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Let's Talk Arcades, Part I


On 03/28/2017 at 09:04 PM by KnightDriver

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I was a teenager when the video game arcades were big in the 80s. I rode my bike everywhere and arcades were all around me. I would go to a pizza shop, a hotel lobby, a department store or the mall and find them. It was fun to go to different places because they often had different machines. I got to play a lot of different games, so I'm breaking this blog up into three parts. This first one is the years 1978-1981.

I was in middle school for these years. At home I had an Atari 2600 and my friend next door had an Intellivision. You'd think that having home consoles would stop us kids from going to the arcades, but at the time, the arcades were king. These were the places that had the systems with the best graphics, the biggest sound and the most exciting gameplay. It was just a situation of the technology. Back then you could do much more with a board dedicated to one game than a home system designed to play many. That's not to say home consoles were bad, just different, and us kids always looked to the arcades to see what was coming next to console, albiet in reduced form. These were my favorites by year. 

                                                                    1978

This was ground zero for video game arcades' massive popularlity. The hit Space Invaders started it all. Almost every arcade I went to had one of these. 

                        spaceinvaders

Look at that, not even a joystick on that cabinet! Ever wonder about that Bowie song from '72 "Moonage Daydream" (used recently in Guardians of the Galaxy film) and the line "I'm the space invader". I wonder if the devs at Taito heard that and named the game after it. Probably just a coincidence, but since I noticed it in the song, I always think of the arcade machine that came out six years later.

                                                                       1979

This year was great for Galaxian and Asteroids, two big hits, but I always had fondest memories of Lunar Lander, the first vector graphics game. 

                            lunarlander

Look at that throttle controller! Nothing else had that. Interesting that you could put more quarters in for more fuel to keep playing - kind of like continues. Definitely unique. I played this at my big mall arcade, but it wasn't as common as Asteroids or Galaxian elsewhere, so I played it less.  

                                                                      1980

This year saw a lot of big hits like Pac-Man, Missile Command, Battlezone and Rally-X, but I spent a lot of time with Berzerk, probably because it was one of the first games to use speech synthesis. Doing this back then was really expensive so very few games had it. 

                              berzerk

I can still hear the voices of the robots saying "Got the humanoid, got the intruder". That game kind of scared me. The walls of the maze were electrified and your character would sizzle and die if he touched them. Yikes!

                                                                       1981

This was the year of Donkey Kong. Others were: Scramble, Tempest, Frogger and Defender. But my favorite was Galaga, the sequel to Galaxian. This was like the next evolution of Space Invaders. The enemies fly down at you in more complicated patterns and there are many different types of alien craft. Some try to capture your ship. If you let them, you can then recapture it and play with two ships at once with double the firepower. Genius! Also there were challenge levels where you just shoot at the swarming ships for bonus points. If that wasn't all, it was colorful. Blue, green, red and yellow ships make the screen a psychedelic trip.

                            galaga

These old cabinets did a good job of isolating you just enough so you felt you were immersed in the game and helped to block out as much stray light as possible to reduce glare. Look how simple the interface is on that one above: a joystick and a button. What more do you need? Right?

Part II to follow, 1982-1985.


 

Comments

Cary Woodham

03/28/2017 at 09:13 PM

I loved arcades as a kid.  When I was little, one time I was watching TV with my dad, and the news was on, and they were showing people building these big yellow box things.  At first I thought they were soda vending machines, because they were about the same size, had a coin slot, and a lighted marquee. A few months later, my mom and I were at the checkout lane at a Kroger grocery store, and I saw the same machine.  I asked my mom if I could go look at it, and she said sure.  When she came by to look as well, she gave me a quarter to put in it.  Oh if she had only known what that would've triggerd.  Turns out that big yellow box was a Pac-Man machine, and that was my first time to play it!  All the way home from the grocery store, I was constantly talking about that game.  As you can guess, it left a lasting impression on me.

It was my mom's sister, my aunt, who took me to my first arcade when I was a kid.  Before then, I had only seen a couple of arcade machines in grocery stores and roller rinks.  But I had never been into a whole room of arcade machines!  I still remember the name of that first arcade I went to: Electric Castle.

I just love arcades.  I can't explain why, there's just something about them.

KnightDriver

03/28/2017 at 09:37 PM

Great story. I don't remember my first arcade experience. I know I had one sometime before I was ten but I guess it didn't leave an impression on me like it did for you. Maybe it was too early in video game history. Arcades hit big when I was 11. 

I love the names they game them. Electric Castle is a great one. Mine was called Space Port. 

Halochief90

03/29/2017 at 01:21 AM

I wish I played more on arcades back when they were more easily available. I wasn't around for the 80s, but there were still quite a few places in the 90s and early 00's (even in Canada). Alas, I was but a broke kid back then and rarely even had a quarter to spend.

I was a huge fan of Space Invaders once that hit PCs. I can't imagine how much money I would have dropped on that one in Arcades.

KnightDriver

03/30/2017 at 12:46 AM

I keep trying to remember how much I spent at the arcade on a typical weekend in my teens. I think it was 5 or 10 dollars. Maybe not 10. That seems like a lot. 5 sounds right though. That's 20 plays or 5 plays of Dragon's Lair, which was one of the first $1 games. 

goaztecs

03/29/2017 at 12:12 PM

I loved the sounds of the arcade. That's what I miss, especially the "Prepare to Qualify" from Pole Position. Man that Galaga machine brings back memories. Little kid Chris was terrible at that game but I loved it, and one time in Hawaii I found little space ships that looked like the Galaga ship that was prizes for earning tickets from skiball. I collected a little fleet of ships. 

KnightDriver

03/29/2017 at 11:47 PM

Ever hear this on youtube?

I'd collect ships that looked like Galaga ships too. 

SanAndreas

04/02/2017 at 12:55 AM

I miss the old arcades. Even then, I was a huge Nintendo fan: Donkey Kong was my favorite arcade game of all time, I also liked Mario Bros, Popeye, DK Jr, DK3, and Punch-Out!!. I even played Vs. Super Mario Bros a few times.

KnightDriver

04/02/2017 at 08:00 AM

I do remember seeing Punch-Out in the arcades for the first time. It was quite the attraction. It was a totally new experience. And I played a lot of Donkey Kong but I liked Dk. jr. better probably because I could climb vines in that first level. Mario Bros though, I don't have a strong memory for. Maybe they didn't have one in my arcade; although, it seems they should have. 

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