> Home Base > Classic Archives > Game Reviews > Features > Sound Fixes > Guess the Game > Links > Flyers > The DUMP! > Glossary > Game Timeline > About Us > Contact Us We love to be linked. Why not use our button below on your site! |
|
||||
Game On is the first major UK Exhibition to explore the vibrant history and culture of Video Games. Focusing on key developments between 1962 and 2002, it’s an in-depth look at gaming's fascinating past and limitless future. I knew that in the expo I would find original arcade cabinets of fine quality, housing such luminaries as Centipede, Asteroids, Miss PacMan, Donkey Kong etc. Once inside, I hurried past great monuments to man’s achievements, mere trivia such as 'Stevenson's Rocket', the first proper steam locomotive and certainly one of the most famous. Finally, inside the door of the exhibition true to form spread out in front of me where some of the finest examples of Video Games you could wish to see. Better still they were all empty ready to play and full of free credits. I gorged myself till I could feed no more. In no particular order I sampled the delights of the following games: All the cabinets it has to be reported were in pristine condition. All screens were flicker and image-burn free. All joysticks were sticky free and full flowing. The funny thing is that these units were built to withstand a beating. They were kicked, thumped, punched and even head-butted back in the 1980’s by many over enthusiastic kids (myself included...although never quite head-butting). Yet to play them now after 20 years is to appreciate thier delicateness, and like a beautiful women they deserved nothing more than my full respect. I am proud to announce that after a near 20 year hiatus that I still managed to post 5 High Scores in my first flurry of attempts. OK this might not mean much to anyone else but I can tell you I was walking around with a big f***ing grin on my face. I could not have been happier had I won the National Lottery. Disappointingly I have to report that it is true with regarrd to what is said about the younger generation, they really do have no idea of the past. As these kids with their parents began to flood in, you could hear little Johnny saying “look dad its SPACE INVADERS”! Of course it was not SPACE INVADERS it was bloody Galaxian. Miss PacMan is not PacMan either, unless a sex change has taken place and Donkey Kong is definitely not Super Mario. What hope for the future? Still they could always visit my site to re-educate themselves. Annoyingly Dad was not always that correct either. You can tell a real addict from a Johnny come lately “of course I played video games I was cool once you know too!” types, they just do not cut the ice unlike Pengo once did when in his prime. Gripes aside this really was a good exhibition. There were the old PDP's and Computer Space cabinets, a massive Pong projected onto a wall, as well as a MAME unit projection running multiple gaming classics. The Home Brew brigade were not short changed either as many a home console both successful and obscure adorned the walls. If my memory serves me I recollect seeing a Magnavox Odyssey, Atari 2600, Atari 400, Commodore 64, Sinclair ZX80 and 81, Sinclair Spectrum, Apple II, Acorn and even I believe a BBC micro and Dragon 32. Another intriguing area of the exhibition is dedicated to the much overlooked area of gaming ‘Sound’. Being an advocate of great sound in games I particularly enjoyed this section. Great kudos must be given to the organisers for setting up free standing headphones, that you can listen to and manually select all your favourite in game sounds with just the mere push of a button. A later section in the expo is given over to the link between Cinema and Games and examples of where the two media's have converged examples being: Star Wars (Atari), Discs of Tron (Bally Midway) and more recently GoldenEye (Rare). Within this section were some of the finest examples of restored cabinets I have ever seen. The Discs of Tron unit being immaculate. With the lighting turned down in this section the full glory from the glow of this cabinet can really be appreciated, no photograph can do this justice ... you will just have to go and see for yourself. As you progress through the building you realise that apart from the opportunity to play some really groundbreaking original games the exhibition can, if you let it, really open your mind up to the larger influence and cultural effect gaming has had on modern society. There are many avenues that can be explored, such as Japan’s distinctive role in the creation of genres influenced by Manga and Anime and again the cross over between these different mediums. There's the usual nod at violence in video games and the ever increasingly realistic games from across the pond in America and the influence of these games on ‘yuff’ today, but it never gets in the way by being too heavy for its audience. A particularly interesting niche section is dedicated to those handheld wonders, you know the ones you got at Christmas and played all day until the batteries ran out at about...ooh 11o'clock that same morning. Such giants as 'Astro Wars', Nintendo's Game & Watch series, and of course the Gameboy. Again beautiful examples are showcased and it makes you wish you had not thrown yours away all those years ago. Finally the expo is brought to its logical conclusion when it covers modern day marketing and future technology. Here the exhibition showcases the Playstation 3 and Nintendo Wii etc. So to sum up my ‘grand day out’. 'Remember ‘Good Games Never Die!'
|
|||||