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I was too young when the arcade scene was H.O.T in my city of Sao Paulo, but as i got older there were always arcade machines in the bars, and there were still a few dedicated arcades in the city that i went to. Racking up 36 wins in my best session, a seeming endless stream of competitors. Then in the early 2000s thinking I knew what I was doing, and having my arse handed to me by truly talented players and needing to step up my game big time to compete. Spamming wall jumps and slides as Guy in Alpha 1, wondering why people would get annoyed when I beat them (back then I wanted to fight the computer, so if people versed me it was more of an inconvenience than anything).
BATTLETECH URBAN WARFARE RAN OUT OF HOTSPOTS HOW TO
By the early 2000s it had mostly dried up, but there was a dedicated fighting (and dancing) scene at one of the last remaining arcades so I spent wayyy too many hours there playing assorted Street Fighters, Vs games etc (I could never come close with SNK fighters).įighting games will always be an arcade experience for me, from those earliest days learning how to reliably throw hadokens to my initial "mastery" of World Heroes. Each shopping centre had an arcade of various sizes (including some with the very latest games), 711s and video stores, fish and chip shops etc would all have a couple of cabinets. In Brisbane Australia it was pretty rad in the 90's. I'm really glad I got to experience at least some of that era in gaming.

They also had a back room that must have been filled with a few hundred old arcade games packed together tightly that I would explore/climb on. Remember playing through all of Captain America that way.
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My dad worked for the company that owned the arcade chain as a repair technician so I actually ended up with all the NES and Genesis consoles when they removed them (but not any of the games, and the controllers had all been modified to hook up to arcade style joysticks).įond memories of going into the shop with my dad where they fixed/stored the old arcade games and he'd put a bunch of them on free play for me. Nintendo eventually sent them a C&D (because they didn't have a licence to use the NES consoles/games commercially) so they made a deal with Sega who later tried to go back on their word but they had gotten permission in writing. They also had several dozen NES and later Genesis consoles that you could rent time on. in addition to redemption stuff like skee-ball lanes and those high score basketball hoop things.
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These locations were generally pretty well stocked: 6 player 2 screen X-Men, networked 4-6 player Daytona and Initial D sit down racing cabinets, full size 2 player DDR, the holographic Sega games, Police 911, Vortex V3 cabinets (the ones with the big yellow VR helmet thing), etc. So I got to personally experience/witness some of that arcade culture stuff like people putting quarters next to the joysticks to challenge the winner of the current match in fighting games. In the '90s we had a chain of arcades (the owners called them "amusement centers" because they didn't like the connotations of the word "arcade") in shopping malls here in Calgary, Canada called Lazer Illusions. Was the arcade scene as vibrant in other parts of America in the 80's and 90's.

Also, the joy of discovering a new cool looking game that you never saw before or only heard about was awesome. It was just such a cool time where you didn't have to walk more than a block to be able to play a fun game that you couldn't experience at home. My Karate School had arcade machines in the back and after class was over, the neighborhood kids would hang out there and play games in the evening. My cousin also had a Bodega and he had a Mortal Kombat machine. Heck my family owns Bodegas and my dad had a Street Fighter 2 machine and he'd open it up and given me 99 Credits and allow me to sit there and play all day. From dedicated Arcades where I played Pac-Man and Bubble Bobble to the local Pizza joints where besides getting some delicious New York pizza, I'd also play some TMNT or Samurai Showdown (I think it was an SNK machine that let you pick a game). I grew up in NYC (mostly Brooklyn) and I have fond memories of the Arcade scene.
