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Content Comments List
Displaying 3361-3370 of 5281 results.
ID | Post Type | Posted By | Comment | Title | Posted On | |
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2520 | Article | echidna64 | Thanks guys, it really was a great time to be a kid! Some of my best memories were playing Pokemon video games/card games with friends on camping trips, sleepovers, and summer camps. I would highly recommend getting your Pokemon game on, it's a wonderful adventure that needs to be experienced! Each version is super fun and very replayable! | Aug 14, 2015 | ||
2556 | Article | AngelOtter | I loved Pokemon (and still do!), The cards got banned from my school because kids were selling them and the parents were getting mad that their kids were using lunch money to buy them. That just made us want them more of course. I still buy every new game that comes out. | Age of Pokemon | Aug 22, 2015 | |
2504 | Article | Vaporman87 | I typically relied on renting for my fixes, unless I was certain that I wanted the game in my collection. I did some trades, but not often. Most of my friends didn't have the same console as me. My best friend Phil did, and I would trade with him from time to time. We had several mom and pop rental shops in the area, and though they usually took their sweet time getting in the newest titles, they did have a decent selection for being in such a depressed area. | A Summer Quest | Aug 12, 2015 | |
2506 | Article | onipar | Yeah, in reality I'm pretty sure I rented much more often than I traded, but the trades always held a certain sacred place in my heart. :-) | A Summer Quest | Aug 12, 2015 | |
2530 | Article | Hoju Koolander | I have loved your whole series of childhood stories from Brooklyn. So relatable, yet the East Coast setting makes it feel more exotic. Cool older kids who were bored with their possessions were a great source for not only video games, but action figures, comics and more. Though when it came to Nintendo, I definitely did more playing at friends houses than trading, since my own collection was pretty sparse. | A Summer Quest | Aug 16, 2015 | |
2536 | Article | onipar | Yeah, same here. Trading was my favorite, but something that only occurred a few times. Thanks so much too, I'm glad you enjoyed them! | A Summer Quest | Aug 17, 2015 | |
2496 | Article | Vaporman87 | This reminds me a fairly unique place that I sometimes frequented around this same time. It was actually a video game retailer, but an independent one. Unlike the Electronic Boutiques and Gamestops of the world, this was just a little Mom and Pop place in a small strip mall area. There, you could not only buy the latest games, consoles, and accessories... you could TRY them before you committed your hard-earned cash toward them. Several TVs with a different console at each lined the tables in the back room. You paid for a certain amount of time, picked the game you wished to have a go with (though not all new releases were immediately available for trying), paid the fee, and off you went to the back room. In a closet-sized room behind the demo tables, they hid the most technologically advanced console of the day. A big screen TV and premium surround sound system huddled around a single recliner was all that sat in there. THAT was the place to be. It might cost you a little more, but you had the chance to experience those games the way they were meant to be experienced. | A New Kind of Arcade | Aug 10, 2015 | |
2498 | Article | onipar | That sounds amazing! I wish places like this still existed. Maybe they do somewhere? Maybe if the console arcade in my town had adopted that same business plan of selling the games as well, they would have lasted longer. I wish they had. | A New Kind of Arcade | Aug 10, 2015 | |
2518 | Article | Hoju Koolander | great topic. We must have had the only one of these on the West Coast when I was 9 or 10 called The Wizard of Games. I only went once because of those high prices you talked about, but that console based arcade concept really was a great concept. Of course if you had a rich buddy with all the games, you could get the same effect, I suppose. | A New Kind of Arcade | Aug 14, 2015 | |
2519 | Article | onipar | Ha, too true. There was a point when I had at least one friend with each system, making the console-arcade fairly obsolete. Still, I can't help but think a tweaked version of this would be a great hangout even today. Kind of Dave and Busters style, only when you get your table, you "order" a console or two to play while you drink and wait for food. :-p | A New Kind of Arcade | Aug 14, 2015 |