12 comments

  • cadamsdotcom 2 hours ago
    Congratulations on a very successful restoration and thanks for writing such a beautiful deep dive.

    The work put in here is a perfect example of how motivation can be so much stronger if it’s for the love, done by volunteers, than for any amount of money.

    It also evokes the Penn & Teller quote, “Sometimes, magic is just someone spending more time on something than anyone else might reasonably expect.”

  • lordfrito 3 hours ago
    Way back in 2007 someone found one of these, disassembled it(!), transported it(!), rebuilt it(!). Long story but full of great pics. [0]

    [0] https://www.dragonslairfans.com/smfor/index.php?topic=231.0

    • greatgib 2 minutes ago
      I was about to post the same link that I have found while looking where there might be another one in Europe.

      I highly recommend to have a look at it, it is incredible and totally fun to read!

  • wyldfire 53 minutes ago
    These days, it seems like one of the best multiplayer arcade games is "Killer Queen" [1]. It'd be nice if there were more games like that. It offers a gaming experience that's more unique to the arcade IMO.

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killer_Queen_(video_game)#

  • ljf 6 hours ago
    Perfect reading with an easter long weekend coffee - I love well written and interesting stories like these.
  • timcobb 3 hours ago
    > a 28 player behemoth that debuted in April 1990 at the International Garden and Greenery Exposition in Osaka, Japan

    Why would an arcade game be debuted at a gardening and greenery expo?

    • shakna 2 hours ago
      Expo '90 had over 23 million people turn up. That is a sizeable audience. However, on top of that, one of the themes with the expo was "coexistence" with nature. It wasn't just a gardening show. [0]

      For example, Professor Iwatsuki gave the conference talk "Coexistence of Nature and Mankind in Urban Areas Role of Natural Science", and one of the forums was on "The Role of the Science in Building the 21st Century".

      It was definitely partly a garden show. But it was also a scientific conference, discussing how to shape the world in the future, in a sustainable way. That meant any technological breakthrough was something to pull the crowd.

      [0] https://web.archive.org/web/20130314172710/http://www.expo90...

    • loloquwowndueo 2 hours ago
      Why not?
  • flir 3 hours ago
    Have played that (not that cab, a European one). Was, indeed, a world of fun.
    • countrymile 3 hours ago
      Where is the European one based? Apparently there is only one left.
  • glimshe 4 hours ago
    Amazing. Why aren't we building things like this anymore?
    • dezgeg 5 minutes ago
      It looks extremely expensive piece of hardware. I have to wonder how much profit this made for Namco or the arcades.
    • ticklemyelmo 2 hours ago
      We are? There are games like this in any modern "arcade" like Dave & Buster's.

      If you mean why aren't we building highly specialized hardware like this any more, I'd say it's because most of that complexity has moved into software running on general-purpose hardware, which is infinitely more flexible and maintainable.

    • praptak 2 hours ago
      It got hard to compete with home gaming setups.
  • squeedles 3 hours ago
    Wow! Great deep dive! I haven’t seen S100 boards in the wild since we retired our rack mounted 1980s Sun 2 decades ago (also 68020-based)
    • guenthert 13 minutes ago
      That struck me as odd -- I associated only 8080 (Z80) systems with S100 (a very primitive bus). Wikipedia has early Sun systems based on Intel's Multibus (being multi-master capable, a considerably more complex bus).
  • dukeofdoom 47 minutes ago
    I have an old Xbox 360, and a projector. Any multilayer games for get togethers. I'm actually building a backyard tki bar soon. Would be fun to add this for parties as well.
  • m3kw9 2 hours ago
    The arcades these days have almost zero wow factor, stuck in the 90s, I’m sure these machines were nothing short of fantastic if you first play it back then.
    • doublerabbit 6 minutes ago
      I found that the wow factor was friends. You went to these places with mates and enjoyed the environment. Grab a slice of pizza and play some games.

      It was rare to encounter arcade place in the UK so I used to dos around shopping centres. Not much of a wow factor there but the fun was had being with mates.

      Now where this has now shifted to online and online friends they make such places redundant.

  • unleaded 4 hours ago
    very sorry to post something tangentially related but does anyone know what happened to that ridge racer full scale machine? Can't find anything on it past 2022.