The Party (or "TP", for short) was an annual demoscene event held from 1991 to 2002 in Denmark. It was one of the first events of its kind and set the trend for many other demoscene parties in Europe.
In 1992, The Party 2, which was actually called "The Final" due to uncertainty of The Party's future, attracted an even more overwhelming number of demosceners. The Amiga organization remained the same, but PC and C64 sceners started to attend and create their own compos. The Amiga demo compo winner was the legendary State of the Art. A 40k intro competition was held for the first time. Facts of Life won the PC demo competition in a ruling contested by Future Crew, the runners-up and compo organizers, because no voting actually took place.
With the release of Doom just weeks before The Party 3 in 1993, network gaming became an overnight sensation, transforming part of the event into the first major LAN party. Through the 1990s, the gaming element of The Party steadily grew while the demoscene element remained stagnant. The PC scene visitors gradually outnumbered the Amiga scene visitors who dominated the early years.
By 2000, much of the demo scene had abandoned The Party in favor of other demo parties taking place around the same time. Amiga sceners formed a smaller alternative called TRSAC ("The Real Scene After Christmas"), while PC sceners started TUM ("The Ultimate Meeting") in Germany. It was the winning 64k intro from Farbrausch, FR-08: .the .product, that briefly drew demoscene attention back to The Party and gave the organizers enough hope to declare the next party's motto "Back To The Roots". But that promise fell flat as demosceners saw little effort to back it. Sceners complained about constant harassment by both the local security people (who would constantly search their bags for alcohol) and gamers (who would complain about the compos being too loud). The competitions in 2002 were abandoned to the point where all demos and intros were combined into one compo. The Party was cancelled the following year, and as of 2006, has not reopened.
| Year | Amiga demo | PC demo | C64 demo | Amiga intro | PC intro |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1991 | Odyssey (Alcatraz) | N/A | Brutality (Light) | N/A | N/A |
| 1992 | State of the Art (Spaceballs) | Facts of Life (Witan) | Coma Light 8 (Oxyron) | Tetris (Melon Dezign) | N/A |
| 1993 | Origin (Complex) | Dust (Untitled) | Tower Power (Camelot) | Chaosland (Virtual Dreams) | CyboMan (Gazebo) |
| 1994 | Nexus 7 (Andromeda) | Project Angel (Impact Studios) | Access Denied (Reflex) | 4k0 (Polka Brothers) | Cyboman 2 (Complex) |
| 1995 | Closer (CNCD) | Caero (Plant & EMF) | Mathematica (Reflex) | Creep (Artwork & Polka Brothers) | Lasse Reinbong (Cubic Team & $een) |
| 1996 | Shaft 7 (Bomb) | Alto Knallo (Free Electric Band) | Nine (Reflex) | Phongfree (Oxyron) | Deesbab (Orange) |
| 1997 | My Kingdom (Haujobb & Scoopex) | Tribes (Pulse & Melon Dezign) | Second Reality (Smash Designs) | Superautodrome (Scoopex) | Stash (The Black Lotus) |
| 1998 | Alien 2 (Scoopex) | MOAI (NOMAD) | Triage III (Smash Designs) | 1000% (Scoopex) | Alien Sex Clone (fudGe) |
| 1999 | Concrete (Ephidrena) | Non-3D:Melrose Space (3Space) | Y2K (Duck & Cover) (No Name) | Nonstop (Dual Crew - Shining) | Fukwit Daddy (Haujobb) |
| 3D:Kasparov (Elitegroup) | |||||
| 2000 | Megademo 2000 (Haujobb) | Love Creation MAX (INF) | Starburst 96 (Padua) | qrid (Nature) | FR-08: The Product (Farbrausch) |
| Year | Combined demo | C64 demo | Combined 64K intro | ||
| 2001 | Elements (Haujobb) | Decade 100 % (Smash Designs) | FR-014: Garbage Collection (Farbrausch) | ||
| 2002 | CloseGL (Jesper & Sharky) | ||||
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"The Party (demo party)".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world