600, I just remember that we had one. We did not have a 5200 or a Vectrex, but one of my friends had them. I did have some of the more rare consoles, such as the Sega 32X and Sega CD, TurboGrafx 16, Panasonic 3D0, Jaguar, and the Neo Geo. It was amazing what you could pick up at garage sales for next to nothing during the PlayStation era. The 3D0 is a perfect example; it retailed for close to $700 at launch in 1993, we picked one up for $50 in 1997 because the platform was dead by then. That system also had some excellent games; Return Fire, Dragon's Lair, and Off-World Interceptor are good examples.
EDIT: Also wanted to add something. Way back in maybe 1993, when I was about 8, we got a ZX Spectrum for $25 at a garage sale. That was my first computer. There was this B-52 Bomber sim game that came on a 5.25" floppy that I used to play on it. It was all vector-based but it was quite realistic. Does anyone have any clue what this game could have been called? I've been looking for it for ages but the search always turns up nil. I'd like to play it on an emulator someday.