Play Classic Video Games In NY, At Home 132
Iphtashu Fitz writes "If you'd like to play classic arcade games from the 1980s, then it might be time for you to take a trip to New York, according to Wired News, since the American Museum of the Moving Image is holding an exhibition called Blip! where you can play a selection of the classics, including some of those referenced in an earlier exhibition. Also mentioned on their site is the X-Arcade cabinet for playing arcade-style classics at home through emulation." Much easier than building your own cabinet.
No Pac Man I hear! (Score:5, Informative)
Sounds like Videotopia (Score:3, Interesting)
This sounds like the traveling Videotopia [videotopia.com] exhibit.
It's quite a hoot to play games you used to rock at. I think they had Pac Man (not a fave of mine), although it's been a year or two since they came to my town.
Re:Sounds like Videotopia (Score:2)
Re:No Pac Man I hear! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:No Pac Man I hear! (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:No Pac Man I hear! (Score:2)
However, I heard HE DID NOT RUN 'PATTERNS' when he accomplished the amazing feat of the world's first perfect game of PAC-MAN. By doing that, he MAXIMIZED the challenge and made the feat he accomplished even MORE amazing!
The best I ever did was 'a coupla million' and yes I was 'running patterns' to do it.
On the other hand, I do know what marathon videogaming feels like. It took me about 8.5 hours to see what happes to a TAPPER videogame after 'board 255'....
There is a 'board 0
Re:No Pac Man I hear! (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:No Pac Man I hear! (Score:2)
Re:No Pac Man I hear! (Score:2)
I assume most everyone here has played Pac Man in their lives, but to those who haven't: Pac Man uses completely static levels. I
Re:No Pac Man I hear! (Score:3, Interesting)
Just a theory, anyway.
What bout those spaceinvader Tables? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:What bout those spaceinvader Tables? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What bout those spaceinvader Tables? (Score:1)
Re:What bout those spaceinvader Tables? (Score:2)
Re:What bout those spaceinvader Tables? (Score:1)
Re:What bout those spaceinvader Tables? (Score:3, Informative)
If I had a good salary and owned my own space, I'd probably buy one of these for a conversation piece.
Mrs. Pacman tables too (Score:1)
to a place called whitt's barbeque, they had a Mrs. Pacman table there, you looked down and played, it was cool, hmm, if I make an arcade cabinet, I might just cheat and find one of these tables.
Original article text (Score:5, Informative)
Same submitter, same "dept."... just the title and story text has changed.
Play Those Classic Video Games Virtually Anywhere
Posted by CmdrTaco in The Mysterious Future!
from the emulating-the-classics dept.
Iphtashu Fitz writes "If you're like me your introduction to video games decades ago was something like the Atari 2600 [atariage.com], and you also pumped untold hundreds of quarters into arcade games like Space Invaders, Defender, and Asteroids [www.hut.fi]. Well according to a Wired News article you can now play these and many more [wired.com] of those classic games in their original format on your PC, Mac, Playstation, XBox, or Gamecube. X-Arcade [x-arcade.com] has an emulator & arcade-style interface that they claim will let you play over 4000 of the classic games on any of these modern gaming systems. Or if you'd prefer to play the actual arcade games from the 1980's then it might be time for you to take a trip to New York where the American Museum of the Moving Image [movingimage.us] is holding an exhibition [movingimage.us] where you can play these classics. Game emulators can be found linked from the museums website as well as through Retrogames [retrogames.com]." Much easier than building your own Cabinet [cmdrtaco.net].
Re:Original article text (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Original article text (Score:1, Informative)
As others have noticed, they tend to occasionally add typos, too...
Re:Original article text (Score:1)
I might just have to build my own vector only cabinet based on this vector generator [zektor.com] and and old Tempest vector monitor
Gound Kontrol Does This Everyday (Score:1)
Ouch (Score:5, Interesting)
Want to download Mame Rom games directly?
Easiest = Using Kazaa, or P2P engine
Type MAME in a software search.
Download Any MAME Related Searches
Encouraging people to pirate roms. That can't be good for business (well, good for business until the government comes knocking).
Or am I out of the loop and its all alright now?
Re:Ouch (Score:1)
Re:Ouch (Score:2, Insightful)
If the ROMs were available from the companies who own the rights to production, then downloading the ROMs could be considered piracy. This is not the case, though, and from the copyright owner's perspective, eBaying the ROMs and downloading them are the same.
Re:Ouch (Score:1)
Yes but it should be legal to put the code of a rom you own into an emulator to play the game you own- maybe newer roms feature more license restrictions, surely not the classics from the eighties. Copyright owners do not usually get revenue from second-hand market, nor they should have any right to. Or am i missing something?
Re:Ouch (Score:1)
Don't think you're missing anything -- we're in agreement.
Re:Ouch (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Ouch (Score:2, Insightful)
Hey officer, my neighbor wasn't releasing his invention to the public, so I stole it! I mean, how else was I supposed to get it?
NOTE: I too believe that out-of-circulation ROMS *should* be made available to the public for free. But it is a false rationalize to say that trading copyrighted ROMS without permission isn't theft.
Re:Ouch (Score:2)
Re:Ouch (Score:2)
Re:Ouch (Score:3, Informative)
I can put up on my website a Gameboy Advance emulator (which is legal) and say, "Want roms? Download them from alt.binaries.emulators.gameboy.advance". I'm not supplying the ROMs, just telling people where to get them.
You might not agree with telling people where to get ROMs, but there's nothing legally wrong with it.
ROMs are NOT Illegal! (necessarily) (Score:1, Informative)
Try reading their "legal" section. It's none of that "24 hours" BS, but some advice they got from the lawyers they've hired.
Note that they also let you play NES and Atari games for free, whereas you can play unlimited SNES and Genesis games for a monthly fee (fair disclosure: I went there after the first Slashdot story on the site, I donated/helped out until I became a "charter member" and I now have free, unlimited service)
Also, while I don't think that ConsoleClassix has
Re:Ouch (Score:3, Informative)
Mame roms: http://www.mamereactor.com [mamereactor.com]
Or am I out of the loop and its all alright now?
Depends on which Slashdotter you ask.
No, it's not okay. Technically. It's still a violation of copyright.
Unlike console games where one can just copy a CD or press a button on a cart copier, arcade games have anywhere from a couple to dozens of ROM chips that one has to figure out how to copy and that's only if you can afford the hundreds of dollars that one game will cost. In order to legally play the game, you h
Piracy in the high st (Score:1, Informative)
"free download of 4000 games" says the site, do you think Taito,Atari etc agree while this company earns 1000$ for a wooden mdf box ?
Instead of buying the x-arcade cabinet (Score:5, Informative)
Appreciate that special aroma in your home and the genuine cigartte burns around the joysticks.
Re:Instead of buying the x-arcade cabinet - Wha? (Score:2)
Yes! It's always great to have a new person get addicted [havokmon.com]
pop in a PC made out of all those bits and pieces you have lying around your house and join them together with bits from http://www.ultimarc.com/ Appreciate that special aroma in your home and the genuine cigartte burns around the joysticks
WHAT?!? a PC?! Blasphmer! Back you savage!
Re:Instead of buying the x-arcade cabinet (Score:1)
Go to Retroblast.com [retroblast.com] and see how gorgeous this combination looks. It's the stuff of dreams, ladies and gentlemen.
Played Halo there (Score:1)
Thought it was pretty cool seeing a room that had everything from Halo to Space War together.
Ten games? Try 200. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Ten games? Try 200. (Score:1, Informative)
http://www.phillyclassic.com/
-Jeff
One weekend? Try 52. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Ten games? Try 200. (Score:2)
I think you're slightly missing the point. This is the American Museum of the Moving Image. It's a very large museum dedicated not just to video games but also to film and television (and related industries). It is across the street from a working television studio (the studio where they filmed the most recent Cosby show, and whatever Whoopee Goldberg's last bit of TV nonsense was), and AFAIK the studio
Anyone bought that X-Arcade cabinet? (Score:2)
Just buy a junked cabinet (Score:5, Informative)
You can buy a scrapped cabinet for less than $100, or free if you know where to look. They typically include a coin door which is a real eye catcher, and just need a washing up. Attach a pre-made control panel ($100?) or make your own, drop in a TV + PC and Bob's your uncle.
Re:Anyone bought that X-Arcade cabinet? (Score:3, Informative)
I spent a total of about $1600 building my cabinet from scratch, but that includes all hardwareincluding the new 27" arcade monitor, computer hardware, and controls.
Just set a budget (both for your money and your time)
Re:Anyone bought that X-Arcade cabinet? (Score:2, Interesting)
As mentioned BYOAC(Build Your Own Arcade Controls) [arcadecontrols.com] Is a great site for MAME cabinet related information.
Re:Anyone bought that X-Arcade cabinet? (Score:2)
Not that much (Score:2, Informative)
Classic Arcade Games in northeast MA/southeast NH (Score:2, Interesting)
It's worth the trip, as long as white trash doesn't bother you.
Re:Classic Arcade Games in northeast MA/southeast (Score:3, Informative)
You can get discount coupons on their tokens, so games cost something like
Nice tourist slogan (Score:2, Funny)
If they want a killer, boffo tourist slogan to bring the huddled masses to NYC, I think they need to try something different.
Easier, but less expensive? Or nicer? (Score:5, Informative)
You might be better off buying an ancient cab and gutting it, or building your own. I built a wooden cab right to my size (I have a physical disability, dwarfism) and it kicks much booty as a result. Having a customized cab, or an authentic cab with new guts, seems a better way to go than a generic black cab branded with X-Arcade logos and a somewhat questionable price tag.
xbox cab is a joke (Score:1, Informative)
I HATE emulators (Score:4, Insightful)
If you really love arcade games, collect and restore the machines. I only have room for 3 or 4 upright cabinets, but I pick up old ones, restore them, play them till I'm bored of it, then sell them and start over.
I usually turn enough profit to buy everyone I know a gummi bear.
But, there are tons of subtle differences. Midi tempos are usually off, colors are off. The games dont look the same emulated, even through a real arcade monitor..
Emulation is really neat, technically.. But if you truly love the old classics, keep the old classics around. Rescue that beat up SFII cabinet from the pizza shop, clean it up, repair/replace the controls.. Give it a little elbow grease..
MAME cabinets are just so... ghetto.. Especially when people try and cram every possible control into them.. Two sticks, 12 buttons each, trackballs, spinners, meh.. They look retarded. Many real cabinets were works of functional art.. Look at an old defender control panel.. Designed to function for only one game..
Or vindicators, a cabinet shaped like a giant tank with two crazy throttle levers for control.
Re:I HATE emulators (Score:4, Insightful)
The Gamecube version of Namco Museum comes to mind - for some reason, even at the largest display mode, all the games (except Pole Position and the original Galaga) are at about 80-90% of original size on the screen, not to mention being rather fuzzy. In contrast, I can fire up MAME and play all of them on my monitor with the correct sizes and resolution.
It's nice that you can restore and sell cabinets, but not everyone has the extra cash to spend on buying them in the first place, not to mention the skill to restore them.
Emulators are really the closest the majority of gamers can get to the originals, and I would hazard a guess that it's close enough for many.
Re:I HATE emulators (Score:4, Informative)
I used to own an arcade version of the "Main Event" - a pretty cool four player wrestling game. I loved it. Problem was - it was the same game and the cabinet took up a lot of room just for one game. Who the hell has room to collect several cabinets? Sorry if we're all not flush with cash and square footage like you ...
Re:I HATE emulators (Score:1)
Sorry, but that's ghetto. It looks stupid, as stupid as a homemade spoiler on a honda civic. Just because it was a lot of work doesn't mean the end product is appealing.
If you read my post, I only have room for 3 or
Re:I HATE emulators (Score:2)
And buying old full sized games in cabinets is NOT a "cheap hobby". They run several hundred (if not over $1,000) each. I don't think most people have the space or the room for it.
Cool your 'tude, you'll live longer.
Re:I HATE emulators (Score:1)
I agree with you on those MAME cabs though, I want a cabinet to look and feel like a real arcade machine and take quarters. Most of the designs out there are horrible (X-Arcade included).
Re:I HATE emulators (Score:2)
Re:I HATE emulators (Score:1)
For me, it's about the game. When I discovered I could still remember my super secret patterns for Pac-Man Plus on MAME, it was all good.
Re:I HATE emulators (Score:2)
I for one enjoy immensley the fact of just playing the games on my PC. The emulation is more than close enough, especially with MAME. I also can play ALL my old 80's favorites, not just 3 or 4 taking up a whole room in my house.
Re:I HATE emulators (Score:2)
Re:I HATE emulators (Score:1)
Yes, having the original cabinet is nice, along with the original controllers and everything. However, an emulator mixed with a good joystick is going to be nearly as good as the real thing. Unless you only want to play a few of games total, buying the cabinets won't get you very far unless you happen to have a lot of extra cash/space.
HACKING video games! (Score:2, Interesting)
Some way to squeeze through the wall outside the play area, walking endless desert then, or in a space shooter I found a position where I can kill all newly appearing enemies easily and managed to kill them all (yeah, just flew through empty skies without anything to shoot at, until I reset the machine with power switch), or climbing a ladder and shooting some
Re:HACKING video games! (Score:1)
That one would always freak everybody out in the arcade!!!
Cool... sort of (Score:2)
You will be standing in line for HOURS AND HOURS to play whatever game tickles your pickle. That doesn't sound entertaining to me.
It's like slashdotting a Pentium 75 server (Score:1)
Re:It's like slashdotting a Pentium 75 server (Score:1)
dude (Score:5, Informative)
the guy that runs http://arcade.madsmurf.com/ [madsmurf.com] can probably point you towards a cabinet vendor.
I'm not an owner of that company or investor or anything other than a very happy customer.
shipping is kind of expensive but the arcade cabs are very cheap in my experience. slap a windows PC in there and a couple bits from www.ultimarc.com (arcadeVGA adapter and the J-PAC) and you have every thing you need but the roms to play thousands of arcade games on this arcade.
and there are a lot more than one type of cabinet - there are stand-up cabs, sit down cabs, two seater sega cabs, cabinets with dual monitors, cabinets with giant projection screen monitors, all kinds of stuff.
have a look. they're good stuff.
Reasonable cabinets in the UK? (Score:2)
Failing that, how easy is it to convert older actual arcade cabinets over? Or is that a "how long is a piece of string"-style question...?
Cheers,
Ian
what no link to byoac? (Score:4, Informative)
And man is the x-arcade "cabinet" just an ugly expensive bookshelf for a TV and PC with a shelf for one of their undersized controllers, or what?
E.
PS I of course like my cabinet better: UberCade =P
Ouch (Score:5, Insightful)
the museum (Score:1)
cabinet designs (Score:2)
You'd end up with a much more visually interesting piece of furniture, and it wouldn't take up as much space as a cabinet. Yes, it doesn't have the back glass artwork, nor does it have the coin slots, but if it's a stand up microswitch joystick
Re:cabinet designs (Score:1)
and a slot that would hold a laptop so that the display was held at the appropriate angle.
Arcade games were designed to look good on a 19" to 27" display. I'm not too sure a 14" laptop display would cut it. I'd suggest a shelf that could accommodate a VCR, a DVD player, a game console, or a closed laptop with a TV output.
No wait, that's called a "home entertainment center".
Similiar exhibit last year in Europe (Score:2)
the "Game On" exhibit [gameonweb.co.uk]
e.
The Best Collection of Arcade Games and Pinball (Score:4, Informative)
arcade controls (Score:3, Informative)
Save your link-whoring, Commander. Build Your Own Arcade Controls [arcadecontrols.com] lists hundreds of documentary pages written by people who've built their own acrade machines or controls.
I finished my own professional-looking arcade control panel with real arcade machine parts just last week, but I haven't had time to post the info to my website just yet. For those looking for the ultimate arcade experience, you can't beat the feel of the real thing.
X-arcade website = BS. (Score:2)
I'm not sure what a Pac-Man arcade game goes for, but you can get a used Ms. Pac Man around here (NJ/NY-Area) for $300-$500. A Used arcade cabinet in good shape goes for about $100. I've seen used arcade cabinets thrown away before because they were no good for conversion kits (Ie, Nintendo's playchoice).
Re:X-arcade website = BS. (Score:2)
My friend picked up
Get Midway Arcade Treasures for PS2 (Score:2, Interesting)
Gauntlet
Joust
Defender
Spy Hunter
Smash TV
Rampage
in all, something like 25 titles. It's only $19.95. You can build a cabinet and stick the PS2 in it, and then you can have all these classics for super cheap!
The Museum Rocks (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The Museum Rocks (Score:2)
Try Ground Kontrol (Score:1, Informative)
Old style games at old style prices. And couldn't be in a nicer part of the country. Damn I miss living there.
Re:Try Ground Kontrol (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Try Ground Kontrol (Score:1)
And our ROMs come complete with free plastic shells and labels!
In other words, we sell the original cartridges. Just making sure Nintendo of America doesn't get the wrong idea ;-)
-El D.
Re:Try Ground Kontrol (Score:1)
(Disclaimer: I co-own and operate GK, so this qualifies as shameless self-promotion)
Yes, Ground Kontrol [groundkontrol.com] has all but one of the Blip exhibit's games and about 50 more. Our goal is to present arcade gaming's "greatest hits", spanning the decades, all for .25 a play in a true arcade environment, as originally intended.
At the old-timer 'museum' end of the spectrum, we're refurbishing a 1973 QuadraPong. It's the first cocktail table game and only the third Atari produced. It's so early, the screen is a modifi
Whoa ... (Score:1)
Homemade Cabinet (Score:2, Informative)
Arcades still around (Score:1)
It was on Pine street on Cap Hill. An artist friend had painted their sign. Ahh, back in the days...
COSI Columbus, too. (Score:1)
From their website [cosi.org]:
Online 80's Games (Score:3, Interesting)
http://www.80smusiclyrics.com/games.html
Or in NH, AK, CA, TX..... (Score:1)
For those Adventurous Folks (Score:2, Informative)
Its a great place to start and an almost bottomless supply of links to vendors and parts sources. There are about a dozen or more arcade cabinet plans out there on the net and at least as many companies offering a far better product than the X-Arcade stuff.
Gratuitous links:
Lusid's arcade flashback [adelphia.net]
Cocktail Cab Plans [arcadecontrols.org]
Happy Slashdotting!
informative: KLOV (Score:1)
The page for Pac-Man is here [klov.com].
ah.... memories (Score:1)
The standard rule at the arcade was placing a quarter on the machine for "next game". Ah... such memories.
If You Are Ever In Orlando, Pop Into Disney Quest (Score:1)
Zero Wing? (Score:2)