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1990 - The Year Santa Died

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IDPost TypePosted ByCommentTitlePosted On 
 
2534ArticleoniparThanks, Hoju! Yeah, the arcade bullies were the worst. I have probably a couple more stories about that sort of thing. Aug 17, 2015View
2569Articleshakin steakMan, what a well-deserved win. Great setup, great plot, great writing.A Flurry of Hadoukens and ShoryukensAug 27, 2015View
2593ArticleoniparThanks so much, I really appreciate that! :-)A Flurry of Hadoukens and ShoryukensSep 01, 2015View
2481ArticleVaporman87HyperColor was cool, but in my youth it couldn't compete with the gloves that you wore during winter that had images appear/disappear on them. Still, they had their fifteen minutes of fame, and I was there to revel in it. Good thing they didn't invent pants that did the same. High school would have been even more awkward than it already was for us all. LOLDo You Remember: HyperColor ShirtsAug 07, 2015View
2486ArticleoniparOh yeah, those winter gloves! I loved hypercolor AND the gloves. It was brilliant. I think I was still young enough that sweaty pits didn't bother me much :-)Do You Remember: HyperColor ShirtsAug 07, 2015View
2478ArticleVaporman87You've really brought back to mind all the wonderful things we miss about an arcade in the 80's and 90's in great and loving detail. It's funny how, in a time before the internet and worldwide connectivity, your experience in one arcade will be the same in so many ways in another hundreds of miles away. Like the routine of plopping down your quarter for "next". Such things transcended distance and social environment differences. And, each felt like it's own little "club". As though there was a camaraderie that was implied any time you crossed the threshold onto that gaudy carpeted floor. Many places that house arcades now are simply dens of rip-offery. Insert a dollar to play a game that is rigged to prevent you from winning that Nintendo DS calling out to you from behind the glass. In Gatlinburg, Tennessee I saw a glimmer of hope. An arcade with a machine that combined the greatness of the past with the redemption craze of today. A giant Pac Man game that played like the classic, but was recrafted to make the goal winning as many tickets as you could. The more points, the more tickets. If they could do this with several hundred more classic titles, an whole new arcade concept could be invented. But so far that is the only title I've seen to incorporate that idea. The Mall ArcadeAug 07, 2015View
2480Articleechidna64Way to go Mass! This was a great read and I love the individual details you gave with each arcade game. This def takes me back, the Simpson's game and other 4-players games were epic! Area-51 is probably the only arcade game that I beat in its entirety. It was the right balance of fun vs difficult. I tried to stay away from the games that were coin-crunchers. Nowadays, the closest thing we have to the original mall arcades is Dave and BustersThe Mall ArcadeAug 07, 2015View
2482ArticleVaporman87@echidna: There are still some arcades out there that have stuck to the classic business model, but they are few and far between and typically located in the heart of giant metropolitan areas. Which is exactly the opposite of where I live. LOL.The Mall ArcadeAug 07, 2015View
2485ArticleOldSchool80sEnjoyed reading this. Nice work! Have some awesome 80s memories of going to the arcade and Showbiz Pizza. I also remember the tabletop Ms. Pac-Man at Pizza Hut, but never realized that was a universal thing.The Mall ArcadeAug 07, 2015View
2487ArticlemassrealityThanks everybody. echindna64: I originally had a huge write up on Area 51, since it was my favorite arcade game. However, it came out a few years after the time period of this article, and I actually never played Area 51 in an arcade. Only in movie theaters. It was such a great game, I even bought it on PC. The Mall ArcadeAug 07, 2015View