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Video Games of My Life: Part Three - 1980-1983


On 02/08/2014 at 04:27 PM by KnightDriver

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Linked to Article Series: Blog a Day (BaD) 2014

                                xevious

     Arcades and home consoles were hugely popular in this The Golden Age of video games. Arcades were everywhere. I played such games as: Berzerk, Tempest, Centipede, Defender, Missile Command, Battlezone, Pac-Man, Galaga, Ms. Pac-Man, Frogger, Donkey Kong, Venture, Pleiads, Xevious, Joust, Q*bert, Front Line, Donkey Kong Junior, Sinistar, Dig Dug, Time Pilot, Moon Patrol, Zaxxon, Spy Hunter, Crossbow, Dragon’s Lair, and Gyruss. My favorites were Xevious, Front Line, and Spy Hunter but I blew quite a few quarters beating Dragon’s Lair. Dragon’s Lair was basically a memory game and my friend and I challenged each other to see who would finish it first. Recently I’ve rediscovered Time Pilot and Gyruss in Xbox Live’s Game Room and now love these as well. All these arcade games were the cutting edge of what you could do in video games - the ultimate experience. Or so everyone thought.

                                                   stampede

      On home consoles, you would see a marked difference from the arcade with much reduced quality of graphics and fewer levels, but some experiences were unique to the home systems such as Adventure, Superman, and Haunted House. The games I played back then were: Adventure, Space Invaders, Golf, Boxing, Fishing Derby, Skiing, Asteroids, Missile Command, Super Breakout, Video Pinball, Warlords, Laser Blast, Tennis, Kaboom!, Freeway, Stampede, Ice Hockey, Amidar, Star Raiders, Pac-Man, Frogger, Pitfall!, Chopper Command, Star Raiders, and River Patrol. Golf and Tennis were always consistently fun to play as was Kaboom!, Freeway, and Stampede. Stampede was a game I played a lot and still love today in Xbox Live’s Game Room. I discovered Yar’s Revenge in Game Room and wondered how I missed it. I still think Activision understood the Atari 2600 best and produced really fun and visually attractive games within the limits of the system. There were experiences there going beyond what the arcade had to offer even though graphical fidelity was less.

                                          sb

     Across the neighborhood, I was able to experience the other consoles. I went to play Mattel’s Intellivsion next door. This system had the best sports games. I played: NHL Hockey, NFL Football, Horse Racing, Sea Battle, PGA Golf, Major League Baseball, and B-17 Bomber. The Intellivision’s controller had a key pad for selecting options and a circle pad for movement that allowed for lots of gameplay options and smooth control of on screen animations - perfect for sports games. My favorite though was strategy game Sea Battle, as I’ve always loved such board games such as Stratego, Risk, Sink The Bismarck, and Squad Leader.  There was nothing like it on the other two systems. The Intellivoice Voice Synthesis Module was novel as well. It was the first time outside the arcade you could hear an approximation of a human voice in a game.

                                     fl

    And a few houses down the street, there was the ColecoVision, which the rest of us in the neighborhood were in awe of because it had the best ports of arcade games. I went there to play such games as: Venture, Donkey Kong, Zaxxon, Donkey Kong Junior, and Front Line. My favorite was Front Line and couldn’t wait to visit my friend’s place to play it. I replayed the arcade version of that game recently on Taito Legends 2 on PS2 and it’s still a fun and challenging game. I played Donkey Kong Junior on Virtual Console as well, but it’s the NES version, which is not all that close to the arcade original. I’ve always loved DK Jrs. vine climbing in that game much more than Mario’s barrel jumping in Donkey Kong. Maze crawling, arrow shooting Venture was a favorite of mine as well since it recalled the action element of Dungeons & Dragons to my mind. All these games really needed the arcade perfect treatment to really enjoy at home and DK Jr. and Venture are still best played on the ColecoVision (mainly because they haven’t been ported anywhere as of yet). 


 

Comments

Alex-C25

02/08/2014 at 05:26 PM

I you want to go for some 2600 nostalgia, I recommend to visit this.

I played some of Berzerk. I enjoyed it, but I keep dying and I didn't even had the chance to see that infamous smiley enemy.

KnightDriver

02/09/2014 at 07:47 PM

Berzerk was hard. Plus they put that smiley face guy in there just to kill you in case you got too far in the game. Nasty.

Ranger1

02/08/2014 at 05:48 PM

1982 was when I discovered the joys of dungeon crawling in Wizardry. That was also the year that the local Action Family Arcade gave out 20 tokens to each kid who made honor roll. I think blew most of them on Qbert and Moon Patrol. As for the home consoles, no joy there, the first chance I ever really got to spend with an Atari wasn't until college. Some guy in my dorm donated his Atari and all the games to the dorm. I spent many happy hours playing Demon Attack (and cutting math and sociology to do so) until some drunken asshole who didn't even live there destroyed our lounge and everything in it - TV, Atari, pool table, couches, and cable box.

KnightDriver

02/09/2014 at 07:54 PM

Wizardry comes up in my next blog on this subject. I forget exactly when I played it but it was definitely while I was in High School '82-'86. It marked my first involvement with computers, aside from briefly playing Zork sometime earlier.

Super Step Contributing Writer

02/08/2014 at 06:47 PM

I kinda want to play DK Jr.

KnightDriver

02/10/2014 at 04:01 AM

I love DK JR. I wish there was an arcade perfect port of it out there. I guess there's probably a ROM online. Someday i'm going to put together a MAME collection and play all that stuff on an iCade for iPad. That would be cool.

C.S.3590SquadLeader

02/08/2014 at 08:35 PM

I played a bit of the NES version of Xevious when it was included as a bonus minigame when I bought Star Fox Assault. From what I remember, it was pretty fun.

KnightDriver

02/10/2014 at 04:20 AM

Xevious is hard, but I always liked it. Probably because it was one of the first games to combine shooting and bombing. It gave you the idea you were flying high above the ground even though everything looked 2D.

Cary Woodham

02/08/2014 at 10:37 PM

I loved the arcade games in this era.  I miss those days.

KnightDriver

02/10/2014 at 04:23 AM

It was neat to go someplace just to play video games. Like going to the movies. Now there's only Dave 'N Busters and their choice of games doesn't interest me in the least.

Matt Snee Staff Writer

02/09/2014 at 06:01 AM

hmmm never heard of Front Line.  I love this era.  It was very part of my growing up, and I'll never forget it. 

KnightDriver

02/10/2014 at 04:39 AM

It's weird to have gone to arcades but then never seen some games. A lot of the Konami games in Xbox Live's Game Room were new to me like TwinBee and Finalizer. Front Line was done by Taito. I like that company's games a lot. Most of them I never played in the arcades.

goaztecs

02/10/2014 at 01:33 PM

I miss the sounds of the arcades. When I used to go to the mall, that was the only spot I wanted to visit. 

I loved playing Gyruss and Spy Hunter. I actually started playing those games on the NES, but I would try my luck on the arcade versions. Dragon's Lair was always the "pricey" game at a $1 but it was the most popular machine at the local arcade

KnightDriver

02/11/2014 at 03:13 AM

Someone posted this on youtube. The actual arcade I used to go to.

I played Spy Hunter at a pizza shop in my hometown where they had like two machines. I went there all the time by bike just to play Spy Hunter. That's another one that really has to be played on the original cabinet. The feel of the steering wheel, gear shift, and pedals just isn't replicated well by controllers.

goaztecs

02/11/2014 at 11:33 AM

And the midi version of Spy Hunter! No matter where you go that sound of random game music, flashing lights, and tons of people, that was the arcade! 

Oh that feeling of the special controls with arcade cabinets, that added to the game, and I agree about controllers just are not the same. 

KnightDriver

02/13/2014 at 03:11 AM

Spy Hunter used the Peter Gunn Theme as it's music and it sounded great on that cabinet. I remember when I discovered you could turn your car into a boat. I was like, "Oh yeah!".

goaztecs

02/13/2014 at 08:25 PM

Haha I thought I wrote in Peter Gunn, but rereading my reply says otherwise. My friends and I loved playing that game that we learned that we figured out how to play it on our instruments in band

KnightDriver

02/17/2014 at 12:19 AM

NSonic79

03/14/2014 at 01:28 PM

I think the only neighborhood console I had early on was the 2600 and at that time it didn't quite impress me. Plus it was Pac man on there. Oddly I could tell the differenece between the arcade andt eh home consoles at that time. The differecnes seemed pretty obvious to me, yet others didn't seem to mind. If antying the home consoles had better controls in my opnion. I couldn't get no-where on the arcade asteroids game but did very well on consoles.

KnightDriver

03/14/2014 at 04:02 PM

Yea, the console versions were always way easier than the arcade ones and that Pac-Man game on 2600 was really, really bad.

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