Anyone in the older gen-x to millennial crowd of hexbear have fond memories of playing a game in the arcades?
Couple stand out to me:
Seeing Virtua Fighter for the first time back in what 1993 or so at an amusement park and being wowed by the graphics, thinking it was photo realistic.
Seeing Mortal Kombat 2 on a big screen CRT cabinet and thinking I was going to go to hell because of the violence (lol).
Playing X-Men with my dad and his friend and his kid on a 6 player machine that had widescreen, very cool for the time.
Pumping endless quarters into Aliens vs Predator (one of my favorite arcade games).
Seeing some dude beat Tekken Tag which I could never clear and thinking he was the coolest.
Arcades were great. A dream of mine is to visit a game center in Japan and play some of the classics on an actual machine.
I grew up in the sticks, but we did have some arcades. Most were relegated to pizza huts, although occasionally we'd take a trip out to the mall. They had an awesome arcade, the kind with ski ball, every street fighter, that one Area 51 light gun game. I was part of a regular Soulcalibur 1 tournament they'd do every month. I'd go bowling with my grandma as a teenager too. The bowling alley had a very small, but extremely well curated arcade. Whoever was in charge of the arcade selection there really knew what they were doing, and I should have asked. Metal Slug, Street Fighter Alpha 3, Crazy Taxi, NBA Jam, etc. Just hit after hit.
I occasionally go to the retro arcade near me, although it's aimed at a slightly more retro vibe than I'm into. It mainly has games from the late 70s to late 80s, but it's still a cool time. I used to have the high score on the Bubble Bobble cabinet (trust me, jump a bunch of times in place on the first few levels, it's important).
I've been to a bunch of arcades in Japan and a few in China. It depends on where you go these days. In Japan a Taito or a Gigo are always good bets. There's only one Sega left, so that's a shame. Namco centers are also pretty good. They're harder to find, but little tiny arcades are always the best, but what can suck is people in there will absolutely be smoking. Every Japanese arcade I've visited that had Street Fighter III: Third Strike also had ash trays and permanent yellow stains everywhere.
Also, heads up, very large arcades in Japan will be set up on multiple levels. If you actually want arcade games, you'll have to find the floor you want.
First floor is always claw machines (or UFO catchers).
Second floor is often photo booths, or some kind of odd hobby-game like confusing card games or those simulators where you're a train conductor. Sometimes there will be VR stuff set up on the second floor too.
Third floor will be rhythm games. Japanese arcades absolutely love rhythm games and you will see someone blasting their hands all over some buttons to a bouncy Hatsune Miku song or dancing like crazy on DDR
Fourth floor will be stuff like airhockey, multiplayer stuff like the taiko drum game, etc.
Fifth floor and above are what I call the otaku caves. They're where the nerds are pushed. That's where you'll see fighting games, more action oriented stuff, retro games, whatever.
Top floor will be something like a place to play collectible card games or maybe even something like a theater for some local idol group, if you're into that kinda thing.
Hope you can visit a game center someday! There's really nothing else in the world quite like them. Shout out to that lady who destroyed me in Street Fighter 6 at the Taito in Nipponbashi a few months ago.
23 skidoo! Me and my main squeeze used to take the Model T down to the Nickelodeon with 20 cents in our pockets to play Shoot the Duck and Ten Pins see!
Shadows over Mystara and The Simpsons game in the lobby at the theater downtown.
Popped a couple quarters into Arm Champs 2 at lazer tag and accidentally picked the hardest opponent. I held out long enough that other kids wouldn't let me lose, so like 5 of us together beat it.
Went to Texas on vacation and absolutely annihilated the high score board on a Star Wars: Phantom Menace pinball machine.
This is now my favorite arcade game thanks to discovering it via emulation. We didn't have a machine of it around here or I know I would have fell in love with it as a kid.
Sure do! In fact, my mom worked in an arcade when I was pretty young. She would hook me up with the quarters painted blue that they use to placate kids whose quarters were "eaten" by the game.
When my mom was dating my stepdad, we went to the arcade often.
When I was a young teen, I figured out you could eke out a few extra tickets if you gently pulled on the tickets that you won.
I liked the shooters the most. Driving was pretty cool too.
Side note, does anyone remember an Aerosmith themed shooter where you were the band, and you shot nondescript thugs? It was the kind of console that had the plastic gun. Pretty sure they were uzi style. I also remember the special button shot gold records.
In fact, my mom worked in an arcade when I was pretty young.
That's awesome.
Side note, does anyone remember an Aerosmith themed shooter where you were the band, and you shot nondescript thugs? It was the kind of console that had the plastic gun. Pretty sure they were uzi style. I also remember the special button shot gold records.
Oh arcades do the blue quarters thing too? I guess that sense. My grandpa owned a bar and he had a stack of blue quarters to put in the jukebox whenever a song wasn't playing. It was since he didn't own the jukebox and the guy who emptied the quarters knew not to take the blue ones.
Old ass hexbears lol. I was still able to play some all time classic games with ppl at arcades when I was a kid in the mid/late 2000s and early 10s. Plenty of street fighter, mortal kombat, soul calibur, local ones had carnevil, tmnt, it was great. Will 100% agree that arcades have become shit though. Ever been to a dave and busters? Most disappointing mobile game scam shit possible
I really liked Burger Time. I felt like it wasn't mind numbingly hard and it was a good value proposition for a quarter. I similarly feel the same way about DigDug.
Spy Hunter was a revelation. But really hard.
Seeing Dragons Lair for the first time was mind boggling. But I sucked at it.
Street Fighter 2 definitely got me going back to the arcade.
Edited to add: look into the MiSTer FPGA project. I've had one for 5 or 6 years and it scratches an itch where most emulation falls short.
My high school had a deal with the college across the street to let us use the bowling alley in their student rec area for a bowling class that me and my friends all joined together. It was pretty cool. We bowled right before one of our scheduled breaks so pretty frequently we'd all just walk over to the next door arcade. Crazy Taxi, Dynamite Cop, Time Crisis 2... honestly amazing times.
My parents didn't have money to spare like that, and we didn't go out much, so in those brief moments I would watch others play arcade games. Cringe as it is one of my best memories growing up was watching some college kids play those simulated race car games with the actual steering wheel and everything. Was young enough it was just fun to sit there and watch the demo too.
I'm right around the millennial/zoomer gap, and I have fond memories of playing a shitload of time crisis and tcII at my local arcade which also had a dope go-kart track.
Younger Millennial here. Too young to have been around for the arcade craze, but the Fish and Chips shop near my childhood home had a Metal Slug cabinet me and my friends used to love.
Awh fuck yeah Metal Slug on an arcade cabinet, I can't count the number of pizza shops/video rental shops/low-end malls I've seen Metal Slug machines in.
Edit: Shout out to Point Blank and Puzzle Bobble too. Those were great for just random little businesses.
I'm playing them now as well on FPGA hardware thanks to the scene out there working to reverse engineer the original hardware and preserve them. Still waiting for an X-Men port though.
Lately I've been discovering that a bunch of classic NES games were arcade ports and I never knew because I had never seen the arcade versions, like Contra, Bionic Command, Strider, Castlevania (Haunted Castle)....
The six player X-Men was indeed so cool when you actually had the whole team going on it. Street Fighter 2 was absolutely my game, I remember putting my token in a line of them that we put on the cabinet to call next game at the arcade by the grocery stores my parents often went to. One time we were playing winning sits at Street Fighter II, I was on such a tear that I played for almost two hours straight and there were literal cheers when someone finally beat me.
My friends and I would all have our birthday parties at that arcade (the only one for like forty miles in any direction).
A lot of places had a few machines here and there though. I can remember going to a wedding venue for some people I honestly don't even remember, but I do remember stealing quarters from the bar tender's tip jar to play more games and when he caught me he was very cool about it and just put Pac-Man on free mode so I would stop.
My grandfather had no idea how to bond with us (first gen Eastern European immigrant) and so he would just take us to a local hotel that had some arcade machines and let us run wild with a roll of quarters. He'd taught us to pretend we were staying at the hotel if anyone asked us.
there was a mall that died in the late 70s and all that was left by the early 90s was this enormous, mother of all arcades. I loved that place. divorced dad would take us there on weekends. I mostly just watched people play games, but the most memorable was this thing, a $10,000 arcade machine in 1989 dollars. the polygon count is a joke by today's standards, but the real value was in the sound and feel. it was a legit driving sim with serious haptic feedback from the steering wheel. trying to correct an oversteer as an 11 year old doing 90 mph around a gentle curve, it would rip the wheel out of my hands. you really had to fight it to drive fast.
also, the manual transmission was no joke. I lacked the ability as a kid to coordinate the knowledge, speed and strength of throwing the gears to downshift and recover traction, but it took the punishment with steel construction of shifter. I would just play with automatic, but I watched this guy in his 30s go hard on it, and it was made for it. shit was badass.
I bet if there's one out there that still works, it's probably worth like more than a new real car. I would love to play it again and kick the shit out of it.
There was a laundromat that sold beer and had a 3D well type Tetris game called blockout. Played against my friends, competition got pretty intense. Would leave the mat late at night doing rotations is my brain, so fun
Snow Bros is my jam! Used to love playing that as a kid, got lucky on holiday once and found an arcade machine of it at the hotel I was staying at. I spent all my time (and all my money) playing that game. It was a great trip.
Loved it as a kid. Gauntlet, Rampage, Arkanoid, TMNT, Cruisin' USA, the boating version. Obviously pacman+ms, qbert, galaga, I think there was a Terminator game with a gun, mortal Kombat, street fighter, X-Men. And of course plenty of pinball.
I remember having chickenpox on the day of my friends birthday party so I had to stay home while everyone went to the Discovery Zone. I sobbed for hours while my mom covered me in calamine from head to toe.
Shit I haven't thought about Virtual On in a long ass time. That game was fun as hell. I think you could do 1v1 with a 2nd connected cab of I recall. The dual flight stick controls were a real novelty.
There's a pizza place just down the street from me that has a working old timey Donkey Kong. I have the high score and will probably keep it. I'm good at Donkey Kong and no one else plays it
What y'all know about that Bucky O'Hare tho 👀 also when I was in high school they still had DDR machines at the arcade at the mall I used to frequent that was right across the street from my school
I got so good at it my friends and I started drawing crowds lol
DDR was GOAT, we played the shit out of that. My friend even bought pads for his house lol.
House of the Dead 2 we played a lot of too as well, but DDR is the one we played the most. Like before DDR we would just play whatever was around, but that's the first one we would really look for, or go to certain arcades for
Me and my kid are really into claw machines now. My hit rate is pretty good but I am on a bit of a cold streak
Time crisis 2 was my shit back in the day! There's a "barcode" near me I hit up with my lady friend on occasion for some drinks and digital violence. It's a cool place
It’s still a thing in my shitty small town. We have a huge one with all the classics. Once a week I’ll go down there with friends and play classic Tekken or pinball.
Area 51 gun game at the bowling alley in my grandparents small town. During regular life our home consoles were the star (didn’t have to beg adults for spare change) but when we were stuck at that smoky bowling alley waiting got the adults to get tired that was the best time waster.
In the mid 90s when I was really young I remember playing Galaga somewhat regularly in a diner near my parents house
Also later when I was older (mid 2000s) my class in school went on a day trip to an amusement park with an arcade, and towards the end of the day I got bored of rides and played Joust to the point where I got multiple high scores on the machine
Doing some deranged digital violence on the Mortal Kombat 3 cabinet at the Pizza Hut is a favorite memory of mine. The experience was, of course, made much worse by capitalism; those things were just designed to devour your allowance money. I think what I liked most about it was just that it was a third place where you could have fun with other people, and I was a lonely kid who craved that.
Getting older kids (and adults) to rage-quit at the OG Street Fighter II was always good for a laugh. My own uncle had a meltdown because he couldn't figure out how to counter the Blanka flying claw-into-face chomp-into electric shock combo. As Ryu. Yeah.
The original Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles arcade with the 4-player cabinet was awesome, too. I think I only ever made it past Bebop once, though. I remember being super excited for the NES port when it finally came out, because the other TMNT game on NES (and home computers) was such a disappointment compared to the arcade.
I wish we'd had the X-Men and Simpsons ones; those looked like they were in the same lane as TMNT.
There was a version of After Burner where the "cabinet" was a giant recumbent pilot's seat on a set of force feedback motors, and it would jolt you around when you banked the jet. That was pretty cool.
My mom would go to bowling league and she would watch me by handing me a pile of quarters and let me play fighting games. I didn't have a console for the longest time, so stuff like Marvel vs Capcom 2 and Ms. Pacman would be my main exposure to video games.
When I was young, during a family trip we stayed at a hotel with a rec area that had a swimming pool, a hot tub, and a Donpachi cabinet. I was a happy kid that day.
We also regularly went to a Pizza Hut that had a Raiden 2 machine. I'd always beg my parents for change to play, but I never made it past the first level (I was a dumb kid and bad at video games). The first stage theme still takes me back to those days every time I hear it.
When I was a kid, my dad would take me to the arcade in the mall and we would play House of the Dead 2 together. It's one of my most treasured.memories
Oh man, and that's not even getting into all the elementary school roller rink trips/soccer team pizza parties where I and the other bad children would slink off to the back play Metal Slug.
Shout out to Time Crisis, up there with HOTD for hilarious voice acting. Actually, pretty much every arcade game had that
There was this arcade game which was a time attack sort of game except you started as a tiny dinosaur amd the more you ate you became cooler and cooler dinosaurs. Iirc the final form was a T-Rex and right before that was triceratops. No idea what it was called, but as a dinosaur obsessed young kid it was magical.
The four player gauntlet arcade game stands out because my two best friends were moving abroad and the last time we got to hang out our parents took us all to an arcade where we spent the entire time on that game with a 4th mutual friend.
My friends used to go to the mall near our school on our lunch breaks and they'd play lightgun shooters (jurassic park was what they played alot of). I didn't have any money so I just watched them play.
When I was younger I have one time my dad took me to the movie place in a lake town, and we played through the entire Simpsons arcade game together. One of my few good memories with my dad. I don't think we actually finished the game, but we got really far in at least.
That double wide X-Men Cab was fucking sick. Also, I got my love of fighting games from putting way to many quarters into the X-Men vs. Street Fighter cab.
I got to play in some Japanese Arcades a number of years ago, it was really fun. SuperPotato has a bunch of CandyCabs at the top floor with all different old school games running in them. Only downside to Japanese arcades is you can still smoke on them.