I'm going to start this topic by talking about the Adventures of Microman.
My first ever computer (that was able to play games at least) was a Windows 95 computer. With it I had a "101 Games" shareware disk that included a lot of classic games and demos like Shadow Warrior, Raptor: Call of the Shadows, Terminator Future Shock and of course this game, the Adventures of Microman. By today's standards it's not a very remarkable game, it had some questionable level design, plain graphics and there was a bug in the game (visible in this video) where the instruments of the MIDI turn to piano for no apparent reason. However, the PC landscape of the 90s was very different than what we have today. While today we have Steam and PC gaming is often considered the cream of the crop, back in those days PC gaming was the wild west. Anyone can release anything on the PC regardless of quality or content, but most games were free and came as shareware.
The Adventures of Microman is the most "early Windows" game I could think of. The look of the game combined with the General MIDI soundtrack, the fact that you had to play it with keyboard and the overall gamefeel brings me back to the days when the internet was primitive, most websites consisted of only a single page of animated GIFs and MIDI music and small game developers like ourselves released whatever we had the skills, patience and imagination allowed. I guess not too much has changed, I'm still making Astral Fantasy and other independent games and many of you are doing the same, but stuff like this hearkens back to a more innocent time I genuinely miss.