Difference between revisions of "Arcade"

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An '''arcade''' game, for the purposes of this site, is a pay-to-play stand-alone video game. The earliest arcade games were just games in an arcade setting and included ring tosses, target shooting with pellets guns, and the like. In the 1960s, coin-operated arcade electro-mechanical games became popular including [[Pinball|pinball machines]], [[Pool|pool tables]], [[Slot Machine|slot machines]], and the like. It wasn't until the 1970s that true fully electronic video games arose. Arcade video games are the pioneer of many genres in the video game industry. Arcades saw their golden years in the late 1970s and early 1980s, but declined in the late 1980s when home video game consoles became popular. There was a slight resurgence in the early 1990s when arcade hardware surpassed the 8-bit era, but, by the time 16-bit and 32-bit home consoles became popular, arcades returned to obscurity. Most modern arcades survive because of ticket redemption games rather than their video games. While modern video game consoles are powerful enough to duplicate the visual effects of any arcade game, those games with haptic feedback are still difficult to simulate at home.
 
An '''arcade''' game, for the purposes of this site, is a pay-to-play stand-alone video game. The earliest arcade games were just games in an arcade setting and included ring tosses, target shooting with pellets guns, and the like. In the 1960s, coin-operated arcade electro-mechanical games became popular including [[Pinball|pinball machines]], [[Pool|pool tables]], [[Slot Machine|slot machines]], and the like. It wasn't until the 1970s that true fully electronic video games arose. Arcade video games are the pioneer of many genres in the video game industry. Arcades saw their golden years in the late 1970s and early 1980s, but declined in the late 1980s when home video game consoles became popular. There was a slight resurgence in the early 1990s when arcade hardware surpassed the 8-bit era, but, by the time 16-bit and 32-bit home consoles became popular, arcades returned to obscurity. Most modern arcades survive because of ticket redemption games rather than their video games. While modern video game consoles are powerful enough to duplicate the visual effects of any arcade game, those games with haptic feedback are still difficult to simulate at home.
  
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==Personal==
 
My earliest memories of arcade games are of an arcade at the Summit Place Mall in the mid to late 1980s, and the small arcade room at the Lakeland Arena in the late 1980s, although I have memories of arcade games at various movie theaters, bowling alleys, hotels, bars, and laundromats, and many after I started playing ''[[Dance Dance Revolution]]'' in the early 2000s. During my childhood, these games were so much more advanced than the home video games I was playing on the [[Atari 2600]] and [[NES]] that I was very enamored by them. My parents rarely gave me money to play arcade games, but, because they were so difficult, I was usually just content to watch the attract demos and look over the shoulder of other people who played. When I got older, I found that arcade games are actually pretty awful because their primary goal is not to create an enjoyable game, but to entice players to drop in as many quarters as possible.
 
My earliest memories of arcade games are of an arcade at the Summit Place Mall in the mid to late 1980s, and the small arcade room at the Lakeland Arena in the late 1980s, although I have memories of arcade games at various movie theaters, bowling alleys, hotels, bars, and laundromats, and many after I started playing ''[[Dance Dance Revolution]]'' in the early 2000s. During my childhood, these games were so much more advanced than the home video games I was playing on the [[Atari 2600]] and [[NES]] that I was very enamored by them. My parents rarely gave me money to play arcade games, but, because they were so difficult, I was usually just content to watch the attract demos and look over the shoulder of other people who played. When I got older, I found that arcade games are actually pretty awful because their primary goal is not to create an enjoyable game, but to entice players to drop in as many quarters as possible.
  
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Altered Beast - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Altered Beast]]''
 
Altered Beast - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Altered Beast]]''
 
Arkanoid - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Arkanoid]]''
 
Arkanoid - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Arkanoid]]''
Bad Dudes - ARC - Marquee - USA.jpg|''[[Bad Dudes Vs. Dragon Ninja]]''
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Bad Dudes - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Bad Dudes Vs. Dragon Ninja]]''
 
Dance Dance Revolution - Extreme - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Dance Dance Revolution: Extreme]]''
 
Dance Dance Revolution - Extreme - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Dance Dance Revolution: Extreme]]''
 
Double Dragon - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Double Dragon]]''
 
Double Dragon - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Double Dragon]]''
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OutRun - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[OutRun]]''
 
OutRun - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[OutRun]]''
 
Pac-Man - ARC - USA - Marquee.svg|''[[Pac-Man]]''
 
Pac-Man - ARC - USA - Marquee.svg|''[[Pac-Man]]''
Rampage - ARC - USA - Marquee.png|''[[Rampage]]''
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Rampage - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Rampage]]''
Shinobi - ARC - USA - Marquee.png|''[[Shinobi]]''
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Shinobi - ARC - USA - Marquee.svg|''[[Shinobi]]''
 
Spy Hunter - ARC - USA - Marquee.png|''[[Spy Hunter]]''
 
Spy Hunter - ARC - USA - Marquee.png|''[[Spy Hunter]]''
 
Street Fighter II - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Street Fighter II: The World Warrior]]''
 
Street Fighter II - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Street Fighter II: The World Warrior]]''
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Time Soldiers - ARC - USA - Marquee.png|''[[Time Soldiers]]''
 
Time Soldiers - ARC - USA - Marquee.png|''[[Time Soldiers]]''
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
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==Media==
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===Fan Art===
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<gallery>
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Video Game - Deimos-Remus - Tappers.jpg|Aracde video game mashup by Deimos-Remus.
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</gallery>
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===Videos===
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* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-nSU4KBKI38 youtube.com/watch?v=-nSU4KBKI38] - Did You Know Gaming?
  
 
==Links==
 
==Links==
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* [https://www.arcade-museum.com arcade-museum.com] - The International Arcade Museum.
 
* [https://www.arcade-museum.com arcade-museum.com] - The International Arcade Museum.
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* [http://www.progettosnaps.net/index.php progettosnaps.net/index.php] - Arcade cabinet artwork.
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* [https://mrdo.mameworld.info/mame_artwork_ingame.php mrdo.mameworld.info/mame_artwork_ingame.php] - Arcade cabinet artwork.
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* [https://www.flyerfever.com flyerfever.com] - Arcade flyer scans.
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* [http://vectorlib.free.fr vectorlib.free.fr] - Arcade vector art.
  
  
 
[[Category: Video Game Platforms]]
 
[[Category: Video Game Platforms]]

Revision as of 09:30, 31 August 2020

A row of arcade games.

An arcade game, for the purposes of this site, is a pay-to-play stand-alone video game. The earliest arcade games were just games in an arcade setting and included ring tosses, target shooting with pellets guns, and the like. In the 1960s, coin-operated arcade electro-mechanical games became popular including pinball machines, pool tables, slot machines, and the like. It wasn't until the 1970s that true fully electronic video games arose. Arcade video games are the pioneer of many genres in the video game industry. Arcades saw their golden years in the late 1970s and early 1980s, but declined in the late 1980s when home video game consoles became popular. There was a slight resurgence in the early 1990s when arcade hardware surpassed the 8-bit era, but, by the time 16-bit and 32-bit home consoles became popular, arcades returned to obscurity. Most modern arcades survive because of ticket redemption games rather than their video games. While modern video game consoles are powerful enough to duplicate the visual effects of any arcade game, those games with haptic feedback are still difficult to simulate at home.

Personal

My earliest memories of arcade games are of an arcade at the Summit Place Mall in the mid to late 1980s, and the small arcade room at the Lakeland Arena in the late 1980s, although I have memories of arcade games at various movie theaters, bowling alleys, hotels, bars, and laundromats, and many after I started playing Dance Dance Revolution in the early 2000s. During my childhood, these games were so much more advanced than the home video games I was playing on the Atari 2600 and NES that I was very enamored by them. My parents rarely gave me money to play arcade games, but, because they were so difficult, I was usually just content to watch the attract demos and look over the shoulder of other people who played. When I got older, I found that arcade games are actually pretty awful because their primary goal is not to create an enjoyable game, but to entice players to drop in as many quarters as possible.

Games

See all Arcade Games.

These are the arcade games that are important to me.

Media

Fan Art

Videos

Links

Link-Wikipedia.png  Link-MobyGames.png  Link-VGMPF.png