2old2play.com — An article about the resurgence of arcade games in the living room. The article shows how smaller developers can now make money off of low budget arcade games with far less monetary risk. Just like fashion, what was once cool is now cool again.
Mar 2, 2006 View in Crawl 4
dsmoothMar 2, 2006
In case the site is still being hammered, here is the text:Golden Age of Arcade Games: A New HopeWritten on Thursday, March 02 @ 12:23:42 EST by codemonkey[ Edit | Delete ]In 1971 an arcade game known as Computer Space was born and is considered the first ever coin-operated arcade video game. A year later that Computer Space developer Nolan Bushnell would form Atari, Inc. and the name Pong(1972) would be heard around the world. Following this event would be Gun Fight(1975), Night Driver(1976), and that well known Space Invaders(1978) game would issue in the ?Golden Age of Arcade Games.?Space Invaders would inspire the arcade game pioneers to birth the classic Pac-Man(1980) and this Japanese development group known as Namco would begin to make its mark on society. Namco had its hand in an upgraded version of Space Invaders entitled Galaxian(1979) which would spring board them into the world of Nintendo?s Famicon (NES) in Japan and ultimately lead them to a merger with Bandai.All this was possible because a little video game publisher known to us as Midway would publish these newcomers in a growing game market and from that fire would arise titles such as Spy Hunter, NARC (by Williams Electronics), and Mortal Kombat. All hugely popular arcade smashes with Mortal Kombat clearing a path for the new Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) to step in and begin controlling brutal action. FATALITY!Years have come and gone and games have increased in complexity, graphic quality, story line, and sound. What happened to all those great arcade games by Service Games of Japan (SEGA)? The Golden Age of Arcade Games has come and gone and today we see most of the old arcade hang outs being boarded up, and sold off. Some mall arcades are converted into restaurants, bathrooms, or yet another Taco Bell. Arcades cannot draw out the children that they once could in the days before beefy console systems landed under our Christmas trees back in the early 80?s.Yet today we?re seeing the re-birth of the arcade in a new location: our homes. For many geeks and gamers this is not a new concept because they have been downloading game ROMS for their arcade/console emulators for years now. There are large varieties of Atari emulators, NES emulators, and of course MAME (Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator) and people are filling their hard drives with bytes upon bytes of gaming ROMS. It seems the success of these free solutions have gotten the big wigs at Microsoft and Nintendo seeking to squeeze a little more life out of old generation games. There is indeed money to be had in refreshing older arcade games or inventing new arcade games. Geometry Wars and Hexic on the Xbox 360 are highly addictive ?arcade quality? games that are some of the top downloaded/played games on this newly released console!The Nintendo Revolution is boasting an emulator to play classic games from NES all the way to the Nintendo 64. What is unique about the new generation of consoles that is driving the effort for classically remade games? What makes us want to play really old games on really powerful systems? Perhaps Nintendo and Microsoft hope to draw a different audience towards their consoles or just breathe more life and enthusiasm into their current audience. Maybe the gamer demographic has sparked the realization that many gamers are getting older and older gamers will always fall in love with that special game that got them hooked. Let us not forget that older gamers also tend to have more money then the younger ones!The beauty of this arcade rebirth is that it allows independent game developers to get some face time. Arcade games are typically easy to understand, shorter in length, simplified graphics with gradual increases in levels of difficulty. An arcade game is not a multi-million dollar project that requires full motion video, storyline designers, licensed musicians and musical scores. An arcade game is not guaranteed sixty hours of game play nor does it require Dolby 5.1 Surround Sound. That means a small team of developers can work with a small pocket of cash to create some of the most addictive games on the planet which you could download for minimal cost. It?s a winning situation for all involved. For the price of a cup of coffee you too could feed a starving developer in California.Arcade games are obviously not a revolutionary idea but as we all get older and begin to expand our families we do not always have time to play a massive multiplayer RPG or sit down and run through four quarters of football. However a game like Gauntlet, Excite Bike or Joust would fit better into many of our busy schedules and with consoles allowing us to save progress at any moment in time that means we can save our game to stop Liam from pulling Brianna?s hair or feed the newborn screaming in his cradle.I look forward to the day where I do not have to play Double Dragon on my PDA or Ikari Warriors on my cell phone. I?ve got a D-Pad and a dream and I want my old arcade games back!CodeMonkey - ?What will Sony?s PS3 be supplying for classic/arcade style games? Post your comments?References:WIKIPEDIA - <a class="user" href="http://www.wikipedia.org">http://www.wikipedia.org</a>MICROSOFT XBOX - <a class="user" href="http://www.xbox.com">http://www.xbox.com</a>NINTENDO - <a class="user" href="http://www.nintendo.com">http://www.nintendo.com</a>ATARI/INFROGAMES - <a class="user" href="http://www.atari.com">http://www.atari.com</a>SEGA - <a class="user" href="http://www.sega.com">http://www.sega.com</a>MAME - <a class="user" href="http://www.mame.net">http://www.mame.net</a>
lfrankMar 2, 2006
Gotta love these old games.
adamesqMar 3, 2006
Quick and fun...the days when we didn't have to play for 45 mintues, lose, and start the same level at the beginning and play the same 45 mintues we could do in our sleep to get back to the same point...lose, start over. Ughhh! Who here hasn't had MAME for years!??! Almost not worth the Digg for the DUHHH factor, but almost any article that brings up 8 bit games is diggworthy. Favorites: M.U.L.E., Archon, Bruce Lee, GYRUSS (oh, I'd love that in 5.1), Karate Champ, Eternal Champions, Ninja
astrotrainMar 3, 2006
MAME - Arcade Classics and PINMAME for your Pinball Tables (including Baby Pac-Man!)I'm an arcade junkie from the 70s and 80s. So seeing the golden arcade games come back isgreat! The Classics that come in the joysticks you hook to your TV, they work rather well. They evenreleased an Atari 2600 with built in games (yes the console and controllers) that plugs into yourA/V jacks on your television.I don't think these Golden classics will ever die, they effected and touched several generations.This story is well Dug by me...
raindog469Mar 3, 2006
I don't have the space for an arcade console, so I play the "classic collections" on the Gamecube and PS2 (and the DS, what there is so far at least.) I'm also building my own miniature arcade console and have been writing games for the Atari 2600 off and on for about 8 years now.So I'd be all over Xbox Live Arcade if I had a 360, and I'll be all over the Revolution Virtual Console when the Revolution comes out. But I get a lot of "retro fix" just playing Katamari Damacy or even Warioware or Super Mario Sunshine. Just because you play modern games doesn't mean you have to play Halo, Doom 3, GTA et al.
gabbagabbaheyMar 13, 2006
MAME - "Game Not Over"Just downloaded 15 Gigs of ROMs, over 6000 games.Great memories so far - 1942, Gyruss, Gauntlet, Time Pilot, Super Cobra, Aero Fighters.Don't need much of a machine to run, startup and shutdown is instant. Can really sympathize with the expanding family, don't have time.Now I can play all of those games I sucked at without going broke.
johnxMar 13, 2006
working on mine now. sunk way too much money into it, but cant stop. that first game of pacman is going to be so sweet though.
falelornMar 13, 2006
I work for a game company, and currently am designing my own arcade game that is old school in design, but with some new DX9 flash.. love the old games.. need more..
flubber134Jan 13, 2010
try this, more than 500 games, all are interesting and damn fun<a class="user" href="http://www.thecoolestgames.net" rel="nofollow">http://www.thecoolestgames.net</a>