Sunday, March 16, 2008

Insert coin(s) to start!

I think my brightest memory of an arcade game was a booth they had at a local theater when Street Fighter II came out. I could just stand there and watch the "demo mode" forever. It was something about the bass on that one booth. The music was thumping and the manly announcer made you wanna poop your pants. ROUND ONE... FIGHT!!

They had Darkstalkers and MK2 at a bakery near my high school. Sweet times. I also loved when MK3 came out. The one I played was fresh out of the box and the game seemed to be in beta mode or something, because some features didn't work. Still it was awesome.

Honorable mention to the Simpsons’ arcade, a rare beat-em-up game that I barely ever see, Point Blank, and Chase HQ.

What I loved about arcade games when I was a kid was that they weren't always there. Like you'd go on vacation and there'd be this game you'd get obsessed with there, or when you'd beg your mom to take you with her to the Laundromat so you could play some puzzle bubble. Knowing that you'd eventually have to leave the game made it special.

Also, at least back in the day, arcades always had something you just couldn’t have at home. Usually better graphics, but also that sweet arcade stick, the big, mashable buttons, and of course the ones with a steering wheel, pedals and a seat. Later on the racing games had subwoofers in the seats, and the steering wheels and light guns had motion feedback. That just made it worth it.

Sadly, most of the time I just didn't have a quarter on me so I would have to just stand there and enjoy the intro sequence over and over again. When I did have a quarter I’d shy away from games that seemed too challenging, fearing I’d lose my investment too soon. In some games I'd only play when there was nobody around to challenge me and beat the crap out of me. God I hated that.

Still, I find it disturbing that the arcade game business is dying. Every year less and less arcade games are made for the US arcade market. When you go to your local arcade joint it’s all about the kiddy rides, the DDR and those 3 Marvel Versus Capcom booths they have. You go there for old time’s sake, but nothing surprises you anymore. Why is this? Have they run out of ideas of machines with features that cannot be mass-produced for home use? Are they not making profit at $2 a pop?

I’m pretty sure with proper distribution the market could soar again. They could sell booths to businesses like restaurants and such, not just TimeOuts and such. There could be games with online features, and mad, mad hardware.

They could complement console games, like they wanted to do with the Dreamcast and its arcade counterpart, the Naomi board. Back then you would save your game to your VMU, play it all the way to the mall, then stick the VMU in an arcade console and do some crazy shit with your character. That would be so freakin' sweet. Just imagine playing Phantasy Star Online all week at home, then taking care of your MAG as a virtual pet on the VMU, then loading your pimped-out RAcast on some whacked up high-speed FPS or something.

Why, I say, WHY do they hate us so?

1 comment:

Mamá said...

Woah!! you are so frikkin right in everything you say!! You are a Genius!!! thats why you married me ;)

Really!! you made me think and that was sooo right. I remembered begging my mom to take me with her to the boring beauty saloon so I could play Puzzle Bobble in the Pizzeria next door