He chose the Bulgarian National Team, eager to play as Krum. The game ran at about 10 frames per second. Every time he tried to perform a "Tackle," the computer made a sound like a stapler. But he was doing it. He was flying. He scored a goal, and the "Apun Ka Games" watermark flashed triumphantly across the screen in neon green.
Finally, he found it on a site called Apun Ka Games . The link was glorious: download-harry-potter-quidditch-world-cup-apun-kagames-exe . download-harry-potter-quidditch-world-cup-apun-kagames-exe
"This is it," Leo whispered, his face illuminated by the flickering CRT monitor. He ignored the three pop-up windows claiming he’d won an iPod Nano and clicked Save File . He chose the Bulgarian National Team, eager to play as Krum
The download bar crawled. 1%... 12%... 45%. Leo spent the time practicing his "beater" swing with a wooden spoon in the kitchen. By the time the bar hit 100%, the sun had set. With trembling fingers, he navigated to his downloads folder and double-clicked the .exe . But he was doing it
The screen turned a vibrant, unyielding blue. The beige tower gave one last, wheezing breath and went silent. Leo sat in the dark, the smell of slightly toasted electronics filling the room. He hadn’t caught the Snitch, and he’d definitely given the family computer a digital version of Dragon Pox, but for ten glorious, laggy minutes, he had been the greatest Seeker in the world.
For a moment, nothing happened. Then, the computer’s fan began to spin at a terrifying speed. The screen flickered black, and then—magic. A pixelated Harry Potter appeared, flying a Firebolt that looked more like a brown rectangle. The music was a distorted, bit-crushed version of the John Williams theme, but to Leo, it was a symphony.