VIDEO FEVER - Games People Play from ABC news LA about arcade video games recorded in 1982

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  • čas přidán 30. 12. 2010
  • ABC news channel 7 Los Angels did a five part series about the arcade video game indusrty. This was transfered from a VHS tape that we recorded in 1982. We were 8 years old operating the VCR back then so some of video gets cut out.
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Komentáře • 529

  • @NintendoThumb
    @NintendoThumb Před 7 lety +355

    It's funny how much the tone changed from news reporting here in the early 80's which seemed more curious about it, to the reporting in the 90s where it's all just blaming the games for everything under the sun.

    • @Willibef
      @Willibef Před 7 lety +20

      Nowadays internet is a popular scapegoat.

    • @keybyss98
      @keybyss98 Před 7 lety +9

      Nintendo Thumb I think there were some controversies surrounding video games even at the time. I would argue, though, that it wasn't intensified as much as it was in the 90's.

    • @yellowblanka6058
      @yellowblanka6058 Před 7 lety +21

      Probably has something to do with the games getting much more realistic and violent in the 90's - there was nothing anywhere near "Doom" or "Mortal Kombat" during the 80's, and violence was either vehicle on vehicle or bloodless. Not that I agree with the sensationalism in the slightest, but I can see why they latched onto games as a popular scapegoat for larger societal issues.

    • @dirratt
      @dirratt Před 6 lety +2

      That tone got worst in the late 80's and early 90's to now.

    • @asherouk7308
      @asherouk7308 Před 6 lety +19

      Mortal Kombat (1992) was the game changer (pun intentional). Blood was shown for the first time. Characters were real actors, not cartoons. And of course there was the fatality, which meant that not only was your opponent defeated, he was dead and YOU killed him. Hyperrealism. Parents groups even tried to have the game banned. Which of course only made the game more popular. Ten years doesn’t seem like a long time but after the collapse of the USSR and the end of the Cold War, 1992 was a world away from the innocence of 1982. Violent crime (associated with crack cocaine) kept increasing throughout the 1980s and peaked in the early 1990s. In the post-victory Cold War era big studios really wanted to test the limits of censorship, arguing that entertainment should be allowed to reflect the violence in the real world. But of course it was all about the bottom line. More gore, more controversy, more promo means more dollars.

  • @danlivni2097
    @danlivni2097 Před 7 lety +121

    I was 12 in 1982 and everyone was playing arcade games in 1982. This was the Hayday for arcades.
    There were so many amazing arcades games that came out in the early 80s

    • @Theonetruewonderfly
      @Theonetruewonderfly Před 5 lety +10

      I was 6 years old in 1982. I've got many awesome memories of the arcade scene in the early 80's, but also many awesome memories of Nintendo in the late 80's.

    • @slum3947
      @slum3947 Před 4 lety +7

      My dad was a truck driver in the 80sand I can remember stealing quarters from his little coin bag to play Pac-Man and stuff in truck stops man them where are the best times of my life

    • @personalpc7439
      @personalpc7439 Před 4 lety +1

      I had a hand-held space invaders.. cost a fortune back then

    • @jamestaylor2648
      @jamestaylor2648 Před 4 lety +2

      Sandy V. pahahahah funny

    • @oldiesmusic76
      @oldiesmusic76 Před 4 lety +3

      @Sandy V. No they weren't. 1979-1985 was the golden age for arcades and the hundreds of video games in them, nothing after that came close. Nothing! The 90's, who are you kidding? I'll give you Tetris or Street Fighter, that's it.

  • @micahnightwolf
    @micahnightwolf Před 6 lety +156

    I got a lot of respect for game devs back then. They didn't have Photoshop or GiMP, they didn't have Blender or Autodesk, they didn't have Unity or UE3/4, and they didn't have advanced programming languages. And they had extremely limited hardware on both the consoles and the computer systems used to program them.
    Yet they still made the most awesome and memorable video games in history.

    • @MrHetherton
      @MrHetherton Před 5 lety +4

      Me too. Some of my most memorable video games growing up was ninja turtles 1989 arcade without a doubt a true classic Superman made by Taito another classic and Simpsons arcade WWE wrestlefest etc.

    • @slum3947
      @slum3947 Před 4 lety +8

      The 80s f****** rules

    • @rashoietolan3047
      @rashoietolan3047 Před 4 lety +1

      Donald Jong-un tru but the chode makes a good point

    • @bubbahogg-buga4613
      @bubbahogg-buga4613 Před 4 lety +11

      early game devs didnt just write the software, but created the hardware as well..

    • @blumenthal7528
      @blumenthal7528 Před 4 lety +4

      You can say they sacrified their lifes for the gamers.

  • @farticas101
    @farticas101 Před 10 lety +115

    "Oh dear, the children are getting small blisters from playing these games. Better ban them!"
    By this logic every single physical activity should be banned too. God damn people.

    • @Maceguy2000
      @Maceguy2000 Před 9 lety +11

      That's exactly what I thought! When they explained how kids were developing blisters and calluses, I thought " and on the other hand physical activity can lead to broken bones and sometimes bleeding induced trauma ( mostly in extreme sports)... Well, better ban video games! A lot of parents just love to nitpick on things that aren't school or work to the point of banning them altogether for no good reason besides calluses and rubbing hands on a board 😐.

    • @OikPoinFive
      @OikPoinFive Před 6 lety +4

      Flippy because physical activity makes us feel better and lose weight duh. Unlike fat video games.

    • @sonicexereaper6814
      @sonicexereaper6814 Před 5 lety +1

      Flippy With the blister part, I was actually surprised I have it on my knuckle when playing games like Injustice and Neon FM. I guess maybe this is what happens when I give it “too much beating” when playing too aggressive, lol. But hey, according to the media blaming video games for these conditions, it is not the game’s fault for these conditions. It is the player’s own fault, even I say it is my own fault since I CHOOSE to play and I get these effects. Take a look at the Berzerk controversy where it is revealed that the game didn’t cause a curse to the players’s deaths, but it was the players’ own faults for their deaths since it is revealed they had serious conditions of their own and proceeds to care less about it and more about playing a video game they are dying to play. But hey, like most players, we don’t care as long as the gaming pace we play at isn’t too severe. Also, these less severe conditions the media stated is just the usual we deal with. For instance, my hands get tired when I play Injustice, and Neon FM. My fingers get tired when I play House of the Dead, King of Fighters, Marvel vs. Capcom, Galaga, Guitar Hero, Big Buck Hunter, Tomb Raider, and Street Fighter II. But who cares? At least it doesn’t affect us severely. It’s the same effect as typing frequently at office work, doing PE exercise, working at a fast paced restaurant, etc. Also, games of retro and modern are just there for fun and they don’t do anything to create deaths. It is us the players that we have take responsibilities of our own health. Like the Berzerk players, if we have a serious medical condition we need to check before it goes, we take that responsibility. If we ignore it, it’s our own fault and not the games.

    • @blob5907
      @blob5907 Před 4 lety +1

      YOU CANT TELL ME NOT TO FAP

    • @lennybrewster4673
      @lennybrewster4673 Před 2 lety

      Nothings changed, people are just finally noticing the bullshit lol

  • @wreckloosecibblecaboot
    @wreckloosecibblecaboot Před 2 lety +46

    im glad i was born in the era of real coin op arcade games, it was truly an amazing experience to have as a child, loud jazzy rock music, arcade sounds coming from all the games in the arcade center smell of popcorn and pizza not too far away, man i wish it were the 80's and early 90's again!!!!

    • @yellowblanka6058
      @yellowblanka6058 Před rokem +2

      You miss your childhood/youth, like every other person that has waxed nostalgic for a certain time period throughout human history.

    • @schnek8927
      @schnek8927 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@yellowblanka6058And like every person who blames quality on nostalgia, you think all time periods are equal...
      The only person with a waxed view here is you, funnily enough. Reverse nostalgia is real. The ”NEW IS GOOD” mentality, where objectivity goes out the window because of your rose-tinted glasses for all that is simply not old.

  • @ToruKun1
    @ToruKun1 Před 10 lety +97

    Back when graphics were "details" and an isometric perspective was considered 3D

    • @Maceguy2000
      @Maceguy2000 Před 9 lety +9

      Yup, pretty much

    • @westingtyler2
      @westingtyler2 Před 3 lety +4

      haha yeah. and game levels were called "boards." that's what me and my brother called them. was that common usage? "No, I haven't gotten to the dungeon board yet."

    • @southsidesaiyan8641
      @southsidesaiyan8641 Před 2 lety +3

      @@westingtyler2 yes lots of people called levels boards back then even in the 90s I remember plenty of us callings stages boards.

  • @joevs21001
    @joevs21001 Před 11 lety +55

    I was 16 years old in 1982 at the highlight of the video game era. This brings back some fantastic memories. Man did I spend a LOT of time at our local video game arcades in Daytona Beach, namely the Daytona Mall arcade, and the arcade at Volusia Mall. Both were great arcades. All the arcades were darkened and very dimly lit to make all the different games "pop" with color and those alluring sounds that drew you in and "made" you spend money! LOL. Great times, and great memories.

    • @TheTiagoespanhol
      @TheTiagoespanhol Před 6 lety

      joevs21001 mee too but I'm from Portugal.

    • @garlicguy2892
      @garlicguy2892 Před 6 lety

      Me to im from Australia.

    • @OikPoinFive
      @OikPoinFive Před 6 lety

      Garlic Guy i was in Perth and Joondalup in 2002

    • @erik-victory
      @erik-victory Před 2 lety

      Hell yeah. 🙂

    • @Bacchus1983
      @Bacchus1983 Před rokem

      Same age, same year, but at Funarama in the westland mall, Hialeah. The time and money i spent there 😆😆

  • @soyoudonthaveananglehuh8513

    I remember being a young kid back in the early 80's. It was awesome to watch people play, and I remember playing Pac Man.

  • @tarabuff
    @tarabuff Před 9 lety +66

    I remember looking forward going to the shopping mall to play video games. Now, the beloved video arcade @ my mall is no longer around. Darn, I miss those days! Let's bring back the video arcades!

    • @starpowerz
      @starpowerz Před 8 lety +8

      i go to a mall with a japanese arcade in it. no classic games there but the competition among players of the japanese games is strong and arcade culture is very much alive there :'D

    • @Pichuscute
      @Pichuscute Před 5 lety +7

      Japan still has them. I highly recommend going there to visit and play! there's also barcades in some cities in the US.

    • @shannonbriggs100
      @shannonbriggs100 Před 4 lety

      I’m in the UK and we have arcades (usually at a seafront). They aren’t like American arcades though, it’s mostly just 2p coin machines, claw games and then arcade games but only the modern ones. I’d love for retro arcades to be a thing.

    • @zpushy633sora8
      @zpushy633sora8 Před 2 lety

      That's too Bad.

    • @zpushy633sora8
      @zpushy633sora8 Před 2 lety

      That's Sad

  • @SuperGamesLegend
    @SuperGamesLegend Před 2 lety +16

    1981 was such a great time to hang out in the arcades. I miss those days.

    • @bluescat581
      @bluescat581 Před 2 měsíci

      Also Toasters and Chainsaws. The arcade game that never was.

  • @tartgreenapple
    @tartgreenapple Před 9 lety +56

    Reporter of this segment, Josh Littman, died in 1987 at age 35 of leukemia.
    He turned the camera's on himself, relentlessly recording the rollercoaster swings of hope and despair, remission and final decline for his documentary "Castles in the Sand".

  • @DarkWizardPrince
    @DarkWizardPrince Před 5 lety +7

    I miss these times. I wish I could go back in time. You kids today have no idea how hard we had to work to have good graphics and sounds.

  • @rasalghul9331
    @rasalghul9331 Před 3 lety +5

    Little did we realize that 40 years later, the type of video games and the gaming culture we will have with the explosion of computers and computing power. Can you imagine the type of video games we will have in the next 40 years?

  • @starshipcaptain4753
    @starshipcaptain4753 Před 3 lety +11

    1978 - 1984 best years ever
    Starting with home play Atari 2600, to Asteroids and then full arcades in 1980-84 with some of the coolest games ever. What a time!

  • @buymeskittles2719
    @buymeskittles2719 Před 7 lety +42

    "Toasters and Chainsaws" was just a name they gave to cover up the game actually being worked on, which was most likely Elevator Action. Most other Taito games released in 82-83 were direct imports from Japan that just had to be nationalized.

  • @thomascampr
    @thomascampr Před 9 lety +12

    I must have missed a year of school playing video games!!!! Thank you Donkey Kong, pacman, defender and many more. Best times.

  • @roasthunter
    @roasthunter Před rokem +3

    There was always something magic for a young boy going to the arcade, the sounds and the atmosphere was great. Meet up with friends and watch and play, things have moved on, now alot is online rather than face to face which is a bit of a shame.

    • @jetfrog4574
      @jetfrog4574 Před 4 měsíci

      Then Pac Man came along and girls started showing up everywhere.

  • @Infinite0396
    @Infinite0396 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Nostalgia is becoming one of my biggest hobbies, like watching these clips more than current television.

  • @biancaispunk6407
    @biancaispunk6407 Před 5 lety +12

    I think I'm obsessed by the 80's

  • @jjstratford
    @jjstratford Před 10 lety +10

    9:02 love the comb in the back pocket! Classic early 80s!

  • @NathanHassall
    @NathanHassall Před rokem +3

    I was 67 in 1982 and when the videogame craze hit the scene I sold my surfboard and hit the arcade!

  • @bluetarantulaproductions6179

    I was born in 1986 and I truly miss the arcade that was at my mall and bowling alley. My favorite game from before I was born is Space Invaders.

  • @MerkinMuffly
    @MerkinMuffly Před 4 lety +48

    5:12 Yes, everyone remembers where they were when they played their first Toasters and Chainsaws game, it swept the world by stom and put Pac Man and Donkey Kong out of business ...

    • @zoxultra7011
      @zoxultra7011 Před 2 lety +2

      Way before my time but I would have loved to see arcade games when they were popular. I feel like I missed out.

    • @baardbi
      @baardbi Před 2 lety +1

      Ah. Good old Toasters and Chainsaws lol

    • @DrumWild
      @DrumWild Před 2 lety +5

      Not to be confused with Chainsaws & Toasters, which is a slot machine.

  • @Khultan
    @Khultan Před 10 lety +15

    I love it!! I remember the kids of the early 1980s, damn, so many playing at the arcades, so many!! I was just becoming a teenager.

  • @drtydawg73
    @drtydawg73 Před 4 lety +8

    the good old days, I miss the arcades. :-(

  • @KaijuEigaMan88
    @KaijuEigaMan88 Před 12 lety +15

    I enjoyed this five-part news piece. It's always cool to see news coverage of the arcade craze of the late 1970s/early 1980s, especially when the reporters show respect for video games and don't condescend to those who enjoy playing video games. Well-done!
    Off-topic, but Tawny Little is incredibly gorgeous here.

  • @troywright359
    @troywright359 Před 6 lety +9

    I'm glad they've recognised the importance of sound in video games even back then

  • @CBLounge2112
    @CBLounge2112 Před 6 lety +3

    Thank you so much for sharing, I remember watching this when I was 12 in Newhall, Ca...kinda mindblowing to see it again!!

  • @X-Gen-001
    @X-Gen-001 Před 6 lety +7

    It was the same in Australia. The Arcades were my favorite place to be.

  • @VH-lp4ll
    @VH-lp4ll Před 6 lety +10

    I’m really thinking of setting up my ColecoVision and start playing..Got about 25 games, original controls and in great working order. Yeah, I’m ready to play some Burger Time and Zaxxon.🤘

  • @occamsrazor9183
    @occamsrazor9183 Před 2 lety +2

    Pac Man "A year and seven months" it's 2022 it's still a hit...

  • @rickybandit2
    @rickybandit2 Před 2 lety +2

    Came here from Hi-Score by Botnit. I love the 80’s and 90’s eras they hold a special place in my heart I grew up with that 80’s tv sound and the nostalgia I get from watching old media like this really invigorates me.

  • @user-xb3oy3vk7v
    @user-xb3oy3vk7v Před 2 měsíci

    I was 10 years old in 1982 loved play arcade games still play them now all the classics

  • @dmjsra04
    @dmjsra04 Před 8 lety +80

    wait, how did that guy pronounce "Galaga" again?

  • @hoagie1978
    @hoagie1978 Před 10 lety +6

    I was 4 years old during this time and would bum change from my parents to play at the arcade. I had to stand on something to see the screen. My favorite was Pole Position. I still have my Atari I got for x-mas 1982. This brings back fond childhood memories.

    • @zpushy633sora8
      @zpushy633sora8 Před 2 lety +2

      Pole Position is my Favorite Namco Arcade Game I also love Galaga. I got the Arcade 1UP of Galaga Christmas of 2019 and I play it all the time. I've been playing it ever since I got it for Christmas almost 2 Years Ago.

  • @captainkevski566
    @captainkevski566 Před 2 lety +4

    Ooooh... Sweet memories... I was there... The magic was real... The smell of warm wood and circuit boards... The sounds of 100 machines all playing at once... The excitement of having coins in your pocket... Then the emptiness of having none left.

  • @thaismagalhaes5928
    @thaismagalhaes5928 Před 5 lety +8

    "Will this popularity last?" Well, 36 years later, here they are, being one of the most popular and lucrative way of entertainment in the world.

    • @jetfrog4574
      @jetfrog4574 Před 4 měsíci

      Arcades though? Even while they have had sort of a resurgence they really aren't the major thing they used to be.

  • @blumenthal7528
    @blumenthal7528 Před 4 lety +3

    a time where you need to go outside to be a gamer. at least they still hangout with friends at the arcades unlike many kids today.

  • @Nightweaver1
    @Nightweaver1 Před 8 měsíci +1

    This was almost before me. I was 3 in 1982, too young to play in the arcades. I didn't get my first console until 1988 with the NES, but IIRC I did play a few arcade cabinets in the mid-80s when my parents took me to some pizza joints. Those early years are kind of a blur, but I'll never forget slapping Super Mario Bros. into my NES for the first time.

  • @lisvender
    @lisvender Před 7 lety +8

    Remember what E.B. White said about libraries? That's how I felt about arcades. I miss them.

  • @craigowens4629
    @craigowens4629 Před 2 lety +3

    I was in middle school during the early 80's. These video games where everywhere! You could play them at convenience stores, bars, gas stations and grocery stores. As a kid growing up in school we talked about our high scores. Arcades popped up everywhere too at all the strip malls. That is where you started having issues. These were places to go to get drugs. I believe this started the decline of arcades along with Nintendo's coming out later in the 80's.

  • @PeteCurrington
    @PeteCurrington Před 8 lety +28

    Video games? It'll never catch on

  • @InfiniteUniverse88
    @InfiniteUniverse88 Před 10 lety +15

    "Your tongue hungers for a kill." haha

  • @norbertop.niebres6320
    @norbertop.niebres6320 Před 4 lety +2

    I miss these old school retro arcade video games. At least there is MAME (Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator).

  • @morris4321
    @morris4321 Před 5 měsíci

    I’m thankful for whoever recorded this I remember the fun times I had
    I’m glad I was part of the last generation to experience this born in 1985 definitely grew up in the last greatest generations I remember going to the arcades so much fun memories back in the day

  • @cattysplat
    @cattysplat Před 2 lety +2

    In the 90s I only got to experience the old 80s machines in old run down arcades and the odd abandoned machine in a hotel lobby. Best thing about them was the prices hadn't been adjusted for inflation, so you could get a few credits for dirt cheap. Respect for arcades bringing video games to the masses and opening the way for the incredible 3D graphic we got in the 90s and home consoles becoming powerful.

  • @one4allall4one91
    @one4allall4one91 Před 5 lety +3

    A lot of things came out in the early 80's. Arcades, mtv, pop music etc. It was a time of discovery.

  • @jamestaylor2648
    @jamestaylor2648 Před 4 lety +4

    Oh why couldn’t i have been a teen in the 80’s😭

  • @HolyRomanEmperor90
    @HolyRomanEmperor90 Před 11 měsíci +2

    The Valley Lalley company is the same one who gave us Pac-Man, Ms. Pac-Man, Jizz Sac-Man, Space Invaders, Jizz Defender and Ass Invaders.

  • @Theonetruewonderfly
    @Theonetruewonderfly Před 5 lety +7

    And then came 1983 and Atari's E.T. game being dumped in a landfill...

  • @greenrefrigerator
    @greenrefrigerator Před 13 lety +3

    I remember playing pinball machines when it was all the rage. Then came video games, and then video arcades. Those were fun times playing games in arcades :)
    I have most of these old games on CD and play them on PC sometimes. Although it's not nearly the same experience as the *real thing*, it's as close as one can get to going back to those fun times :)
    The 80's was THE single best decade of my life. I sure miss it . . .

    • @bruceaskew2107
      @bruceaskew2107 Před 6 lety

      greenrefrigerator agreed i miss the 80s

    • @OikPoinFive
      @OikPoinFive Před 6 lety

      greenrefrigerator u sell cd of 80s games? Cost? Ericengesser2018@gmail.com

  • @Letsgetsubscriberswithno-ub6nr

    I have recently become obsessed with retro video games, and when I play them, it's like I'm traveling in a time machine. Anyone who reads this should try playing a retro game, even like Adventure in Serenia online. If you want, you can even get a vintage console on eBay. Try it, you won't be disappointed!

  • @thenuclearsandwich
    @thenuclearsandwich Před 5 lety +2

    The glory days of arcades. They were everywhere you went. I certainly do miss that. Now with the internet and more powerful games consoles we're confined to home. It's a win lose situation.

  • @bluescat581
    @bluescat581 Před 2 lety +3

    I love the Tron parts. Tron was one of the best best movies of the 1980s. I didn't feel like watching it, not because I didn't like it, I love it, and that I felt there was much much much more to the movie than the average time of a typical cinema film.

    • @AnthonyEvelyn
      @AnthonyEvelyn Před rokem +1

      Same here! For some reason, I didnt have a urge to watch it although I really loved the tech and concept of the movie.

    • @bluescat581
      @bluescat581 Před rokem

      @@AnthonyEvelyn YES! I really love Tron's visuals.

  • @Sinn0100
    @Sinn0100 Před 3 lety +2

    Man. The game industry has changed an awful lot since this report. I started playing a few years after this with the Nes and Master System. I was completely enamored with the arcade experience especially considering the types of ganes we got back in the late 1980's. "Just like the arcades" became words that burned into my head like a laser. I hated getting home with a game expecting an experience that never truly matched up. Yes, I played many types of games and really enjoyed the longer games just beginning to hit. I was a pretty casual player until one fateful day in 1989...when I got my hands on a Sega Genesis. That machine turned me into a gamer for life. I remember the resurgence of the arcade with Street Fighter and SNK. Oh how I wanted a Neo Geo AES but it was not to be until many years later.
    Today in 2020, I'm 39 and my home is one giant playpen for gamers. My fiancee is a diehard gamer like me and we don't do things small here. We have in our master bedroom two of every console including the enhanced machines connected to two 4K UHD's screens. We have a full retro gaming room with everything from the Atari 7800 through the Xbox One and PS4. Yes, when the new machines hit we will geg two of each as we hate having to share. Finally, we have a full sized arcade complete with stand up coin-op cabs in our living room (all 1990's games).

    • @Drizzt_Do_Entreri
      @Drizzt_Do_Entreri Před 2 lety +1

      you are an inspiration! I want my own home arcade also with dedicated cabinets. I would be the only one playing them so that's what's holding me back for the most part.

    • @Sinn0100
      @Sinn0100 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Drizzt_Do_Entreri
      Thank you! Well it's 2022 and we're still gaming like crazy! I hope you do decide to build your arcade and maybe sharing your love of gaming might entice others to join you. ;)

  • @white-dragon4424
    @white-dragon4424 Před rokem +2

    Funny that in 1982 they thought that pinball machines were a thing of the past, being replaced by video games. Now, in 2023, if there is an arcade the video games are long gone but the pinball machines are still there.

  • @ninjanoh7014
    @ninjanoh7014 Před 6 lety +8

    RIP John Littman

  • @nytrodioxide
    @nytrodioxide Před 5 měsíci

    As someone born in 1999, I feel like I've missed out on such a cool and exciting cultural phenomenon. Video games nowadays just aren't the same as arcades.

  • @forrestmalcom8351
    @forrestmalcom8351 Před rokem +1

    I was 8 yrs old in 82 . The arcades can be fun but I remember the older adults can be mean to you if we’re a little kid cutting in front of you lol 😂

  • @SeraphimRoad
    @SeraphimRoad Před 6 lety +5

    I am sure Toasters and Chainsaws became an instant classic

  • @Glitch-Gremlin
    @Glitch-Gremlin Před 2 lety +8

    1. John Morgan of "Zoo Keeper" fame in 2001 appears to remember that day's interview:
    In 1982, Keith Egging was the Director of Creativity (or some weird title like that). He always had a human skull on his desk which opened up on a hinge and was filled with Hershey's kisses. One day a TV news crew came over to do some interview, and Keith showed them around. He took them back into our area and really played it up (feed them some pretty thick bull which they really ate it up). He took them to the farthest office of cubicles and said that this was DEEP THOUGHT - where all the heaviest thinking took place. Of course this was just made up (the office being picked for it's distance only), but hey, they bought it. The main programmers (me, Mark Blazczyk and Rex Battenberg) took off on this and other of Keith's tall tales and frequently made up whoppers about everything under the sun to one up each other with our far fetched stories. Pretty cool for those days.
    2. According to Mark Blaszczyk, the real reason for the fake marquee is as follows:
    It is correct that Toasters & Chainsaws was never a real game. It certainly was never tested. All it was was a marquee. Keith Egging came up with the name to try to trigger our creativity to come up with some new game concepts.

  • @sideburn
    @sideburn Před 6 lety +1

    I remember those news anchors in ‘82. Grew up in Orange County. We must be the same age. Lost pretty much all of my vhs tapes though :)

  • @lolman9630
    @lolman9630 Před 7 lety +30

    Guys wanna go play GULLAGA

  • @landmarkcreations1183
    @landmarkcreations1183 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I remember these games at the local corner store. There would be a line to play. Good times

  • @gregoryent
    @gregoryent Před 8 lety +84

    when video games were thought of as fads

    • @Vetusomaru
      @Vetusomaru Před 5 lety +10

      ProzAtor No wonder they still hate video games since it beats competition with tv, their boring shows and their fake news.

    • @westingtyler2
      @westingtyler2 Před 3 lety +1

      haha yeah. the video game industry profits STOMP the movie industry. ESPECIALLY now during covid, but even before.

    • @ahmadkamil3713
      @ahmadkamil3713 Před 3 lety +1

      Plus it alot cheaper to use TV for gaming purposes, than to actually paying cable bill every month

    • @zoxultra7011
      @zoxultra7011 Před 2 lety +3

      Just like VR is now? In some ways I’m excited to see how it is in 10 years but in other ways I’m dreading it. Video games used to be an escape from reality, a luxury just like VR is now. Now video games are almost something people expect. It’s not something you would just do on the weekend.

    • @gurriato
      @gurriato Před 2 lety +1

      Arcades were a fad. The games kept increasing in quality, but the widespread craze they were talking about here didn't last long: this "golden age" lasted a measly 5 years, give or take, and, even though so many people played them, it failed to leave a lasting impression for most of them. It was Japanese consoles and 8-bit computers that fostered a life-long interest in video games in a new generation. The young adults and children of the late 70s became the clueless parents of the kids growing up with videogames in the 90s.

  • @theonlyonestanding6832
    @theonlyonestanding6832 Před 4 lety +1

    Yup that was the greatest time in my youth in SF California arcade rooms from 1981-87

  • @CyborgNinja7
    @CyborgNinja7 Před 7 lety +2

    Terrific report. Sad about the reporter, Josh Littman. He died of leukemia some years ago. But not before making a documentary about it called Castles in the Sand. I'd like to watch it someday.

  • @Frankodragon1
    @Frankodragon1 Před 10 měsíci +4

    "...And George Foreman, Intercourse Master, Lego Island, Asshole Massacre..and in Rhode Island I rode a hamster to an eggplant factory."

  • @outbackigloo6489
    @outbackigloo6489 Před rokem +1

    I enjoyed the games in that era, but can also related to the injuries as well. In my case, the injuries were blisters from the way I held the joysticks. The games that gave me the worst blisters were Robotron and Galaga.

  • @benb5963
    @benb5963 Před 6 lety +1

    i remember being a sophomore in high school in 82 and me and a friend stopping by this convenience store every morning on the way to school to spend our lunch money on Donkey Kong and Pacman. wasnt long before we found out drinking , racing and chasing tail was alot more fun

  • @farouqiamin7894
    @farouqiamin7894 Před rokem

    Cool thing I remember as a kid in the 80's was every random store had 1-3 arcades at the exit locations, it was a joy when my parents would let me wait by the exit to play games while they shopped, sometimes kids hogged the machine but even then they respectfully let someone else play. Kids would have to be dragged away as their guardian was ready to leave.

  • @Schush
    @Schush Před 11 lety +5

    Mark, that's incredible! Taito (by far) was/is still my favorite arcade manufacturer of all time! I used to live in Arlington Heights for a couple of years, a little north of your operations.
    What became of "Toasters"? Looks like they showed a screen shot of Wild Western along w/ it - same game?
    Would love to hear some more Taito stories from you!:)

  • @JackKirkpatrickVideos
    @JackKirkpatrickVideos Před 10 lety +40

    Gloga.
    LOL

  • @sarahsimpkins2021
    @sarahsimpkins2021 Před 9 lety

    In the mall I used to love going to the arcade to play video games. We don't have them no more. Some of them disappear

  • @eltravo2112
    @eltravo2112 Před 4 lety +4

    I had forgotten that “The Dude” played in Tron.

  • @RMoocher
    @RMoocher Před 6 lety

    Would have loved to have seen this uncut. It's a shame :(

  • @madjoe8622
    @madjoe8622 Před 2 lety +1

    7:40 That section makes me laugh because I have been playing video game since 79 and I have no physical problems related to playing video games 😂

  • @luisreyes1963
    @luisreyes1963 Před 2 lety +1

    If I only knew just how much money I spent at the many arcades I haunted in my youth. Good times. 🕹️

  • @JosephAlanMeador
    @JosephAlanMeador Před rokem

    Before there was “gamer thumb” there was Pac-man wrist?! This was a neat look at an era before my time, thanks

  • @DamaramuHQ
    @DamaramuHQ Před 5 lety +1

    Tawny was Miss America 1976? Neat!

  • @laurallama73
    @laurallama73 Před 5 lety

    Pinball and Pachinko games! ❤️❤️❤️Loved the heck out of em!

  • @CUBILOBA
    @CUBILOBA Před 7 lety

    its amazing save that tape all these years.

  • @markfrost6961
    @markfrost6961 Před 4 lety

    I loved playing vedio games when I was younger

  • @Choices2aa
    @Choices2aa Před 6 lety +3

    WOW I remember playing video games pac man donkey Kong, Super Mario Brothers, Castleviana, I miss the 80s so much back then everyone hung out a the video game place in some various malls. It was fun back then now everything is shit now .

  • @Mr_x_19922
    @Mr_x_19922 Před 6 lety +4

    1982, 10 years before I was even born, and videogames were already very popular

    • @Lush_Produce
      @Lush_Produce Před 3 lety

      I missed the GameCube and gba Xbox ps2 era I started playing games around ds wii Xbox 360 ps3 era I wish I started gba era.

    • @doburu4835
      @doburu4835 Před 3 lety +1

      It went under between 83-84 then NES came in and revitalize the industry

    • @southsidesaiyan8641
      @southsidesaiyan8641 Před 2 lety +2

      @@doburu4835 only for home consoles in America, it didn’t crash in the majority of the world. And are arcades were still popular at the time.

    • @doburu4835
      @doburu4835 Před 2 lety +1

      @@southsidesaiyan8641 the US market was the biggest Video Game Market back then doe, so it's a pretty big deal.

  • @darkone292
    @darkone292 Před rokem +1

    I like how they have the ninja turtles arcade game on the cowabunga collection. That was one of my favourites

  • @davidg7960
    @davidg7960 Před 2 lety

    "these games will never amount to anything..." - your dad, back in the early 80s

  • @sa3270
    @sa3270 Před 2 měsíci

    Too bad so many of the clips were cut off. But I think some of these may be elsewhere on CZcams in their entirety.

  • @kach069
    @kach069 Před 4 lety +1

    I bought my first 1up Arcade machine and I am hooked. Playing these 1up cabinets really brings back memories and the feel of a bygone era. I miss the 80's so much.

    • @randalgelking7329
      @randalgelking7329 Před 2 lety +1

      Barfcade 1Ups suck. Get a real machine not a toy

    • @squirrele.1266
      @squirrele.1266 Před rokem +2

      @@randalgelking7329 Why are you telling someone to scrap something they love and are thankful for?

  • @nocasttotv519
    @nocasttotv519 Před 2 lety +2

    Seattle had video games everywhere.. Seattle center had a giant building full of games . God father's pizza at the end of the block. The burger place zestos 3 blocks away. Sunset bowl 8 blocks aways... And pizza and pipes they had great prices and good pizza games and a man would play the giant organ and play old fashion comedy movies. 1980s

    • @deborahchesser7375
      @deborahchesser7375 Před rokem +1

      Wouldn’t you love to have a deep dish pie from Godfathers back then ? The shit places serve now isn’t worth eating.

    • @nocasttotv519
      @nocasttotv519 Před rokem

      @@deborahchesser7375 the quality of the restaurants and family restaurants were gone. They had the all you can eat pizza and salad and video games .. the family can enjoy together...

  • @tarkus2455
    @tarkus2455 Před 3 lety

    Oh man this is a piece of history. This is the childhood for millions out there!
    Not for me though, i grew up with the N64

  • @NuGanjaTron
    @NuGanjaTron Před 6 měsíci

    "If you're filling your time capsule these days..."
    Indeed, we just opened it! Holy crap! 😲

  • @bruceaskew2107
    @bruceaskew2107 Před 6 lety

    I miss classic arcades ,, but since i live in chicago i visit galloping ghost alot

  • @sluggotg
    @sluggotg Před 5 měsíci

    I was 20 in 82, the Arcades Rocked! They had dim lighting and I never, Ever saw people fighting in an Arcade. (I am sure many fight happened in some arcades, not the ones i was in),. Arcades where awesome back then!!!! You go there, spend some quarters and if you were as good as me, you had the high score!!

  • @bumpnscore
    @bumpnscore Před 6 lety +4

    Stinks that some of the reports are cut off before jumping to the next one!

  • @emadstarns291
    @emadstarns291 Před 2 lety +9

    I remember those days there wasn’t so many great games there wasn’t any capcom namco games only Midway Atari had the best games but not a lot these poor people in the video didn’t have a lot of games to choose from they were stuck and were wishing there were more now when you go to galloping ghost arcade you have 800 arcade games to choose from just pay $15 to enter without paying tokens the owner is Doc he’s the best guy to go to if you want to play the arcade everyone else wants to charge you money to start the games either buy a quarter or $2.00 which is so crazy when the NES console was here I hated it it was trash it wasn’t playing close to the arcade so I instead bought the arcade machines I loved

    • @adewilson132
      @adewilson132 Před 11 měsíci

      Galloping ghost is actually $25 now for admission, which i feel is too much. It hasn't been $15 in years.

    • @peterparker346
      @peterparker346 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@adewilson132 So what their worth to go to then any other arcade unless you feel like spending 25 cents on each credit then you’ll find out that more expensive

    • @peterparker346
      @peterparker346 Před 10 měsíci

      Only broke people say it’s to expensive

    • @stevestars2966
      @stevestars2966 Před 10 měsíci

      @@adewilson132 over 800 games pay a quarter 800 times just think how much that would of costed you I say $50 is a great deal also if it’s free play all day you just can’t afford $25

    • @adewilson132
      @adewilson132 Před 10 měsíci

      @@stevestars2966 You aren't gonna play anywhere near 800 arcade games in one day though. So you really aren't paying $25 to play 800 different arcade games. If you played each game for 10 minutes each and you stayed there for 12 hours (which is a long time) that would be only 72 different arcade games you played in that one day which is nowhere near 800. You would have to go back atleast 10 times and pay the admission each time again and play completely different games than you played last time in order to actually play 800. I just wish there was another option where you could pay as you go because I don't always like to stay there that long, sometimes i just wanna get a couple games in then leave. Also as often as I would want to go you're right i can't afford it, I wanna go like twice a week so that would be $50 a week and $200 a month. I just don't understand why its $25 now when it was just $15 a few years ago I just can't justify spending that much regularly so it makes it harder to be a regular there. Also other cities have similar venues like this that might not have as many machines but are still much cheaper, Vortex in Arkansas (I forget what city) charges $10 to play all day, they have a couple hundred arcade machines and they have a bunch of retro consoles set up to tv's and a lot of other cool stuff. They may not have 800 arcade machines but like I said earlier you aren't gonna play anywhere near 800 different arcade machines in one day's cover charge anyway.

  • @PipkinXIV
    @PipkinXIV Před 11 lety +2

    That's so cool. Any idea what your co-worker in the video is doing these days?

  • @daehawk9585
    @daehawk9585 Před 8 lety +7

    I started in 1978 when I was 9 years old. Lived in thise places until around 1994 when they really died. I was already married by then and getting tons of stuffed animals out of crane games 😀

    • @soyoudonthaveananglehuh8513
      @soyoudonthaveananglehuh8513 Před 7 lety +3

      I disagree that they died in '94. Fighting games were huge then, and the graphics on the home system couldn't quite compare. I really noticed the arcade starting to die around 97' or so (when graphics began matching arcade quality). Also, once online play took off, people started staying home. I had to lol at the crane comment.. :) My dad used to love those, and all the young kids standing around would end up with a stuffed animal.

    • @thatssoironic
      @thatssoironic Před 7 lety +2

      My 2 friends and I were Mortal Kombat (both 1,2 and 3) champions in our hometown. The arcades were FULL up until about 97 or so. People were playing MK, Killer Instinct, Street Fighter, and Daytona Racing. All of those games allowed multiplayer competition, and it was a big deal at Tel Twelve Mall and Space Station arcade, my two spots to play in the 90s. There were 2 MK 2 machines right next to each other and my 2 friends and I would tag team in a rotation taking on a constant opponents, most of whom were easily 10 years or more older than us. What was our highest score, you ask? Well, on a Saturday sometime in the mid 90s, we won 94 games in a row off of 1 quarter. That's 94 different battles against a lot of different people. It was the highlight of our gaming childhood and we still talk about it today. Gotta love childhood!

    • @daehawk9585
      @daehawk9585 Před 7 lety

      kool memory man. Those were truly the days of fun and friends.

    • @BoJangles42
      @BoJangles42 Před 6 lety +2

      I miss playing the 4-player co-op beat-em-ups like TMNT or The Simpsons with my friends. Nothing was better than a Saturday at the mall with my buddies...cute girls, arcade games, music stores, and good friends. I feel lucky that I grew up in the late 80’s/early 90’s, before Facebook and Twitch and Fortnite, before school shootings and culture wars and identity politics and cyber bullies.

  • @jbw9999
    @jbw9999 Před 8 lety +3

    Love the kid with the comb in his back pocket. I did that (as did probably most kids).
    Any idea what arcade is at 10:00?

  • @theredspringtrap.7256
    @theredspringtrap.7256 Před 29 dny

    Teenager nightclubs for us! What a great decade, i wish i could do it again