Posts tagged retro
Retro Gaming
4Over the past few weeks, I’ve come to the realization that I’m first and foremost a retro gamer. When it comes to the latest and greatest games out there, I haven’t played about 99% of them. I rely on video gaming blogs and magazines to keep me up to date when it comes to the present. For most of the time, however, I live in the past. And that’s not a bad thing. I grew up with these games. That’s the big reason why they are still a huge part of my life. With my video gaming history firmly in place mixed with the librarian thinking part of my brain comes a barrage of ideas on how libraries can use retro gaming to attract and educate patrons.
Retro gaming programming at your library is a great way to let the public know that video games have a HISTORY. 8BitLibrary and Piscataway Public Library teamed up and had a Retro Gaming Event in 2010 (Click here or here for pics). These programs are designed to turn your library into a makeshift museum of video game history. What does this history do? Like classic books, it will show your community that gaming has a rich background. Games like Minecraft which encourage players to build and create their own world have their roots in games like Sim City. Librarians can find and show these connections to their community. These connections in video game history will create a rich tapestry of games which we can then use to educate our patrons about the rich possibilities gaming has to offer.
Yesterday’s release of Nintendo’s new handheld 3D gaming system the Nintendo 3DS gives libraries who have the system a chance to offer up the device for testing within the library. It’s a simple idea…set up some systems for your patrons to play and teach them about the technology. So where does retro gaming come into the picture? Nintendo’s tried 3D gaming before with the Virtual Boy. It didn’t really work out that well and the Virtual Boy died off rather quickly less than 1 year after it was released. Most people haven’t ever heard of the system and look at you in disbelief when you tell them about it (“why in the hell would they have released that?” is my favorite question I get when I tell them about the specifics of the Virtual Boy.) Giving patrons a chance to play the Virtual Boy at the library will create a unique experience which they’ll most likely not get anywhere else. It will also open up a lot of discussion on 3D gaming and how this new technology will impact our culture.
Which brings me to my final point…can anyone give me a good reason why we shouldn’t lend out retro games and systems to our patrons? I’ve talked about this topic once before and the more and more I think about it this option seems like a no brainer. As libraries are squished out from viable eBook lending options and all that other stuff, what does the mission of the library become? I’m an advocate of giving our patrons experiences over just giving them stuff. Lending out retro games and systems like the Sega Saturn above gives our community a chance to experience something that they may not have a chance to experience elsewhere. My recent ongoing affair with X-Men: Children of the Atom for the Sega Saturn was only made possible by the fact that my mother and myself are pack rats who saved every single piece of video gaming history I collected. While I do enjoy the time I spend playing this game at home by myself (my wife won’t play with me) it would be a lot cooler if I could share this experience with others.
Retro Gaming Day press release…
4I got really excited when I got an email with an 8bitlibrary.com Retro Gaming Day press release in it! Big shouts to our own MaMcGinley & RedheadFangirl for setting this all up. Hope to see some of our readers at the event:
Saturday, September 11, 12 – 4 PM
The 8bitlibrary.com Retro Gaming Day
The first ever Retro Game Day will be conveniently located in central NJ at Piscataway Public Library! Cool panel speakers on retro games, and open play on old school platforms like SNES, Gameboy, Xbox! From Pac-Man to Mario to World of Warcraft, learn and play with the 8bitlibrary.com bloggers and librarians. See you there!
For more information, visit us at http://blog.8bitlibrary.com/retro or email questions to Laverne at lmann@lmxac.org.
Location:
Piscataway Public Library
Kennedy Branch
500 Hoes Ln, Piscataway, NJ
What’s in your collection?
1What’s in your video game collection?
I’m an avid retro video game collector. The problem? I don’t know too many folks like me. So I’m gonna take a moment and highlight some of my personal favorites in my collection. And if you have a moment as well, I’d like to hear what you’ve got stashed away.
Horrible cover art, but a gem of a game lies inside…which is sort of confusing. You’re Billy “Big Bang” Blitz and you’re doing…something. Levels take the guise of routes which you can go back over and over again until you complete your mission. This gives the game a sort of weird action puzzle type feel and while it can be frustrating, the game has stuck in my head.

KICKLE CUBICLE: NES
As Kickle, it is your job to solve puzzles on Fantasy Land using ice blocks and your deep freeze breath. Sounds sort of lame, but there’s a good challenge lying within this game. They sure don’t make games like this anymore and I wish they would.

ODYSSEY 3000
It plays Pong. Four variations of Pong. And one, if I remember correctly, was practice Pong which had you hitting a ball against a wall. Not much fun, but damn it looks retro. And it plays retro. And it’s sort of fun.
I have to apply this to libraries in some way:
A great programming opportunity would be to open up a section of your video gaming program to collectors. Allow them to bring in parts of their collection and share it with younger gamers. Have a weekly “museum” at your game night program for these people. We are out there and we need to connect. Librarians can help bring together that community.
I did a display at the Cape May County Library in November 2009 titled “A Brief History of Video Games”. Check out the photos here.
(PS: Yes, while I do love video games oh so much, I do read books as well. Check out my LibraryThing profile here)
PAX East Live Blog, Final Recap
1Although I had good intelligence that media badges have allowed early access to the game floor on previous days, I was very disappointed to find that security was barring those of us with yellow passes from getting into the Exhibit Halls until general admission at 10am. That being said, those of us representing the Fourth Estate did have first dibs on whatever it was we wanted to see by virtue of already being at the doors when said doors opened, and so I strategically positioned myself opposite the one vendor demo I absolutely, positively wanted to get my hands on before the gamer hordes turned every line into an hour-plus long queue:
That’s right, folks. I made a beeline for Rockstar Games’ Red Dead Redemption, their much-anticipated Western epic built on the Great Theft Auto engine. I am a huge fan of Westerns, and have always waited for a videogame that did the genre the justice it deserves. Just looking at the giant LCD screens showing previews of gameplay to passersby you could tell that if nothing else, this game was a cinematic tour de force. The Old West is rendered in loving detail, all the way down to the dust and the tumbleweeds, and just like GTA you are given the freedom you want to explore this virtual world by foot, by horse, or even by rail, from the Southwestern U.S. circa 1900 down into Old Mexico.
I’m not going to attempt to review Red Dead Redemption since our media walkthrough was fairly scripted and each of us only had a precious few minutes at the controls– though I did have the stick long enough to jump my horse off a cliff and kill the protagonist! — but the game got me to thinking about the intersection of virtual worlds and education. While educational games often fall flat with the gaming public, one can see in a game like Red Dead Redemption real potential for teaching gamers about the Old West. While the historical details are admittedly mixed and matched and the level of violence is what you’d expect from Rockstar’s studios, immersive virtual worlds such as Red Dead Redemption are getting so good that the INCIDENTAL educational value they contain rivals the content being produced in games or simulations designed explicitly for educational purposes (like Second Life’s Deadwood).
Think about this for another second, because when I made this realization it totally blew my mind: the gaming industry is now capable of bringing to bear so much creative power when designing an historical FPS that they can’t help but produce something that has some absolute educational merit. And assuming that Red Dead Redemption will be a huge seller (something the buzz seems to suggest and the demo seems to validate), this may very well open the floodgates for other similarly-conceived projects. We have already witnesses the success of early Renaissance Italy as a setting in the very popular Assassin’s Creed series- the historical backdrop to these games is becoming less and less wallpaper and more and more interactive virtual history.
Granted, because the primary purpose of these games is not educational one must always be wary of the liberties that will be taken by designers with actual historical details and events, but as the whole of history becomes the fodder for games like this with ever more granularity how long will it be before gamers derive their primary knowledge of history through games such as Assassin’s Creed, Red Dead Redemption, and their successors instead of through other forms of media? I can definitely see, for example, a college history professor asking his students to play a game like this and compare its depictions of the Old West with accounts from primary sources, or for communications or literature faculty to ask their students what role historical appropriation plays in modern media. The mind truly boggles.
Alas, because I was getting the media tour of Red Dead Redemption I missed my chance to sign up for the Dark Sun demo, but I promise I will contribute some thoughts and reviews about pen and paper role-playing games such as D&D in future posts at 8bitlibrary.com! What I’d like to close my Day Three Recap, however, is a look back at old school gaming, thanks to the Retro Arcade Lounge provided by the folks at ACAM- the American Classic Arcade Museum, located in Weirs Beach, New Hampshire. ACAM brought a subset of their vast collection of arcade games from the 20th century, including Frogger, Space Invaders, Sinistar, Donkey Kong 3, Food Fight, and the laserdisc interactive fantasy cartoon Dragon’s Lair (which incidentally I dumped who knows how many hundreds of dollars into back when I was a kid in order to “solve” on the Ocean City Boardwalk in New Jersey!).
While we talk about how librarians can incorporate games into their collections and the classroom, the founders of ACAM have gone and actually created a playable library of classic arcade games. As an all-80′s soundtrack blared and ACAM staff members kept feeding a bottomless supply of quarters into the machines so that we could all enjoy as many free plays as our hearts desired, I realized in between my attempts to destroy the Sinistar (whose evil floating head still managed to quicken my pulse even all these years when I saw it appear on screen again) and try to remember all of the winning moves to Dragon’s Lair that this is as much about having fun as it is about preserving an important era in American history for posterity or study.
The play’s the thing, after all.






