25 Years of Online Gaming: How Multiplayer Games Evolved Behind the Scenes
Online gaming has undergone a dramatic technical evolution over the past 25 years, shifting from clunky page-reload web games like NeoQuest to seamless real-time multiplayer experiences. Early browser-based games relied on remote servers to process every player action and reload entire web pages each time, making gameplay slow but reliably saved. The rise of Adobe Flash moved game logic onto players' own devices, dramatically speeding up gameplay but opening the door to score manipulation by hackers, which triggered an ongoing battle between cheaters and developers. Modern games address this by running core logic on central servers using client-server or peer-to-peer architectures, though unstable connections can still cause glitches like teleporting characters or phantom hits. Today's apps also integrate UI components, native programming languages, and hardware APIs to coordinate millions of players across devices in near real time.
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