Cast your mind back to mid 1993, when arcade parlours were a place you could go to and get your fix of unparalleled gaming experiences from industry heavyweights like, Sega, Taito, Atari (Ed: Yep, Atari!), Namco, Midway, Konami, Capcom and Data East (to name just a few). Throw in brilliant pinball tables from Data East, Williams and Gottlieb, and you start missing those days – Ah, if only there was time travel!
Just in case you were wondering what arcade machines and pinball tables we were most enamoured with in July 1993, take a peek below, there won’t be too many surprises! Which machines were your favourite(s)?
UPRIGHT (Arcade)
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1 | NBA Jam (Williams) |
| 2 | Title Fight (Sega) | |
| 3 | Mortal Kombat (Midway) | |
| 4 | Lethal Enforcers (Konami) | |
| 5 | Street Fighter II CE (Capcom) | |
| 6 | Super Chase (Taito) | |
| 7 | Terminator 2 (Midway) | |
| 8 | Fighter’s History (Data East) | |
| 9 | Steel Gunner (Namco) | |
| 10 | Golden Axe II (Sega) |
DELUXE (Arcade)
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1 | Virtua Racing (Sega) |
| 2 | Suzuka 8 Hours (Namco) | |
| 3 | Stadium Cross (Sega) | |
| 4 | Lucky & Wild (Namco) | |
| 5 | Race Drivin’ (Atari) | |
| 6 | Moto Frenzy (Atari) | |
| 7 | Galaxy Force (Sega) | |
| 8 | Mad Dog II (ALG) | |
| 9 | X-Men (Konami) | |
| 10 | Hard Drivin’ (Atari) |
PINBALL
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1 | Twilight Zone (Midway) |
| 2 | Jurassic Park (Data East) | |
| 3 | Addams Family (Midway) | |
| 4 | Creature/Lagoon (Midway) | |
| 5 | White Water (Williams) | |
| 6 | Rocky & Bullwinkle (Data East) | |
| 7 | Star Wars (Data East) | |
| 8 | Dracula (Williams) | |
| 9 | Terminator 2 (Williams) | |
| 10 | Street Fighter II (Gottlieb/Premier) |
Source: Replay Magazine




Located at Pier 45 in Fisherman’s Wharf, this wonderland is Mecca for arcade nostalgia buffs. Once you enter the museum, you are greeted by familiar sounds of coins dropping into machines, pinball bumpers being hammered, plastic fire buttons being mashed, and good old Zoltar providing fortunes – music to the nostalgic ear. This Musée contains one of the world’s largest (over 200) privately owned collections of coin-operated mechanical musical instruments and antique arcade machines in their original working condition. The best part is, you can play them all!
The most difficult decision in the Musée is where to go first, and what to see next. It is a huge place! It is akin to being a kid in a candy store. But after Pong, we proceeded to the ‘mechanical’ machines, built 80+ years ago. No photos can do these old machines justice. They have to be seen and touched in the flesh. Their build quality is second to none. Now I understand why people say “they don’t build them like they used to”. These things are built like tanks and are priceless relics.
At the rear of the Musée, you will find the largest concentration of golden era games (Centipede, Spy Hunter, Rally X, Battlezone and others) as well as more modern arcade machines, including SNK’s Neo Geo cabinets. Let’s just say, I spent a considerable amount of time (and money) in this area.

