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You are here: Home / Archives for Midway

Midway

Timeline Arcade Adventures With The Nintendork!

July 13, 2022 By ausretrogamer

When we stumbled upon our good friend’s, The Nintedork, thread about his super fun time with his family at Timeline Arcade, we knew we had to share their awesome experience, which was loaded with a ton of nostalgia!

The Nintendork was happy for us to share some select photos (see below) from their fun times, but if you would like to see all the photos, full of arcade and pinball nostalgia, from this amazing place, then please check out the Twitter thread below, we promise you’ll be amazed!

Had a Super fun time with my son Riley and his girlfriend at @Timeline_Arcade in York!

A thread… pic.twitter.com/w096lILv0b

— Tʜᴇ Nɪɴᴛᴇɴᴅᴏʀᴋ 🇺🇦🎮🕹️ (@Nintendork9) July 10, 2022

Thanks again to The Nintendork for allowing us to share his fun experience at Timeline Arcade!




Filed Under: Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: arcade adventures, Atari, Bally, Donkey Kong, fun times, Midway, Mortal Kombat, NeoGeo, nintendo, Old School, pinball, Retro Gaming, sega, street fighter, Taito, TheNintendork, Timeline Arcade, Timeline Arcade York PA, USA, York PA

History of The Addams Family Pinball Machine

June 3, 2022 By ausretrogamer

Ask anyone that played pinball in the early 1990s to name their favourite machine, we reckon The Addams Family will be right at the top of the list.

Without a doubt, The Addams Family pinball machine is one of the greatest machines of all time. Not only was it the best-selling solid state pinball machine of all time (selling over 20,000 units worldwide) TAF, as it is affectionately known, is still beloved by many and enjoyed some 30+ years after its release. This Pat Lawlor and Larry DeMar designed pinball machine is an absolute masterpiece.

Enjoy this cool history about The Addams Family pinball machine!


source: Kevin Carrington




Filed Under: History, Pinball Tagged With: 1990s, Bally, George Gomez, History, Larry DeMar, Midway, Old School, Pat Lawlor, pinball, Pinball History, pinball machine, pinball master, pinball wizard, pinballpress, Retro Gamer, Silverball, TAF, TAF pinball, The Addams Family, The Addams Family pinball, Williams

Pac-Man: The Complete History

March 17, 2021 By ausretrogamer

As Daniel Ibbertson (aka: Slope’s Game Room) so eloquently puts it, it’s time to drop a coin into one of the highest grossing video game franchises of all time – Pac-Man!

In this history documentary, Daniel discusses the inspiration and creation behind Namco’s flagship mascot, the troubled development between Namco and Midway when bringing him to western shores as well as the interesting backstory behind the controversial Atari 2600 port.


source: Slope’s Game Room

 

Filed Under: History, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 80s, Arcade, Atari 2600, Classic Arcade Games, Documentary, Geek, History, Midway, Namco, Old School, Pac, Pac-Man, Pacman, Puck Man, Retro Gamer, Retro Gaming, retrogaming, Slope's Game Room, video, Vintage gaming

Kickstart A Hit Of AMIGA Nostalgia

April 21, 2020 By ausretrogamer

We recently delved into some of our forgotten boxes, hidden deep in our vault (aka: the garage) which were choc-full of classic video games.

What we found totally blew our mind – a treasure trove of Amiga gems! We are still shaking our head in disbelief in how we could have forgotten about these games – it is sacrilege.

Let’s get one thing straight, as much as we still love our Atari ST, the Amiga, with its various models we’ve had the pleasure of playing on, from the 500, CDTV, 2000 to the 1200 and CD32, it still holds a dear place in our bitmap heart.

So come on an intoxicating nostalgic journey with us by scrolling through the below games, but don’t rush through the photos, as you may miss an old favourite!

PS: Hit us up on Twitter or Facebook to let us know which game(s) gave you a warm and fuzzy feeling 🙂

 

Filed Under: History, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 16-bit, 32-bit, Alien Breed, Amiga, Amiga 1200, Amiga 500, Amiga CD, Amiga CD32, Amiga CDTV, Amiga games, Amiga OS, Cannon Fodder, CD32, Civilization, Classic Games, Commodore CDTV, Deluxe Paint, Graftgold, Micro, micro computing, Microprose, micros, Midway, Myst, nostalgia, Old School, retro computing, Retro Gamer, Retro Gaming, retrogaming, Slam Tilt, Ultima, Virocop, Wing Commander

Wild Chicago visits Williams Electronics

September 17, 2019 By ausretrogamer

This is a cool video from the early 1990s which has the TV show, Wild Chicago visiting the Williams factory. The video shows the making of The Addams Family pinball machine, which also includes a brief chat with Roger Sharpe and Steve Kordek amongst other pinball peeps at Williams. Ed Boon also makes an appearance where they show the making of Mortal Kombat!


source: Arcade Hunters

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Filed Under: History, Pinball, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Arcade, chicago pinball, Ed Boon, Midway, Mortal Kombat, Old School, pinball, Pinball Press, pinballpress, Retro Gaming, retrogaming, Roger C Sharpe, Steve Kordek, TAF, The Addams Family, The Addams Family pinball, wild chicago, wild chicago tv show, Williams, Williams Electronics, WMS Industries

Midway Gaming Box: The Perfect Christmas Gift

October 9, 2018 By ausretrogamer


We reckon we have just found our Christmas present!

If you are a retro gamer or know someone that is a retro gamer / classic arcade gamer (Midway, Atari, Bally, and Williams), then this USD$29.99 Midway Gaming Box is the perfect Xmas gift. This nifty gaming box includes a Rampage journal, Defender Teeny Tin, Joust Bumper Sticker, Defender bumper sticker, Paper Boy sheet magnet, Joust Boingler vinyl figure, and a Spy Hunter pin.

Pre-orders are now open, with the Midway Gaming Box landing in November – great timing for Christmas!

 

Filed Under: Announcements, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: !Arcade!, Atari, Bally, Christmas, Classic Arcade Gaming, Defender, Gauntlet, Joust, Midway, Midway Arcade, Midway Gaming Box, paperboy, Rampage, Retro Gaming, retrogaming, Williams

Retrospective: Weird And Retro Kombat at Timezone

July 23, 2018 By ausretrogamer

Who remembers Timezone?

Timzone was the place that first blew my mind with Mortal Kombat. It was a Sunday morning last century (crap I’m old!) when we walked into Timezone in the Capitol Centre (now called Dandenong Plaza) to see a group crowded around an arcade machine. That was the day I got instantly hooked on the digitised fighter that was the original Mortal Kombat.

As we watched the bloody challenge to completion, we were treated with a Sub-Zero Fatality! My mind was instantly blown. That led to a lot of coins fed into that machine until my fave fighter of all time arrived some time later: Mortal Kombat II – and the rest, as they say, is history.

Here I have two of the super rare Mortal Kombat II Collector Kards that I got from Timezone in Dandenong back in the day, along with a super-kool TZM (Timezone Magazine) issue No.8 (May 1994) that was kindly gifted to me by Aaron ‘blahjedi’ Clement at PAX Aus 2017.

Anyone else remember these?

– Serblander / Weird and Retro

source: Weird and Retro via Facebook

 

Filed Under: Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Arcade, Capitol Centre, Dandenong Plaza, Kards, magazine, Midway, Mortal Kombat, Mortal Kombat II, Rare Kards, Retro Gamer, Retro Gaming, Retrospective, Serblander, Serby, Timezone, Weird and Retro

Man Walks into a Bar and Sees a Pac-Man Machine

June 26, 2018 By David Cutler

Source: Steve Ringman/The Chronicle 1981

By: D.C. Cutler, U.S.A.

I recently walked into a hipster bar that I had never been in before. I immediately felt slightly old. Everyone there was in their early twenties; some of them didn’t look old enough to order a beer. As I made my way past the bustling, long bar, I noticed something in the back corner of the place that I hadn’t seen in a longtime.

A large group of twentysomethings were gathered around an original Pac-Man arcade machine. I hadn’t seen a Pac-Man machine since I was a little kid. It was a smack of nostalgia in a place I didn’t expect it.

Like the Rubik’s Cube or the DeLorean DMC-12, Pac-Man is an 80s icon. Seeing a vintage machine with a group of Millennials playing it, made me curious. I sat at a small booth near the Pac-Man machine and watched the young group feed the machine quarters. They were having such a blast trying to see who could reach the highest score with one quarter.

source: ausretrogamer

After a few craft beers, I wanted to try my hand at Pac-Man; but they had taken over the machine. It was entertaining watching them shriek and groan when they got devoured by a ghost. It may’ve been the first time any of them had ever played the arcade version of Pac-Man, but I still wanted my turn.

Pac-Man brings people together. From the time the game was released in arcades in October 1980, Pac-Man has been a unifier that you could play with friends. Pac-Man is cross-generational. It seems simple at first, but as you keep playing, the difficulty of each stage keeps you addicted to clear the maze.

When Pac-Man was released in 1980, movie theatre owners and movie moguls were worried that the game would hurt the film industry. Pac-Man was taking money away from Paramount and 20th Century Fox. Pac-Man’s enormous popularity was short-lived, but at its height, movie studio executives had to be worried about how long they would be competing with the bright yellow machines.

I never got to play the Pac-Man machine in that bar that night, but I enjoyed watching the twentysomethings play a game that this October will turn 38-years-old. Will there ever be another Pac-Man? I doubt it.

source: ausretrogamer

 

Filed Under: History, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 000000, 1980s, 80s, 80s icon, Arcade, barcade, Classic Arcade Gaming, David Cutler, DC Cutler, Midway, Namco, Pac-Man, Pacman, Retro Game, retrogaming, Toru Iwatani, video game

Highest-Grossing Arcade Machines of All Time

June 15, 2018 By ausretrogamer

Let’s reflect and gloat for one second – it was great to be alive during the Golden Age of Arcade video games and experience arcade joints first-hand; from the clean franchised ones to the decrepit dark and scary independent ones – we loved them all.

Oh yeah, we loved the games too, from coin dropping in Galaga, Bomb Jack, Pac-Man, Tron, Double Dragon, DragonNinja to Sega’s beasts like Space Harrier, Super Hang-On, OutRun, After Burner and Thunder Blade – we spent up big and loved every single second of it.


The 1990s started with us hammering coins into Atari’s Pit-Fighter, Capcom’s Final Fight and Street Fighter II. However, it was Sega’s Daytona USA that emptied our piggy bank of coins – we just could not get enough of it.

source: The Arcade Flyer Archive

Looking at the top 10 highest grossing arcade games (below), we can tell you that we played them all during their heyday and understand why the dot munching Pac-Man is perched right up top – the game was a breath of fresh air (for its time), as it wasn’t a derivative of the then plethora of space shoot’em ups. Pac-Man was truly a revolutionary title which had universal appeal, both male and female gamers loved chasing Inky, Blinky, Pinky and Clyde.

source: A-1 Arcade Gaming

So what of Atari’s Pong then? Well, the 1972 game did very well for Atari, they sold somewhere between 8,500 to 19,000 units (1972 to 1973) grossing them around $11Million US dollars – not bad for 1973!

The revenues generated were quite staggering, reaffirming the Golden Age of Arcade video games period as the most prosperous of them all, with Street Fighter II, Mortal Kombat and NBA Jam flying the flag for the 1990s.

Source: Wikipedia, USGamer and Goliath

Filed Under: History, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: !Arcade!, arcade games, Arcade Machines, Asteroids, Atari, best selling arcade games, biggest selling arcade machines, Capcom, Defender, Donkey Kong, Galaxian, Highest Grossing Arcade Machines, highest-grossing arcade games, History, Midway, Midway Games, Mortal Kombat, most popular arcade machines, Ms Pac-Man, Namco, NBA Jam, nintendo, Out Run, OutRun, Pac-Man, popular arcade games, retrogaming, Robotron, sega, Space Invaders, street fighter II, Taito, what are the best selling arcade games, Williams, WMS

NFL Blitz Turns 20

September 8, 2017 By David Cutler

By: D.C. Cutler, U.S.A.

From the first time I played the arcade version of Midway’s NFL Blitz at a movie theatre arcade, I was hooked. This year marks the 20th anniversary of the release of the colorful, over-the-top football game in arcades. And yes, that makes me feel old too.

Before there was Madden, there was Blitz if you were an NFL fan and gamer. Blitz wasn’t as technical and stylized as a year of Madden, but it was just as fun and competitive to play with your friends. When Nintendo 64 released Blitz, the game was so different than any other football game on the market.

Blitz had a blown up exaggeration to it with the humorous violence when you tackled an opposing player. The explosive crunching sounds and the streak of light behind the ball when you threw it deep elevated the gaming experience. The graphics and play popped off the smallest of television screens.

The “late hits” after plays were a bit much; so much so, it’s one of the reasons, along with some of the graphic collisions, the NFL almost offered to refund Midway’s licensing fee. I’m sure the NFL was pleased when they saw the early numbers of units sold.

Everyone I knew who had a Playstation or Nintendo 64 system owned Blitz. Like Madden or Goldeneye, playing Blitz was a happening at a friend’s house. I can’t count how many times in high school I participated in an NFL Blitz tournament. No money was ever involved, but a friend had to wash my Jeep after I humiliated him in a rout.

On weekends, I would play an entire season (usually with the Cowboys or Broncos) in a single day. And I loved the pitch play. My go-to-play was always “Da Bomb,” or the pitch to my running back down the right sideline. The reverse pass play was always a must on a difficult drive as well.

As much as I’ve enjoyed years of Madden, I think I have fonder memories of playing Blitz. It wasn’t as formal as Madden, but the action was just as enthralling and challenging. When you scored a touchdown against a really good opponent, it was just as gratifying as when you scored in a competitive Madden duel. And, I would know, I’ve played against some exceptional Madden players.

Twenty years ago, Midway created one of the most enjoyable football games ever. It still holds up, and when I play it, I’m flooded with bittersweet memories of close wins and crushing defeats.

I hope, somewhere in a lively arcade, kids are still playing and discovering a version of NFL Blitz.

source: The Arcade Flyer Archive

 

Filed Under: History, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Arcade, DC Cutler, Midway, NFL Blitz, NFL Blitz Turns 20, NFL games, Old School, Retro Gaming, Video Games

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