Well, after much thought[footnote]Basically excluding games that I nor my family didn't owned a copy of... So, sorry "that one time I played Pokemon Crystal/Oracle of Ages off that one dude's GameBoy Color" in 1999... Or the fact that <link=http://www.escapistmagazine.com/forums/jump/9.847767.20923098>this happened back in 1997...[/footnote], I have narrowed my answer down to three choices:
-An 80s Namco arcade game (Between
Pac-Man and
Galaga)
-A
Jumpstart PC game (Only played
2nd Grade and then
Typing)
-
Rayman Advance for the GameBoy Advance (First game I got on the system)
But, then I rememeber saying something in the past:
FPLOON post="9.861314.21433669" said:
I was going to say Rayman Advance for the Gameboy Advance, but that was my first game as well as my first unfinished game...
And I realized that my past self was wrong... The first time dabbing into Namco was back in 2002 with the
Namco Museum Collection off my cousins (formally their parent's) PS2 and I was playing
Jumpstart 2nd Grade back in 2000, the same year my mom got her first Gateway PC from her step-brother-in-law... I've never touched
Rayman Advance until 2001 while we were on a trip to Circus Circus in Las Vegas with my Grandma and cousins...
So overall, the first video game I ever played was an educational game about a lion chasing after a rabbit in a maze of a mansion and then, at the end, gets trapped in a rocket ship that's blasting off into space... Once you figure out the consistent answers or, worse, find out how to skip basically the whole game and win in under 5 minutes[footnote]Let's just say that the game didn't no know the definition of "invisible walls", if you know what I mean...[/footnote], then the predictability really begins to shine brighter than the scientist in
Jumpstart Typing who locked himself under his typing-driven security system...
Edit (2/26/15 11:55 PM PST): So apparently, after reading <link=http://www.escapistmagazine.com/forums/jump/9.847767.20923098>this comment that I made back in April of 2014, my first video game was actually a CD-ROM demo for Hot Wheels... (Take of that as you will...)