The Rise & Fall & Rise of Choose Your Own Adventure Books

2021 ж. 13 Қаз.
543 035 Рет қаралды

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Choose Your Own Adventure Books are a series of children's gamebooks where the reader assumes the role of the protagonist and makes choices that determine the main character's actions and the plot's outcome.
Choose Your Own Adventure Books were based upon a concept created by Edward Packard and were wildly popular throughout the 80's and 90's before kind of falling off the map.
Choose Your Own Adventure Books are a part of pop culture, so much so that it has led to a few lawsuits, most notably against Netflix regarding Black Mirror: Bandersnatch.
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  • "You're walking down the hall. Turn to page 6 to take the left door" _turns to page 6_ "You fall down a never ending pit and are never seen again. You're deader than dead" _ffs_ - 9 year old me

    @JonnyInfinite@JonnyInfinite2 жыл бұрын
    • It got to the point where it was “Do X, turn to page 36. Do Y, turn to page 84.” I would do X, because I had fallen into the pit enough times to remember the page number.

      @ianjohnson8419@ianjohnson84192 жыл бұрын
    • @@ianjohnson8419 You're not getting me THIS time bottomless hole in the ground.

      @zubbworks@zubbworks2 жыл бұрын
    • @@zubbworks Turns to Page 43. "You run to the garage, choose the car on the left, and speed away from your captors. Unfortunately, its brakes were cut. Your attempts to stop the car proves unsuccessful, and your car ends up in a fiery blaze below the bridge". If PTSD was a thing for reading books, Choose Your Own Adventure would have triggered it! :P

      @sigmacademy@sigmacademy2 жыл бұрын
    • This is why I used my fingers as bookmarks to prior choices... "Nope, I died... Back to that last choice... Nope don't like that ending either. Ok... Go back two choices and make a different choice.... ah yes, much better." lol

      @hathalud@hathalud2 жыл бұрын
    • @@wariolandgoldpiramid it's a figure of speech. _Jeez_ wouldn't have the same impact

      @JonnyInfinite@JonnyInfinite2 жыл бұрын
  • When a Dungeons and Dragons player was home alone in the 80's a 'choose your own adventure' book was the best companion!

    @mondomacabromajor5731@mondomacabromajor57312 жыл бұрын
    • They even had D & D books like CYOA

      @danielmiller3596@danielmiller35962 жыл бұрын
    • I loved them as a youngster!

      @tdawg4756@tdawg47562 жыл бұрын
    • Oh no, "Lone Wolf" was - that was a series where you had stats, special martial arts powers and you could carry the character over between books (this made you wildly overpowered though).

      @Erydanus@Erydanus2 жыл бұрын
    • I preferred the Interplanetary Spy series.

      @mrp4242@mrp42422 жыл бұрын
    • Fighting fantasy books of Steve Jackson and Ian Livingstone.

      @ZBeansUncut@ZBeansUncut2 жыл бұрын
  • Back in elementary school, early 80’s we were assigned a project to write a letter to somebody famous or influential. I wrote Mr. Packard. I received a letter back from him which I still have to this day. I was requesting him to write me in as a character in a story. He responded back that I was always a character in the story. Realizing now that I’m older what he meant. He did stamp the letter with a cool type of Indian elephant stamp. I had not thought about the letter or the books in a couple decades. It was nice to have this randomly pop up & brought back many years of good childhood memories. Thank you!

    @holdencaulfield5826@holdencaulfield58262 жыл бұрын
  • My mom got me The Cave of Time and The Mystery of Chimney Rock for Christmas one year. I wasn't too excited because I didn't think books were a great gift. Then I read them. They quickly became my favorite books and I started collecting them. Decades later, I still have them and treasure them. Thank you Mama!

    @user-ik8ts2lf1u@user-ik8ts2lf1u3 ай бұрын
    • The cave of time was my first too!!!! It was in the library of my school. I loved it. I took it on a tuesday and brought it back on thursday. My teacher was confused and thought i hated it. Nope, on Wednesday, i did it with my older sister and she had the idea of mapping it. I was giving it back not because it was boring, but because in a day we went all possibilities.

      @Awelbeckk@Awelbeckk2 ай бұрын
    • Great story! I still have my earliest books too!

      @MotionMcAnixx@MotionMcAnixx2 ай бұрын
    • It was the treasure of the onyx dragon that got me, I picked it up read the first page "do not read sequentially", and said what the heck, but books are linear. The artwork was so well done, I started collecting right there, dinosaur island before Jurassic park. They were awesome!

      @QuinnMallory-od1hw@QuinnMallory-od1hw2 ай бұрын
    • Me too!!

      @pavkey88@pavkey882 ай бұрын
    • My mom worked in a publishing clearing house (not a sweepstakes) and she would bring me loads of paperback books with the front cover ripped off (that's what they did to devalue them so the author's work couldn't be sold after the fact) and I read lots of these, and Encyclopedia Brown, Nancy Drew (even tho I was a boy) and The Hardy Boys. These books were a precursor to 'if/then' gaming programming. I am so glad that I was reading adult fiction (Watership Down, The World According to Garp, One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest, tLotR, etc) when I was a first grader, when I see 25 y/os today who CAN'T read, and they never read anything that they weren't forced to read/watch the movie of...Thank You Mama!

      @allhopeabandon7831@allhopeabandon78312 ай бұрын
  • I'm over 40 years old and I'm not ashamed to admit I own several of these books and still read them. Space Vampire is probably my favorite.

    @timothybrandriff6499@timothybrandriff64992 жыл бұрын
    • I think my favorite was Cave of Time. I recall reading it through several times.

      @PNWAffliction@PNWAffliction2 жыл бұрын
    • @@PNWAffliction that was choose your own adventure #1, written by Edward Packard. I have that one too.

      @timothybrandriff6499@timothybrandriff64992 жыл бұрын
    • Wizards Warriors and You! I found this and many books in an attic.

      @TheTeamIsSHaRP@TheTeamIsSHaRP2 жыл бұрын
    • Holy shit, Space Vampire was my fav too!

      @LtCaveman@LtCaveman2 жыл бұрын
    • My sister had that title in the 80s! The one CYOA books I actually know because of that.

      @WillmobilePlus@WillmobilePlus2 жыл бұрын
  • I had a rule when I read these that when i picked a page to turn to it didn’t count until I took my last finger off the old page.

    @lancep2002@lancep20022 жыл бұрын
    • lol same here

      @edkwon@edkwon2 жыл бұрын
    • kept going til i ran out of fingers xD

      @LoPhatKao@LoPhatKao2 жыл бұрын
    • Yep! Always kept it bookmarked in case of an untimely demise. UFO 54-40 was such a gyp though. Randomly turning to the ultimate ending. :l

      @neosquirrel@neosquirrel2 жыл бұрын
    • This was all after you promised yourself before you start that you were gonna play it properly then died after the 2nd decision.😏

      @antfrancis9941@antfrancis99412 жыл бұрын
    • The original save-scumming.

      @MandleRoss@MandleRoss2 жыл бұрын
  • I am 47. One of my favorites in this series was Inside UFO 54-40. I was today years old when I learned that there was, in fact, NO WAY to reach the “good ending”. Decades of therapy answered in this one question 😂😂😂

    @XimaWarriorPrincess@XimaWarriorPrincess2 ай бұрын
    • That one was my favorite of the series i still have it 😁

      @overcomerbtbojesus@overcomerbtbojesusАй бұрын
    • "Inside UFO 54-40" was my favorite too. It made me want to visit Easter Island.

      @lysanderofsparta3708@lysanderofsparta370825 күн бұрын
  • A few years ago I decided to recollect original Choose Your Own Adventure books from local used bookstores, and have so far found and bought 57 of the original 200+ books. I don't even have any kids, but my wife and I enjoy reading them to each other as a sentimental throwback, and a fun way of deciding who gets to make certain decisions affecting us jointly. I read her a story and if she dies, I get to make the decision, and vice versa :) it has worked out pretty well! My all time favorite books include "Vampire Express," "Ghost Hunter," and "The Abominable Snowman."

    @frankb821@frankb8213 ай бұрын
    • Do you know the name of the one about the girl who has a pouch of magic stones? That was my favorite and the only one I remember with a female protagonist.

      @naturalnashuan@naturalnashuan2 ай бұрын
  • When my daughter was born last year I started thinking about my own childhood rites of passage and bought a used copy of Gorga the Space Monster. One day she picked it up and started flipping through it so I read her a few lines. Then I googled Packard, found his website and sent him an email of thanks. This dude WROTE ME BACK. I guess he had less to do since we were all pandemic quarantined. He wrote me back twice. We had a lovely chat.

    @TimothyHuangSongs@TimothyHuangSongs2 жыл бұрын
    • Similar thing happened to me. I ran across the author of one of my favorite Sci-Fi books on social media after he posted an advert on a writers page. I could not resist telling him I was a big fan of his work. Honestly I think he was more excited than I was about that post! He engaged me in conversation and I guess he showed that post to everyone in his family and circle gloating about it. (He was not as well known by any means, but he had good sales and this book I mentioned was talked about nationally on podcasts and such) We still talk on and off to this day. I guess authors are real people too. LOL

      @thomaslange2262@thomaslange22622 жыл бұрын
    • Look up Auguste Piccard. Look up what he did, and what he was recorded saying afterward.

      @firstamendment2887@firstamendment28872 жыл бұрын
    • heck in the books you could meet a horrible fate if it was a choose your own adventure style horror story.

      @willhuey4462@willhuey44622 жыл бұрын
    • So your 1 year old sat down and started reading a book? My 1 year old would've been more interested in eating it...

      @dantresohlavy7323@dantresohlavy73232 жыл бұрын
    • I did this exact same thing. I e-mailed Packard and thanked him for writing his books - I learned to read from those things, and repeated reading them so much that the pages started falling out. :)

      @francisbartholomew7816@francisbartholomew78162 жыл бұрын
  • I loved this series as a kid and I still have several of my original books. Many great memories there…

    @MetalJesusRocks@MetalJesusRocks2 жыл бұрын
    • I'm lamenting the lost of my CYOA books but I at least still have most of the knock-offs: the GI Joes, the Indiana Jones, the James Bond View to A Kills, the Fighting Fantasies...

      @actionvestadventure@actionvestadventure2 жыл бұрын
    • Whoa, MJR in the house! Loved the AIC video 🤘😎

      @Gappasaurus@Gappasaurus2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Gappasaurus I love EVERY MJR video, but yeah, the AIC vid was awesome. I forgot all about the flies in the spine of the jewel case on Jar of Flies.

      @briangereau788@briangereau7882 жыл бұрын
    • You should check out some of the new entries in the gamebook market like: Castles of Imagination by John M. Withers IV. Available on Amazon.

      @johnm.withersiv4352@johnm.withersiv43522 жыл бұрын
    • I remember a similar series called The legend of Skyfall

      @alanale@alanale2 жыл бұрын
  • I first discovered "The Cave of Time" in my local public library. My father had insisted we take piano lessons, and we were goign to the piano store in the local shopping mall... every week we'd get our allowance and then go to piano lessons. I would have my lesson first, because the piano store was just down the way from the Waldenbooks... every week I'd go in and buy a book... I remember that I could afford one book a week, but if I saved my change for a few weeks, every few weeks I could buy two books. I had a massive collection of CYOA books, and when I finally grew out of them I donated them to a local charity... some kid got my pile of books for Christmas in the early 90s. I hope that kid loved them as much as I did. Thank you for this wonderful trip down memory lane.

    @AJBernard@AJBernard2 жыл бұрын
  • The deaths didn't traumatize me when I was a kid. After all, the book taught me the valuable lesson that if you risk your life and get killed in the process, all you need to do is remember the page you came from and try the other choice. It's worked well for me.

    @jschap712@jschap7122 жыл бұрын
    • He said something like that in the video. But who was traumatized?

      @sandal_thong8631@sandal_thong86312 жыл бұрын
    • I wasn't traumatized, but man, I do remember some of them were pretty gruesome. There was one where I was killed by gangsters and my body was chopped up and fed to sharks.

      @Theonetruewonderfly@Theonetruewonderfly2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@TheonetruewonderflyMaybe "The Lost Ninja"? I recall that one introduced me to the trope of Yakuza gangsters cutting off parts of their fingers for the first time, heh. Complete with a tense illustration of the deed about to happen.

      @martianhighminder4539@martianhighminder45392 ай бұрын
  • When I was in 6th grade, we had a reading competition to see who could read the most books. There was a big debate whether my CYOA books counted since you didn’t necessarily read the “whole” book. So I had to agree to read every possible ending in order for it to count. I won by reading every CYOA book available at the time.

    @francispoverello2584@francispoverello25842 жыл бұрын
    • Interesting that they kept the first few in print, which should have been easiest to get from other sources. He showed an advertisement, but for some reason they didn't advertise in comic books I read in the 1980s. There is something to what he said for having a person in charge to handle feedback to find out what kids want next. Once they had 20, 30, 40, etc., how do you know what's good and worth keeping in print and to advertise?

      @sandal_thong8631@sandal_thong86312 жыл бұрын
    • We had a similar reading program at my school and the same controversy. I always read all the endings anyway though.

      @user-do2ev2hr7h@user-do2ev2hr7h Жыл бұрын
    • Prove it

      @jamegumm474@jamegumm47410 ай бұрын
    • I read every ending because I wanted to know all possible fates. It's like googling people you dated or had crushes on in high school to see what your fate might have been if you stayed together. I've done that and learned that I had better adventures after high school than they did.😅

      @naturalnashuan@naturalnashuan2 ай бұрын
    • Please tell me you are now the head of Alternate Reality/Time Travel research lol!!

      @MotionMcAnixx@MotionMcAnixx2 ай бұрын
  • This was Generation X's introduction to hypertext and the reason we ran with the internet in the early days. We also often did flip-book animations in the footers.

    @TimHunold@TimHunold2 жыл бұрын
    • Word (Gen X'er born in 1979 here).

      @btetschner@btetschner2 жыл бұрын
    • And D&D the intro to JavaScript, yeah?

      @Iffyish@Iffyish2 жыл бұрын
    • Brilliant answer

      @sibionic@sibionic2 жыл бұрын
    • @@btetschner 1976er here. Loved CYOA books

      @tyvulpintaur2732@tyvulpintaur27322 жыл бұрын
    • @@tyvulpintaur2732 I have actually never read one before, but I am pretty sure that I would like them. It is such an interesting idea. 79'er here (we're both Gen X'ers).

      @btetschner@btetschner2 жыл бұрын
  • My dad taught me to read early in life and I found and loved these books at a young age. My aunt was actually friends with Edward Packard's wife and when I was 8 she took me out to lunch in New York City - a cool restaurant with crayons and paper tablecloths at every table so you could doodle while you waited. We were ushered to our table and sitting there was a smiling man with salt and pepper hair that I never saw before. It was Edward Packard himself! He was as nice as you might imagine....a hero who lived up to your expectations. i still have battered, dog-eared autographed copies of Cave of Time, My Name is Jonah and Chimney Rock, nearly 40 years later....

    @QuakerPop@QuakerPop2 жыл бұрын
    • edit...."your code name is jonah"

      @QuakerPop@QuakerPop2 жыл бұрын
    • Cool!!!

      @jerikeeley1361@jerikeeley13612 ай бұрын
    • i misread that as "my dad taught me to read early life..."

      @BlackMasterRoshi@BlackMasterRoshiАй бұрын
  • WAR WITH THE EVIL POWER MASTER is the most metal title for anything.

    @thirtyworld@thirtyworld3 ай бұрын
  • The best part of those books was always trying to get myself killed. The plots to those books were never all that riveting, but the death scenes were always described very well and really stuck with me as a boy. One I remember is this- "Before you lose consciousness, a vision of your family passes in front of you. You close your eyes to savor the image. It's the last thing you'll ever see."

    @koolandblue@koolandblue2 жыл бұрын
    • That's awesome! I liked getting killed because it was unusual in a kids' book for the human protagonist to die.

      @naturalnashuan@naturalnashuan2 ай бұрын
    • "You love the death scenes because they're detailed. I love the death scenes because I crave death. We are not the same." X3

      @jackpijjin4088@jackpijjin40882 ай бұрын
    • Damn that was a good one! Gave me the chills!!!

      @FedericoPalma@FedericoPalma2 ай бұрын
    • I always loved making the "wrong" decisions.

      @settheory2219@settheory22192 ай бұрын
  • Discovering UFO 54-40's secret is still one of the great literary joys of my childhood. Damn I felt so clever. There was also the ending where you were basically the Flash, but everything moved slow to you all the time. It makes a joke about waiting at the grocery store line for what seems like a month, but that's some No Exit grade existential nightmare fuel for an 8 year old.

    @AverageDrafter@AverageDrafter2 жыл бұрын
    • Brother, you’re not kidding. The fact everyone talked so slow fed my nightmares of parallel dimension trappings for decades. Black holes spaghettifying you for eons for science fact doesn’t help either.

      @neosquirrel@neosquirrel2 жыл бұрын
  • I was a huge fan of the 'Lone Wolf' role playing game books by Joe Dever and wonderfully illustrated by Gary Chalk. They had a choose your own adventure style story with combat and random elements using dice or a number chart in the back of the book using a simple character sheet. I've managed to collect nearly the entire series including the world of Magnumund Companion which are awesome. It was a unique take on this genre of book series that I very much appreciated as a kid.

    @00Klingon@00Klingon Жыл бұрын
    • Ah Good Times...

      @alphathealphiliate@alphathealphiliate2 ай бұрын
    • Yeah I left a similar comment on this video. I have a box full of those Lone Wolf books from the late 80's and early 90's. Lone Wolf was the best.

      @grizzlywhisker@grizzlywhisker2 ай бұрын
    • they were great

      @derekscanlan4641@derekscanlan46412 ай бұрын
    • I still have that series. Loved them as a kid.

      @MoreBollocks-ui2zs@MoreBollocks-ui2zs13 күн бұрын
    • There's an app to play them again. 😊

      @user-xn3qm2il4l@user-xn3qm2il4l4 күн бұрын
  • The "Twist-a-Plot" series was glossed over in the list of knockoff series, but it had an author who later became famous in his own right...R.L. Stine, who went on to write the Goosebumps series.

    @Gilleban@Gilleban2 жыл бұрын
  • I started with CYOA, and because of those books ended up reading Encyclopedia Brown and EVERY Hardy Boys book including the Case Files and any with Nancy Drew starring in them. What a foundation back in the 80’s/90’s. Thanks for this video. 🙏🏾👍🏾

    @LamarrWilson@LamarrWilson2 жыл бұрын
    • You're welcome!

      @SecretGalaxyTV@SecretGalaxyTV2 жыл бұрын
    • Are you me? Throw in 'The Great Brain' series and some Tom Swift and that's me to a t.

      @sillyquiet@sillyquiet2 жыл бұрын
    • Also led nicely into Legends of Lone Wolf.

      @mikereger1186@mikereger11862 жыл бұрын
    • Holy crap we read the same books. My dad on a whim before i can remember bought like 40 hardy boys books at a garage sale. He wanted books in the house for us kids, even though he doesn't read for fun. It worked, and my brothers and myself all read a ton to this day. I also loved Encyclopedia Brown and still occasionally think about stories I read 3 decades ago.

      @kendanger6874@kendanger68742 жыл бұрын
    • This happened with me but I started with hardy boys then moved to CYOA and Lone Wolf. The edgy case files books were my jam! Just lmao that they started with a story about the hardy boys solving the case of a professional hitman icing Joe's girlfriend.

      @PacisJusticia@PacisJusticia2 жыл бұрын
  • Fighting Fantasy was the peak of the “choose your own adventure” fad. It mixed the ability to chose your path with D&D style role playing stats. I hope you do a video on that series someday

    @thechad7643@thechad76432 жыл бұрын
    • I couldn't believe he never even mentioned them🙈😂 Definitely the peak of that narrative style.

      @Snaggaface@Snaggaface2 жыл бұрын
    • Definitely want to see one of these on the Fighting Fantasy books!

      @kanewoodking2800@kanewoodking28002 жыл бұрын
    • Ahhh...the reason we got Final Fantasy instead of Fighting Fantasy.

      @rvfiasco@rvfiasco2 жыл бұрын
    • @@kanewoodking2800 They're great. You'd get a huge kick out of them, even now.

      @kforcer@kforcer2 жыл бұрын
    • Absolutely! Those were the best ones by fara

      @TheyTalkOnline@TheyTalkOnline2 жыл бұрын
  • 38 endings, 37 of which led to horrible death. Great, fun reading.

    @privatename5788@privatename57882 жыл бұрын
  • I remember buying new notebooks and attempting to write my own #ChooseYourOwnAdventure stories... numbering every page of the notebook first, and finding weird 'glee' in calculating how many pages I wanted to make them turn/in which direction--and even trying to write one of those endless-loop endings. It was a fun exercise. These books were powerful imaginative tools, honestly. I'd been hoping somebody would do a video dedicated specifically to this concept. Well done #ToyGalaxy. This was fantastic :)

    @ingridfong-daley5899@ingridfong-daley58992 жыл бұрын
  • I still remember getting that very first print of "Choose Your Own Adventure: In the Cave of Time", from a Scholastic catalog in 1979, when I was in the 5th grade. It became my absolute favorite book, and from that point on, whenever I discovered a new book published, I had my parents snag it for me. I got the ENTIRE original run of Choose Your Own Adventure books, plus the subsequent year's run of Dungeons & Dragons Choose Your Own Adventure books. I still have those books in my book case here. All of them. They were ground-breaking and I'm willing to say, very integral in my getting involved in Dungeons & Dragons and role playing games in 1980. Strangely, in all these years, I've never met anyone other than myself who read these books or knew of their existence. Oh, there are some people I know today, who know about them simply because of the name had entered the common lexicon, but have never actually encountered or read them. I used to tell people all about how great these books were when I was a kid, only to receive blank stares.

    @BlackburnBigdragon@BlackburnBigdragon2 жыл бұрын
    • Well...I still have my collection. In spanish.

      @iaquil@iaquil2 жыл бұрын
    • By “catalog”, do you mean the four page tissue paper-like flyers they handed out monthly in schools? I LOVED those things! Before I got an allowance I could convince my parents to buy 3-4 books at a time since reading was hardly an endeavor you wanted to pooh pooh your kids from. Definitely got some of the junior and regular books from those flyers!

      @neosquirrel@neosquirrel2 жыл бұрын
    • I had 2 of the D and D choose your own adventure. One had a blue cover and some frost giants on the cover and the other was an orange cover with I think a dragon on it. But that was 1985 or so.

      @pauljoyner4338@pauljoyner43382 жыл бұрын
    • I still have my choose your own adventure books as a kid, including Prisoner of Par Tharkas and a Zork Adventure. I also have a number of the Choose Your on Adventures books. I even have the entire run of all the Transformers Chose Your Adventures books as well.

      @bccooper2418@bccooper24182 жыл бұрын
    • @@bccooper2418 very lucky. I found them out too late

      @gohjohan@gohjohan2 жыл бұрын
  • When I was in junior high, if kids got too noisy at lunch they would put us on a sort of “timeout” period with no talking. So without speaking, my best friend and I were reading a space adventure “Choose Your Own Adventure” after we finished eating and would gesture when we were done with a page; at the time we could both speed read. Needless to say, I guess we looked like we were enjoying ourselves and got into trouble… for reading a book… IN SCHOOL… AT LUNCH! Yeah, that happened.

    @Mr.ThomasAnderson@Mr.ThomasAnderson2 жыл бұрын
    • I got expelled from 5th grade for reading V.C. Andrews books. They said it was incest porn. Rather than noticing how amazing it was that I was THE ONLY ONE IN MY ENTIRE SCHOOL who would EVER read without being forced to. But instead I was made an example of a sex pervert somehow, though Andrews was only one of dozens of authors I read. So was forced to be home-schooled. By the time I was 17 I had taught myself Greek, Latin, and Hebrew and became a Biblical scholar.

      @cleverlydevisedmyth@cleverlydevisedmyth2 ай бұрын
    • @@cleverlydevisedmyth you win! 😄

      @Mr.ThomasAnderson@Mr.ThomasAnderson2 ай бұрын
  • I remember I had a Star Trek licensed one - not sure if it was an official Choose Your Own Adventure or not - where you're a new ensign interacting with the main characters. At one juncture, the transporter is malfunctioning, and one of your choices is to just jump into the beam to show everyone it's safe. You end up beamed into a rock. Even had a drawing of a rock with hair on it. * chef's kiss *

    @chocolatestraw3971@chocolatestraw3971Ай бұрын
  • These books changed my life. In 4th grade (1983)I found them in the library after hearing about them from some other kid. I checked out “3rd planet from Altair”, which was in line with my interest in space / astronomy. I loved it, and started going to the library to check out more of them. I loved them so much that I would go to the library just to see if they had any new ones. Often. If there were no CYOA, I would read another “choose” series. If there were none of those, I read something else. My family didn’t have enough money to buy paperback books for $2.95. But I could use the library and I did. Big time. School work became trivially way for me. My Grades went to straight A’s. The only problem was that school was so easy that I was bored and wanted to read CYOA when I finished my work. My 4th grade teacher, who was pretty awful, got so frustrated with me sneaking those books to read in class that she called me a “retard” in front of the class. My momand I went to the school for a meeting with the principal and teacher. I was terrified because I thought I was in big trouble. Instead my mom tore into the teacher like I had never seen and told the principal that if she ever heard of any teacher saying that to a child again she would take it to the school board. And that’s how I learned how to stand up to authority when necessary.

    @stt5v2002@stt5v20022 ай бұрын
    • I'm delighted to hear that you were able to find "3rd planet from Altair" at your public library. I was buying books in a library in the 80's and, while some libraries chose not to buy popular paperbacks, I bought all I could, including all of the CYOA books. They were so popular, I made a "While you wait..." list to push other books while kids waited for the popular paperbacks they wanted to come back to the library.

      @robertawalsh2995@robertawalsh29952 ай бұрын
  • "Choose your own Adventure" was the best!

    @tkskagen@tkskagen2 жыл бұрын
  • A big part of my childhood, in the UK we had Fighting Fantasy. The first one was even a board game.

    @staley101@staley1012 жыл бұрын
    • Two dice, a pencil and an eraser are all you need.

      @jimi_jams@jimi_jams2 жыл бұрын
    • I was slightly disappointed that FF books weren't mentioned. Back in the 2000s, I worked for the computer games company Eidos, where Ian Livingstone was one of the directors!

      @allenelliott5647@allenelliott56472 жыл бұрын
    • @@allenelliott5647 CYOA was dead to me after I discovered Fighting Fantasy! I was also disappointed it was not mentioned.

      @matthewtuell9335@matthewtuell93352 жыл бұрын
    • I’ll add to the Fighting Fantasy non mention disappointment. Still got a load of them and trying to persuade my kids to read them. House of Hell would give you nightmares though

      @markbutl@markbutl2 жыл бұрын
    • Here's an interesting fact: Back in the 80's, the first Final Fantasy game was originally to be called Fighting Fantasy, but Square (later Square Enix) had to change it because Jackson and Livingstone owned the trademark on Fighting Fantasy. Ironically, Ian Livingstone would later go into computer games, including several based on the FF books, and his company was later bought out by none other than Square Enix. So technically, Square Enix now own the rights to the name they wanted to use for Final fantasy in the first place. You can't make this stuff up!

      @minimalbstolerance8113@minimalbstolerance81132 жыл бұрын
  • I still read these books from time to time, and I'm 46! Sure, it's not great "literature" or anything, but no other books get me involved in this particular way. I like to treat the story like a real life or death situation that is actually happening to me and it's thrilling to find out if I would've survived or not. Silly, maybe, but an absolutely fun diversion.

    @hawaiidispenser@hawaiidispenser2 жыл бұрын
  • These were the starter kit for the Lone Wolf books, the grittier version of Choose Your Own Adventure with an epic story line.

    @themonkeyhand@themonkeyhand2 жыл бұрын
    • Love lone wolf. It's amazing

      @DarkGhostHacker@DarkGhostHacker2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@DarkGhostHacker Do you have the app?

      @user-xn3qm2il4l@user-xn3qm2il4l4 күн бұрын
  • For a series of children’s books, some of the fates/unhappy endings they chose were rather grizzly and traumatizing. That’s why I remember and loved them a lot as a kid!

    @shenloken2@shenloken22 жыл бұрын
    • They were the print versions of the deaths in King's Quest.

      @Ganondorfdude11@Ganondorfdude112 жыл бұрын
    • LOL! The reason I swore to never read one again after running across that. I didnt have the stomach for it.

      @WillmobilePlus@WillmobilePlus2 жыл бұрын
    • I had a Jurassic Park ripoff that was so hard. I don't think I ever "beat it." I remember pretty clearly one of the endings was, after stealing a boat, you get machine-gunned by a helicopter.

      @colinmunch@colinmunch2 жыл бұрын
    • I had one which had you as a paranormal investigator, and it had severed heads, disembowelment and other grewsome things. It was great.

      @AdamBladeTaylor@AdamBladeTaylor2 жыл бұрын
    • That is sometimes called the Horrible Histories paradox. Kids love the gruesome and gnarly stuff, how can we use this in education? Then the pearl clutching moral minority come for you (see D&D Satanic Panic and similar tales).

      @jon-paulfilkins7820@jon-paulfilkins78202 жыл бұрын
  • I still remember when we used to be able to bring a book for the teacher to read to the class. I brought a Choose Your Own Adventure book. But she didn’t get it and just read it straight through, even reading the instructions. She got confused when the story jumped around and put it down.

    @AdamSnyder1234@AdamSnyder12342 жыл бұрын
    • I had a teacher who read one to us and would pause to let us choose what to do next.

      @UnveiledAngel@UnveiledAngel2 жыл бұрын
    • Your teacher sounds like robot space alien wearing a human suit. You were lucky to have escaped with your life.

      @beatrixwickson8477@beatrixwickson84772 жыл бұрын
    • @@beatrixwickson8477 😆 At least she didn't eat us. I'll consider that a win.

      @UnveiledAngel@UnveiledAngel2 жыл бұрын
    • @@beatrixwickson8477 Funny you say that. That was also a book I read when I was a kid along with the choose your own adventure books. "My teacher is an alien."

      @Gatorade69@Gatorade692 жыл бұрын
    • @@Gatorade69 that series rocked

      @nurgle333@nurgle3332 жыл бұрын
  • I remember discovering "Choose Your Own Adventure" as a kid in a public library; since they'd be checked out, I never knew it was like a big series, all I knew was there was always 2 or 3 on the shelf at a time. Then one day, for some reason, a lady my mom worked for had given her a whole box of books to give to me, and in it were like 30 CYOA books... that was one of the greatest days of my childhood ever :D

    @Enrique-Garcia@Enrique-Garcia2 жыл бұрын
  • I only had two: You Are A Monster and You Are A Millionaire. I still have them. I just wish I had more. Thank you for the upload.

    @Chaosfox04@Chaosfox042 жыл бұрын
  • Just seeing those book covers hits me with nostalgia. I loved these when I was a kid.

    @geoffreybrockmeier3765@geoffreybrockmeier37652 жыл бұрын
    • I recognised some of those covers too. Crazy!

      @pittsky@pittsky2 жыл бұрын
    • I was lucky to get in on it soon after CYOA first came out; Mystery of Chimney Rock (1980) was my favorite. I read the first 11 published by 1981, so missed 1982's Inside UFO 54-40 with the cheating page he mentioned in this video.

      @sandal_thong8631@sandal_thong86312 жыл бұрын
  • There was also fighting fantasy game books that shared this format but also allowed you to roll dice to determine the outcome. Deathtrap Dungeon and The Warlock of Firetop Mountain are two of the ones I remember.

    @Geerladenlad@Geerladenlad2 жыл бұрын
    • I was disappointed that these were not even mentioned. There was another series called Duel Masters where you got two books and you and a friend read each book and could find each other and battle. I believe FF also dabbled in this a bit as well.

      @g8kpr3000@g8kpr30002 жыл бұрын
    • Warlock Of Firetop Mountain was the first I owned (via one of those school-based book order schemes) and I collected half-a-dozen within a few years. I preferred them to Choose Your Own Adventure but admit I skipped the dice-rolling part so I could easily read them in bed. I simply assumed victory in each encounter. Imagine my shock to discover that a few decisions would lead to certain death! I think the vampire in the first book is an example of that.

      @originaluddite@originaluddite2 жыл бұрын
    • Loved those titles.

      @AnthonyP73@AnthonyP732 жыл бұрын
    • @@originaluddite My first was "Demons of the Deep" which I absolutely loved. I did the whole dice rolling thing, but my friend didn't. One thing I never fully understood was that some combat said "you can only defend" or something, then say "if you win, go to page XX" and I would say "how can I win if i can only defend?" I must have missed something, and would need to re-look at it again. I liked these stories a lot, some were really cool, like the Robot Commando, and some were freaking hard, like Creature of Havoc and House of Hell.

      @g8kpr3000@g8kpr30002 жыл бұрын
    • I mapped out _Deathtrap Dungeon,_ but almost never got the dice rolls to succeed. Then it turns out you needed to find certain jewels. So I gave up. There's a monster in _Warlock..._ that you can't beat if you have low stats, so not using the dice is a good option.

      @sandal_thong8631@sandal_thong86312 жыл бұрын
  • I still remember to this day- you train for years in the art of ninja, you adapt to living in the darkness. You now have amazing night vision. You hide in the room ready to jump when, the light is turned on and you fall blindly out of a window to your death.

    @quantidel@quantidel2 жыл бұрын
  • my sister and I used to read these to each other while we washed dishes after dinner. One would read, and the other would wash and get to make the choices. Eventually we got so sick of the 'choices' being presented to us in the books having nothing to do with whether we were observant or clever but just being random 'pick a hallway' that we ditched the books all together and took over telling the stories to each other, with a story teller and the 'main character' who could make choices to influence the story at any moment. Those stories got pretty damn epic - and long - as we got older. As adults, decades later, we still sometimes say 'TBC' to each other which was our code, as kids when our parents told us to stop nattering, that the story was 'to be continued' the next time we were left on our own.

    @jsouth5577@jsouth55778 ай бұрын
  • "The best part is not knowing if you're going to die or not!" So, just like life.

    @ethansloan@ethansloan2 жыл бұрын
    • I think in life, everybody knows they're going to die, don't they?

      @Michael-gs7so@Michael-gs7so2 жыл бұрын
    • It depends on how you look at it

      @POMIlim@POMIlim2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Michael-gs7so takes a while to sink in for many

      @danielmiller3596@danielmiller35962 жыл бұрын
  • I didn't like reading as a child so the Choose your Own Adventure books were the only books I ordered due to the engagement. Some of the endings were very morbid and it got me thinking a lot about why did my character have to die? I was a big fan of these books until the NES came along.

    @junrosamura645@junrosamura6452 жыл бұрын
    • The books were like video games.. in paper form!

      @Raziel312@Raziel3122 жыл бұрын
    • I think the NES came at a time when I was transitioning from books to pop culture and my last book was probably You are a Superstar in ‘89. I don’t recognize any title beyond that in the list.

      @neosquirrel@neosquirrel2 жыл бұрын
  • Had three of the Time Machine books. They improved on the concept by allowing the reader to select from a list of items to take with them on the adventure, which could be useful on the right page. Loved those books. Eventually gave them to a young man I was tutoring.

    @steelshade@steelshade2 жыл бұрын
  • It is impossible to describe how those books really felt interactive back in the early 80's. The world had very few choices, but video games and these books had endless choices with epic consequences.

    @DejanOfRadic@DejanOfRadic3 ай бұрын
  • The "Give Yourself Goosebumps" series was another example of a CYOA copycat (the CYOA formula applied to the Goosebumps series!). Thanks for uploading!

    @MateDrinker33@MateDrinker332 жыл бұрын
    • I remember that. I had the one with the Haunted Wax Museum.

      @catcrimes80@catcrimes802 жыл бұрын
    • @@catcrimes80 I had that one, one about a lab monkey and one about weird peanut butter

      @Flutterbutt225@Flutterbutt2252 жыл бұрын
    • Have been re-reading Animorphs lately and they too had CYOA books. If there was a popular book franchise there was a CYOA version of it.

      @BonaparteBardithion@BonaparteBardithion2 жыл бұрын
    • I loved these books, I never owned any but I would always check them out from the school and public library.

      @Dermetsu@Dermetsu2 жыл бұрын
    • I loved the Give Yourself Goosebumps books! I remember picking one up thinking it was just a regular gb book, then getting to the first choice and being like 'what is this?!?' I think it was the one where you're in a forest/jungle, and there's fishmen at some point

      @RandomJot@RandomJot2 жыл бұрын
  • I remember getting ahold of one of these Choose Your Own Adventure books in the mid 1990s. I was so impressed with the concept I wrote my own story complete with multiple choices. The only problem was when I read it, I knew all what the outcomes of the choices were.

    @1977TA@1977TA2 жыл бұрын
    • Should have let some other people (friends and family) play them.

      @wariolandgoldpiramid@wariolandgoldpiramid2 жыл бұрын
    • @@wariolandgoldpiramid I did but it just sucked that I could not enjoy them with the benefit of not knowing the outcomes of the choices.

      @1977TA@1977TA2 жыл бұрын
    • I did exactly the same thing. I remember two stories I wrote, one was a generic submarine adventure, and another where I lived in a lighthouse with a robot! 🇬🇧🤖🤔 Nearly 40 years later I am now working on a music video, and guess what, it centres around a robot... and a lighthouse! I truly wonder in 40 years time, will the generation that are gaming today perhaps instead of reading/writing, will their imagination be regarded as better nurtured than ours or will it be starved on account of them not having to for example... Make all the noises and music in their heads? Anyway, compliments of the season to you. What was your story about? 🌲👍

      @nigelcarren@nigelcarren2 жыл бұрын
    • @@nigelcarren My story was about an adventure seeking woman who finds her way into a mysterious castle only to discover it is home to a vampire! She attempts to collect evidence of his existence while avoiding being seen by him and captured which would lead to her getting turned into one of his brides.

      @1977TA@1977TA2 жыл бұрын
    • @@1977TA damn! Sounds good! You should have tried to get it published

      @robzilla730@robzilla7302 жыл бұрын
  • Got stuck in an infinite loop during one where you had to survive the Civil War. Also, there was one where you were a squire/page to a knight. In one scenario if you got caught you died by literally getting turned into a candle. 25 years later and I still remember the illustration of you hanging over the wax quite vividly.

    @shaneminer4526@shaneminer45262 ай бұрын
  • I read a few of these books, as a child. I really appreciated that the author gave the readers a choice to choose their own story points and endings. .

    @cabellero1120@cabellero11203 сағат бұрын
  • My mother used to take us to the nearest library once a week during summer vacation, to pick up some books and buy some ice cream at the nearby shop. I read *so many* CYOA books during those summers. I loved them, and they seeded my later foray into Dungeons & Dragons, which has lasted to this day. But I sometimes miss those old kids' books.

    @rkstevenson5448@rkstevenson54482 жыл бұрын
    • Same here. The ones by Packard and Montgomery especially had a certain charm and style to them that is hard to replicate.

      @kforcer@kforcer2 жыл бұрын
  • Joe Dever's Lone Wolf books were my gateway to TTRPGs as a kid!

    @jaywaii3187@jaywaii31872 жыл бұрын
    • I remember the lone wolf books, they were great. Do you remember the Fighting Fantasy books like The Warlock of Firetop Mountain?

      @jasonpapai73@jasonpapai732 жыл бұрын
    • I read all of the Lonewolf Series that was available in the US. One of my favorite series.

      @desertphoenix6980@desertphoenix69802 жыл бұрын
    • Same, and is in fact the reason I use "Lonewolf" as part of my username.

      @RomLoneWolf23@RomLoneWolf232 жыл бұрын
    • @@RomLoneWolf23 Joe Dever would be proud.

      @gohjohan@gohjohan2 жыл бұрын
    • Gawd I luved Lone wolf (loup solitaire for frenchies like me lol) Also loved the shinobi series ^^ super ninja shite. Also remember one that was like a duo book.... in one you played a magician and the other was a barbarian... you could play with a friend and both books had duo events ! It was great.... cant remember the name tho T_T

      @claudegrenier3180@claudegrenier31802 жыл бұрын
  • I remember that the Mystery of Chimney Rock as a kid was my favourite Choose Your Own Adventure. Looking through the list I remember a few of them. Deadwood City, Inside UFO 54-40 and Mountain Survival. The Zork: The Forces of Krill was good too. I had the blue cover version. There were 2 sequels that I had. I remember they had a red and green cover. Apparently there was a 4th book but I never saw it in bookshops. There was knock-off choose your own adventure series too. I remember one I liked called pick-a-path: The Roller Coaster Ghost or something.

    @analcommando1124@analcommando1124 Жыл бұрын
  • Edward Packard is still writing. I contacted him and thanked him for the Choose Your Own Adventure Series. He was appreciative. There are some 4th wall moments in the books where Edward Packard himself appears such as a drawing of him. I beg to differ with your use of the term "copycat books". ; Lone Wolf by Joe Dever was a very different story and game system. By the Way Project Aon was given permission to put the Lone Wolf books online for anyone to read. You can download the Kai Lord adventures!

    @musicalneptunian@musicalneptunian2 жыл бұрын
    • Lone Wolf by Joe Dever -- those are some of the best. KAI MASTERS!

      @muaadeeb9625@muaadeeb9625 Жыл бұрын
  • *realizing you made a choice* “I didn’t take my hand off the page so it doesn’t count!” I remember having this in school that had to do with historical events. Great video!

    @kevinvogler2380@kevinvogler23802 жыл бұрын
    • The equivalent of save-scumming in an adventure game on the computer! Sierra even made a puzzle in Space Quest 1 that expects you to be save-scumming: using a slot-machine to get more money. Save after each win, load after Roger gets fried. The VGA remake adds an in-game item to mess with the machine as an alternative.

      @Roxor128@Roxor128Ай бұрын
  • I’ve got such happy memories of reading these type of books as a pre-teen / teenager - especially the Fighting Fantasy series that was everywhere in the UK in the early 80’s 😊👍

    @michaelantonyaustin@michaelantonyaustin2 жыл бұрын
    • UK here too and the Jackson/Livngstone series were the ones I had. A lot of them.

      @Elwaves2925@Elwaves29252 жыл бұрын
    • I read many of those books in the 00s! My friend's dad had some and I got really into them, so bought some of my own. Really good memories.

      @xNintenJenx@xNintenJenx2 жыл бұрын
    • I still have a special FF pack somewhere (in my loft I suspect) that contained a pad of score sheets, a couple of dice, pencils and iron on t-shirt transfer

      @johnd6487@johnd64872 жыл бұрын
  • Fun fact: The video game variant of these books are nowadays visual novels who are highly popular in Japan, but also played (and written) elsewhere. They mostly add graphics and music to the whole experience.

    @thelastsecret3514@thelastsecret35142 ай бұрын
  • I still remember my first Choose Your Own Adventure book. Through the Black Hole by Edward Packard. I remember trying to read through it like a normal book, going from page 1 to page 2, to page 3 and so on. I very quickly realized something was wrong as the flow of the story made no sense. Even between facing pages there was a discontinuity. The page on the left reads like, "Oh, you are boarding the starship, it looks really fancy". And the page on the right suddenly jumped into "There is a major malfunction and you have lost all control". At first I thought it was a misprint, the pages were printed out of order. Then I realized the text at the bottom of the page was important. "If you want to do W, go to page X. If you want to do Y, go to page Z". So I started over and started that, and it was a far more enjoyable read. Before quick saves became a thing in games, I was using the low tech version of that in these books. My finger. When I had to make a choice, I would place my finger between the pages at the last choice I had to make, and move on to the next page. If that involved death, I would "reload" back to the last choice and go for the other(I also did this for success endings in some cases), trying to extend the story as long as possible until I had reached a point where both choices ended the story. Those books were my gateway drug into video games. Now you can choose your own adventure on the Television screen?! What?! 16:06 Fun little tidbit, Nintendo had to put out an ad campaign to request people stop calling all video game consoles a "Nintendo" for this very reason. If all video game consoles became known as a "Nintendo", they would have lost the ability to hold their trademark of the name(even though it was literally the name of the company and not the name of the consoles made by the company, the NES is technically just an Entertainment System made by Nintendo).

    @TrexelCat@TrexelCat2 ай бұрын
  • Race Forever blew my mind as a kid. One of the endings time loops back to the beginning so you literally race forever

    @comicsmisexplained@comicsmisexplained2 жыл бұрын
    • I loved that book!

      @kingkillmonger74@kingkillmonger742 жыл бұрын
    • That book was where I learned about flash floods. Demonstrated the concept and danger very well. And they thought all those grisly endings weren't good for kids.

      @BonaparteBardithion@BonaparteBardithion2 жыл бұрын
    • There was one CYOA book that had a page about getting to Ultima that was not listed as an option on any other page. You literally had to come across the page by leafing through all the pages in the book. And the page starts with something like "you didn't make any choice or decision but here you are"

      @rlopez8630@rlopez86302 жыл бұрын
    • Ugh... never mind... the YT video brought it up!!!! I wrote this before he had gotten there!

      @rlopez8630@rlopez86302 жыл бұрын
    • I've always been a gearhead since my old man would take me to the races at a young age, so when I saw Race Forever on the shelf, I knew I had to read it. That was the first time I'd ever heard of a Lancia or a Saab. This book knew it's cars, geography and history.

      @hootowl2112@hootowl21122 жыл бұрын
  • Imagine not cheating at Choose Your Own Adventure

    @NoBirthNoDeath@NoBirthNoDeath2 жыл бұрын
    • I actually didnt cheat at these type of books, guess i was too honest

      @g8kpr3000@g8kpr30002 жыл бұрын
    • I didn’t cheat either, back then I had the patience to start from the beginning after each ending. Cheating was to me like spoiling the book.

      @Anderson_101@Anderson_1012 жыл бұрын
    • God no. I could never restart.

      @TheMaskedheel@TheMaskedheel2 жыл бұрын
    • One of the books 54-40 (some space adventure REQUIRED you to cheat to get the best ending. Page 100-104 refer to Utopia, the goal of the story. No page led to page 100.

      @collymorpheous8575@collymorpheous85752 жыл бұрын
    • @@collymorpheous8575 that's true, after (more of less) a couple of dozens of reading through the book UFO 54-40 I thought about searching for the mentioned Utopia "manually" and I found it. But I don't think of that as cheating, as people say nowadays, it was a Feature. A very cool one.

      @Anderson_101@Anderson_1012 жыл бұрын
  • As a child I thought reading was boring and refused to sit and read any book simply for enjoyment. When I stumbled across Choose Your Own Adventure books it was the first time I genuinely enjoyed reading and would scramble to read as much as I can. That started me on my path to reading for enjoyment.

    @thelastdon1@thelastdon12 жыл бұрын
  • I used to buy these books when my elementary school had Scholastic book fair days (1982). I didn't know what it was, the cover looked cool. I brought the first book home when I was 6 and my mom went through the stack of books I bought (she wouldn't give me money for Mother's day plant sales, but I got $20 for book fair day--she loves reading). She was excited when she found the CYOA books and explained to me what they were and how to read them. It was so much fun! She bought more whenever she went to the book store (every weekend). I gotta get a few and read them agan.

    @WastedTalent-@WastedTalent-2 ай бұрын
  • 9:10 wait a minute, William H. Macy & Felicity Huffman were in the _Choose Your Own Adventure_ DVD?? *If you decide to pay off The Abominable Snowman to take the SAT for your daughter, turn to page 6.*

    @IanNewYashaTheFinalAct@IanNewYashaTheFinalAct2 жыл бұрын
  • I remember going to the library in the late 80s and through the 90s to check out the Choose Your Own Adventure books. I spent hours trying to read through all the paths cause they hooked you into the story. Good times.

    @seerus1351@seerus13512 жыл бұрын
  • When I was watching....well playing...whichever...Bandersnatch on Netflix with my son at one moment I said to him: "We have no choice here, sometime we go to dead ends or dull things and have to chose again, this is an illusion of choice, we go where they want us to go". At this moment the main character says "They think they have a choice, but they only have the choices I give to them" (or something). In two nights we navigated every branch of the story but we never felt that we really were at the driver's seat.

    @agranero6@agranero6Ай бұрын
  • William H Macy being a voice actor for these is INSANE

    @Brahaja@Brahaja57 минут бұрын
  • The Time Machine series were my favorite. I liked how there was only ever one ending and they were sneaking in history lessons while I read. In college (mid 90s) I made a cheesy tribute page and one of the authors thanked me for keeping the series 'alive'. I must have read book #2, "Search for Dinosaurs" a dozen times!

    @ChrisGerstle@ChrisGerstle2 жыл бұрын
    • Time Machine was my jam. I read "Sword of the Samurai" so many times it fell apart.

      @driver8sk@driver8sk2 жыл бұрын
    • I LOVE that series. I still have a few of them. I read "World War I Flying Ace" so many times the cover fell off.

      @scottcarroll9201@scottcarroll92012 жыл бұрын
    • @@scottcarroll9201 Same book for me too.

      @dirtydish6642@dirtydish66422 жыл бұрын
  • I read literally every single one of the original series. Growing up in the bay area in the 80s, my library would trade books with all the other libraries around and I would special order each one, keeping tabs until I read every single one.

    @fanatic26@fanatic262 жыл бұрын
    • "gotta read 'em all" is a much better motto to have had, than "gotta catch 'em all" is as a commercial jingle to have been had by... If you get my meaning

      @vitolinneus5386@vitolinneus53862 жыл бұрын
    • @I decide your pronouns, not you. "literally" is abused when used as an emphasis word It really means "as per intent of the writer" and is kind of an intent to illegitimately invoke law Is this what you mean? Are we 'on the same page?' (O bon Chevalier avec in nom questionnable!)

      @vitolinneus5386@vitolinneus53862 жыл бұрын
  • I remember when Price Club (Costco) got in the box sets of books. It was better than being a kid in a candy store. I still have Vampire Express .

    @jasondotg@jasondotg2 ай бұрын
  • These were great, and a great stepping stone to Joe Denver’s Lone Wolf series of CYOA-like books.

    @gddesigner@gddesigner2 жыл бұрын
    • Lone Wolf has been officially turned into an app. 👍

      @user-xn3qm2il4l@user-xn3qm2il4l4 күн бұрын
  • One of the best books I remember is, "Mountain of Mirrors" by Rose Estes. It was a perfect and brief D&D adventure without rolling the dice.

    @griffonclaw@griffonclaw2 жыл бұрын
  • I remember being introduced to goosebumps choose your own adventure books as a kid and having my mine blown. I literally thought it was pioneering reading technology 🤣😂

    @kharyrobertson3579@kharyrobertson35792 жыл бұрын
  • A seperate series of books like these were the Zork books, yes based on the Infocom adventure computer games by alumni from MIT (4 of them)

    @kbahr007@kbahr007Күн бұрын
  • I remember getting really into these books when I was in 6th grade (1984-85). I also remember the teachers and librarians at my school having an irrational hatred of these books and we weren't allowed to read them for class assignments or book reports. One thing I liked the most about the books was that "plot armor" didn't really apply, since many of the endings ended up in horrible deaths for the main character. In normal books, once the main character of the story is established, you can usually tell if they are going to survive some terrible danger based on how much of the book is left to read. For example, if your main character is trapped in a tree with hungry lions clawing at him from the ground on page 50 of a 300 page book, then you can pretty much assume that main character is going to make it out of that situation mostly intact. This wasn't the case for CYOA books.

    @Barada73@Barada733 ай бұрын
  • Honestly, one of the best things about being a kid at the time.

    @TriColoredTiger@TriColoredTiger2 жыл бұрын
    • That, and Saturday morning cartoons!

      @solan7978@solan79782 жыл бұрын
    • How old are you?

      @MrKevinEaddy@MrKevinEaddy2 жыл бұрын
    • @@MrKevinEaddy Forty-four.

      @solan7978@solan79782 жыл бұрын
  • i loved these books in elementary school! it was this series, Encyclopedia Brown, and the Hardy Boys which i loved the most ! : )

    @aliali-ce3yf@aliali-ce3yf2 жыл бұрын
    • Heck ya!

      @MS-lk2sk@MS-lk2sk2 жыл бұрын
    • Dang, that's like my exact reading list as a kid. I admit I also dipped into a few Nancy Drew books.

      @mayssm@mayssm2 жыл бұрын
    • Encyclopedia brown was a favorite. I loved these books too. I'll admit I often cheated and went back to get a better ending.

      @dbel1980@dbel19802 жыл бұрын
    • @@dbel1980 the spookiest ending was in a book about space travel , ended with an illustration of a skeleton in an astronaut suit, i quickly turned back and choose a different path : ) wish i remembered what that choose your own adventure was

      @aliali-ce3yf@aliali-ce3yf2 жыл бұрын
    • Oh man encyclopedia brown! Remember book it from pizza hut?

      @wizeguy26@wizeguy262 жыл бұрын
  • I loved these books growing up. It was fun to see what would happen depending on your choices. A couple of them I flowcharted out, not even knowing what a flowchart was at that time. I started programming and put the logic from a couple of books into a program that showed the different choices. This was when our school had one Apple II+ for the entire school.

    @RARufus@RARufus2 ай бұрын
  • I still have my D&D choose your own adventure books from the 80's, about a dozen or so. My school library would have book fairs and I got as many as my allowance could afford.

    @xr4ti548@xr4ti548Ай бұрын
  • Those were some of my FAVORITE books to read! Thanks for making this informative video! I enjoyed learning about their origins & the journey they went thru over the years! 🤓

    @silviag.bolanos934@silviag.bolanos9342 жыл бұрын
  • My favorite ones were the RL Stine "Give Yourself Goosebumps: Reader Beware You Choose The Scare!" Books. I also loved his regular Goosebumps books as well, and both are a big reason I am a horror novelist.

    @JackDanyaKemplin@JackDanyaKemplin2 жыл бұрын
    • Pretty sure RL Stine actually wrote a couple of early Choose Your Own Adventure books before Goosebumps took off.

      @owenturley6214@owenturley62142 жыл бұрын
    • Give yourself goosebumps was soo cool because typically you would gain a "weapon" or gimmick in the plot as part of the story. Tick-tock You're Dead gave you the "chronometer". "Deep in the jungle of Doom" gave you Fishman hybrid powers...BUT one of the ending was you turning completely into a fish, so watch out! Fun series!

      @ssjsmith8879@ssjsmith88792 жыл бұрын
    • @@owenturley6214 yep RL Stine wrote some Choose Your Own Adventures under different pseudonyms while he was trying to get Goosebumps going.

      @RatelHBadger@RatelHBadger2 жыл бұрын
    • @@RatelHBadger really? Which one's?

      @benmaynard3059@benmaynard30592 жыл бұрын
    • I've got the first twenty five in that series.

      @benmaynard3059@benmaynard30592 жыл бұрын
  • I remember Deadwood city was the first book I got the desired ending in, I still remember that feeling . Great books .

    @tokershark1570@tokershark15703 ай бұрын
  • I still have my copy of The Mystery of Chimney Rock. I liked the dark/scary aspect, instead of the usual no one dying or being locked away in a house forever preteen books.

    @Bernie3000@Bernie30002 ай бұрын
  • I was a big fan of the "Lone wolf" series. Very similar in format, those kind of game/books were so awesome and helped me to learn to enjoy reading.

    @ytrefugee113@ytrefugee1132 жыл бұрын
    • Lone wolf was my introduction to the genre.

      @EricLefebvrePhotography@EricLefebvrePhotography2 жыл бұрын
    • Oh man, I wish I hadn't sold my Lone Wolf books now.

      @synthstatic9889@synthstatic98892 жыл бұрын
    • Lone Wolf books are great!

      @m1k3l1f3@m1k3l1f32 жыл бұрын
    • Joe Dever died a few years ago before being able to finish the 32 book series - the last book he wrote was #29. His son has taken on the task to produce the last 3 books. At time of writing there is just one more to be published.

      @ed_j_webb@ed_j_webb2 жыл бұрын
    • Still have my collection of Lone Wolf.

      @PB-tr5ze@PB-tr5ze2 жыл бұрын
  • I got rid of most of my collection, but I still hold onto my favorite 3: "Cave of Time", "Forbidden Castle", and "Mystery of Chimney Rock" -- the best one of all IMHO.

    @CR3271@CR32712 жыл бұрын
  • A similar series of books is "Lone Wolf Adventures". It's a full single player ttrpg where you make a unique character with a full character sheet and carry your progress forward through the books. Theres 32-34 books in the series. You need a D10 for the rolls, but it has a number grid in the back and ya drop your pencil on it and where the eraser lands is your dice roll.

    @blaked7532@blaked7532 Жыл бұрын
  • The most popular CYOA at my elementary school was “Space Vampire”. It gave everyone nightmares and we loved it! Also, after a few tries, I cheated so I could get the good ending and blast off with the badass Action Girl, Roxanne!

    @pensdrawblood@pensdrawblood2 ай бұрын
  • missed my own personal favorite series: Sorcery! By Steve Jackson The series featured a neat spell system that required you to memorize spell names and collect spell components, as well as keeping a notecard with your character's items, to proceed through a several book adventure, that could be played as each adventure separately, or all three in a row with a continuing character

    @MsCherryKiss@MsCherryKiss2 жыл бұрын
    • I still have my original set of 4 Sorcery books plus the spellbook on my bookshelves.

      @ziploc2000@ziploc20002 жыл бұрын
    • Sorcery! was awesome.

      @Jackalblade9@Jackalblade92 жыл бұрын
    • I had a massive collection of most if the fighting fantasy books by Ian Livingstone and Steve Jackson, they were great and I remember when I was younger I used to just look through the books and just enjoy the artwork.

      @simonorourke4465@simonorourke4465 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes!!

      @MaleusMaleficarum@MaleusMaleficarum2 ай бұрын
    • The library had only 3 book but never the fourth. I came across Sorcery as game on Appstore, still has format but doesn't require separate dice.

      @sammythehamster9093@sammythehamster90932 ай бұрын
  • My favorite version of this was Joe Dever's Lone Wolf series. An adventure RPG with combat and persistent growth of skills and equipment that carried over to later books. EDIT - oh lol they got a shout out.

    @rubaiyat300@rubaiyat3002 жыл бұрын
    • My brother still have the complete series! (We’re in our 40’s lol! )

      @flintsvariety811@flintsvariety8112 жыл бұрын
    • @@flintsvariety811 I still have my Legends of Lone Wolf. I no longer have the game books.

      @gohjohan@gohjohan2 жыл бұрын
    • You folks know there was a full-blown TTRPG for the gamebooks' setting from Mongoose Publishing back around 2005, right? Used the d20 open game license engine D&D 3.0 & 3.5 was using, had quite a few supplements and a miniatures line. Kind of hard to come by these days but fans of the gamebooks would probably get a kick out of them.

      @richmcgee434@richmcgee4342 жыл бұрын
    • Don't forget Grey Star The Wizard too.

      @ironkodiakbooks5115@ironkodiakbooks51152 жыл бұрын
    • ​@@richmcgee434they also released lone wolf books in an app called lone wolf saga. That's actually how I found out about it. I love it.

      @DarkGhostHacker@DarkGhostHacker2 ай бұрын
  • We went nuts for these books when they first came out (I'm that old). The campaign to get them into public school libraries worked extremely well. Anytime these books were back on the shelves, they were gone the next day.

    @fakshen1973@fakshen19732 ай бұрын
  • Mystery of Chimney Rock was my first CYOA book and my favorite of all time. The cover arts of these books are iconic.

    @rhyantrick8178@rhyantrick81782 жыл бұрын
    • I'm thinking one of the reasons is that to really uncover the mystery you have to make it through to several endings, not just the best one.

      @sandal_thong8631@sandal_thong86312 жыл бұрын
  • 4:41 As regards law puns the Onion is still reigning champion with "Jurisprudence Fetishist Gets Off On Technicality"

    @funktimusrhyme@funktimusrhyme2 жыл бұрын
    • That is awful. And is therefore the perfect pun.

      @BradyPostma@BradyPostma2 жыл бұрын
  • I was more into Ian Livingstone + Steve Jacksons: _Fighting Fantasy_ style books.

    @BaronVonHaggis@BaronVonHaggis2 жыл бұрын
    • Same. Those and Endless Quest. 👍

      @JockoJonson17@JockoJonson172 жыл бұрын
    • roll your own adventure

      @foodtuub@foodtuub2 жыл бұрын
    • Both for me.

      @benmaynard3059@benmaynard30592 жыл бұрын
    • I still have my copies of Warlock of Firetop mountain City of thieves Citadel of chaos

      @matrix26uk@matrix26uk2 жыл бұрын
    • Started out with the CYOA books, then found the FF series with "Scorpion Swamp" by chance at a used bookstore.

      @andrewweitzman4006@andrewweitzman40062 жыл бұрын
  • Great efforts were put in this chronology video. Thank you, this was amazing.

    @fabian5002@fabian5002 Жыл бұрын
  • I once had a story involving a main character named Pete. He had a brother named, Repeat. Well the two of them set off in a boat on a grand adventure but roughs seas caused Pete to fall out of the sailing vessel so the question remained, who was left.

    @BillRalens@BillRalens2 ай бұрын
  • Most of the CYOA titles from the mid-80's were pretty tame, so I wasn't prepared for "The Horror of High Ridge" by Julius Goodman. The gore & suspense freaked me out, but despite the drastic shift in intensity levels, I loved that book, and read the hell out of it.

    @fuzzuck@fuzzuck2 жыл бұрын
    • The fighting fantasy title House of Hell did the same thing to an unsuspecting kid me.

      @adamwest8711@adamwest87112 жыл бұрын
    • "Attack of the Mutant Spider Ants" was pretty juicy, too.

      @DamonNomad82@DamonNomad822 жыл бұрын
    • @I decide your pronouns, not you. Yeah, I'm shocked that the series editors ever approved it for publication, but I'm glad they did. It's just bizarre that a line of G-rated books for children suddenly decided to take a hard left into R-rated territory. I guess they felt that kids of the 80's could do with some lightly traumatizing imagery, to make us a bit more interesting.

      @fuzzuck@fuzzuck2 жыл бұрын
  • I had a huge collection of these books back in the 80's. This and The Hardy Boys were what made me love reading.

    @superdaddy1973@superdaddy19732 жыл бұрын
    • I had loads of the Steve Jackson and Ian Livingstone series of books in the 80's. I didn't go further afield as there was more than enough of them. We even adapted Warlock to a board game, which led to Middle Earth Role Playing shortly after. I also recall reading some of the Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew stories but here in the UK, the big equivalents were The Famous Five and The Secret Seven. I had a full set of Famous Five books and they were what got me hooked on reading.

      @Elwaves2925@Elwaves29252 жыл бұрын
  • As a middle school teacher, I have been teaching kids to write their own CYOA books for about 20 years now. It’s seems like a daunting task, but the kids love it. Great school project for sure.

    @ryanodell5516@ryanodell5516 Жыл бұрын
  • i had the inside ufo 54-40 one, the hidden ending blew my mind that to this day, it's still one of my favorite books ever (if not my favorite)

    @S.F.Sorrow@S.F.Sorrow2 жыл бұрын
  • Loved them! I think they may have even sparked my lifelong love of reading in general. I even remember graduating to a series called "Way Of The Tiger" about being a ninja, if anyone remembers those - they were awesome too!

    @TheIronDuke9@TheIronDuke92 жыл бұрын
    • Yep, I remember them. You played a guy called Avenger. They released a couple of new ones a few years ago. A prequel, and a finale - the series having been left on a cliffhanger since the late 80s!

      @bentilbury2002@bentilbury20022 жыл бұрын
    • @@bentilbury2002 wow I can't remember the cliffhanger but I do remember keeping my thumb in the pages in case I made a wrong decision and had to go back and choose another path lol

      @TheIronDuke9@TheIronDuke92 жыл бұрын
    • the martial arts panels inside the cover were the best used Iron Fist Punch a lot; never pulled off a Teeth of the Tiger tho

      @RW77777777@RW777777772 жыл бұрын
  • These books taught me a valuable life lesson: when given a choice between turning left or right with no indication which way is correct, *turning right is 100% certain to be fatal.*

    @drakkenmensch@drakkenmensch2 жыл бұрын
    • You're not the only one to learn that. Most map designers for video games seem to follow the rule: "When in doubt, go left."

      @AntmanIV@AntmanIV2 жыл бұрын
    • statistically, when faced with a random right/left choice people tend to go right. At least before knowing rhe pattern was common, so they made right the bad choice

      @thac0twenty377@thac0twenty3772 жыл бұрын
    • Good adventurers go left. -Metroid series.

      @Voldine2@Voldine22 жыл бұрын
    • No kidding. But turning left or right, you mean turning to choice #1 or #2 or you mean turning to the lower number page or the higher number one?

      @gohjohan@gohjohan2 жыл бұрын
  • 10:17 That Superman book on the left was the one I read the hell out of as a kid!

    @flexiblenerd@flexiblenerd3 ай бұрын
  • It was the Choose Your Own Adventure books that got me into the Fighting Fantasy books, which I love.

    @AdamBladeTaylor@AdamBladeTaylor2 жыл бұрын
    • Still have a few of those. My copy of Warlock of Firetop Mountain is pretty worn out lol

      @Sturmjaeger@Sturmjaeger2 жыл бұрын
    • Fighting Fantasy first for me. I only found out about "Choose Your Own Adventure" later.

      @ByronLina@ByronLina2 жыл бұрын
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