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Retro

The 2021 Christmas Gift Guide

December 8, 2021 By ausretrogamer

The silly season is upon once again! After the last couple of years we’ve had, we reckon it is time to spoil ourselves and our loved ones on some stuff that will spread the cheer.

With the millions of things out there, we thought we’d give you a hand at picking some cool geeky items in this year’s gift guide. So no matter if you are a retro or modern gamer, into emulation, pinball, a Star Wars fan or into comics, we have you covered.

Anbernic RG351V $209.99 (via Amazon)

LENOXX Bluetooth/Turntable Retro Music Centre $179 (via Catch)

The Legend Of Zelda Game & Watch $69 (via Catch)

Arcade1Up Mortal Kombat II Midway 12-in-1 Legacy Series Arcade Machine $770 (via Catch or Amazon)

Pinball : A Graphic History of the Silver Ball $31.96 (via The Book Depository)

The Best Of Archie Comics $23.14 (via The Book Depository)

LEGO Star Wars Darth Vader Helmet $71.20 (via Amazon)

Pixel Frames Street Fighter II – Car Scene 9×9 inches (Big) Shadow Box Art $45.59 (via Amazon)

Game and Watch Display Stand $9.50 (via Etsy)

Exploded PS1 – Art Print Poster (A4 size) $20.00 (via Etsy)

Enhanced Wireless Controller Super Mario – Nintendo Switch $89.00 (via Amazon)

Hyperkin M07280 RetroN 77 HD Gaming Console For Atari 2600 $103.70 (via Amazon)

TheVIC20 – Full sized VIC20 with working keyboard $260.64 (via Amazon)

LEGO Super Mario Master Your Adventure Maker Set $42.87 (via Amazon)

NOTE: Prices correct at the time of publication




Filed Under: Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Arcade, Art, Atari, Christmas, Christmas Gift Guide, Geek, gift guide, gifts, Gifts for Geeks, gifts under $100, nintendo, Retro, Retro Gaming, Retrocomputing, retrogaming, Star Wars, street fighter II, VIC20, Xmas, Xmas Gift Guide

Recreated Commodore 64 User’s & Programmer’s Reference Guide

November 29, 2021 By ausretrogamer

We all owe Iain Bennie a lot of gratitude for painstakingly recreating the Commodore 64 User’s Guide and Programmer’s Reference Guide (and the Quick Reference Card)!

We recently had a notification in one of the Commodore 64 Facebook Groups that immediately piqued our interest. It was a post by Iain Bennie that advised the 24,000+ members that after restoring his breadbin 8-bit beauty, he wanted to complete the set with new copies of the (old spiral bound) C64 User’s Guide and the Programmer’s Reference Guide.

Instead of scanning the original guides, Iain re-wrote them from scratch, reconstructing every graphic, including the front and back covers, every register map, block diagram, and every table to then have a wonderful and pristine final result.

This whole process took Iain a number of months, which clearly shows in the end product. Iain also had his re-written guides printed, which we must admit, look amazing – see pics and stop drooling already!

Not surprising, these guides have garnered a lot of interest from the community, which took Iain by (a pleasant) surprise. Iain has kindly made the PDF guides freely available (here) for all of us, which is darn awesome if you ask us. Oh yeah, he even has tips on getting them professionally printed! We and the rest of the C64 community thank Iain for all of his hard work and generosity in making these guides and proving them for free! What are you waiting for, go get them now!

source: Iain Bennie via Facebook




Filed Under: Announcements, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Books, C64, C64 books, C64 guides, C64 Programmer's Reference Guide, C64 quick reference card, C64 User's Guide, classic, Commodore64, Geek, Old School, Retro, retro computing, Retro Gamer, Retrocomputing, retrogaming, tbt, throwback

Review: PAC-MAN: Birth of an Icon

November 12, 2021 By ausretrogamer

There has been one aspect of classic gaming that we’ve always enjoyed, and that is books! There have been a number of awesome classic gaming books released over the years which we have covered on this site, and we are quite chuffed to review the latest book from Cook and Becker, PAC-MAN: Birth of an Icon.

The iconic PAC-MAN (and his ghostly foes, Inky, Blinky, Pinky and Clyde) needs no introduction, as the arcade game captured the hearts of millions around the world upon its release 41 years ago, and has been played many times over on home systems during the intervening years. There is a reason that the arcade machine is still the number one highest-grossing arcade machine of all time – it was and still is an amazing action maze chase game. Once PAC-MAN crossed over from niche fascination to mainstream appeal, there was no stopping this gaming juggernaut.

The Standard Edition

The Collector’s Edition

PAC-MAN’s appeal has transcended generations of gamers, and this officially licensed (by BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment Inc.) book, PAC-MAN: Birth of an Icon, is the ultimate tome that is filled with historical facts about the yellow dot muncher, including; origins of the game (and going from Japan to America), design philosophies, original arcade source code, concept designs, art, archival imagery, marketing campaigns, merchandise and its impact to popular culture to name just a few. PAC-MAN’s story spans decades, touching everything from video games, pop culture to our world today, and PAC-MAN: Birth of an Icon captures it all beautifully in a quality book that has fast become the definitive work on the iconic dot muncher.

Lots of great chapters on all things PAC-MAN!

Go Toru!

Pac-Man Fever!

With every page filled with eye popping art and images, it is the stories told that capture your attention and keep you glued to each and every page till the last word. We absolutely loved reading the journey from creator Toru Iwatani’s “pizza slice” inspiration to the actual game and its inevitable success. The road from Japan to America is another fascinating insight into how Puck Man became PAC-MAN. Oh yeah, to read about Toru’s early life and love of pinball was another cherry on top of an already amazing layered cake. Another aspect that was a pleasant surprise which our inner geek loved, was the PAC-MAN Gameology. This portion of the book lists details about every PAC-MAN related video game from 1980 to today – we were gobsmacked to see (and learned something new!) that PAC-MAN features in so many games!

The design philosophy behind the golden age arcade hero!

The art inspiration of the yellow dot-muncher

The co-authors of this special tome,  Arjan Terpstra (Sonic the Hedgehog 25th Anniversary Art Book) and Tim Lapetino (Art of Atari and other books), have captured every aspect of PAC-MAN and translated it all into an amazing, hefty and beautifully presented book which every PAC-MAN fan and video games historians need on their bookshelf. PAC-MAN: Birth of an Icon will reignite your PAC-MAN Fever, so you have been warned!

Pac-Man invades popular culture!

There are two versions of this book that can be pre-ordered right now; the PAC-MAN: Birth of Icon standard edition (AU$89.95) and the limited to 2,000 copies Collector’s Edition (AU$169.95), which includes:

  • The PAC-MAN: Birth of an Icon book;
  • A unique PAC-MAN shaped box and level 256 glitch shaped slipcase, celebrating the visual history of PAC-MAN;
  • An exclusive PAC-MAN arcade token; and
  • A limited, brand-new 7” vinyl pressing of the 1981 smash hit “PAC-MAN Fever” by Buckner & Garcia!

You don’t get too many opportunities to get something special like this book, so if you have the opportunity, we highly recommend either of these editions. And if you were bitten hard by the PAC-MAN Fever back in the day, then we highly recommend you grab the Collector’s Edition – it is amazing!

PS: Australian readers can order either PAC-MAN: Birth of an Icon edition via our friends at PixelCrib!

No matter your language, PAC-MAN: Birth of an Icon has you covered!
image source: Cook & Becker




Disclaimer: The ‘PAC-MAN: Birth of an Icon Collector’s Edition’ book was kindly supplied by Cook and Becker for this review.

Filed Under: Retro Gaming Culture, Reviews Tagged With: arcade gaming, Arjan Terpstra, Book, Book Review, Cook and Becker, Geek, oldschool, Pac-Man, Pac-Man - Birth of an Icon, Pac-Man book review, PAC-MAN: Birth of an Icon book review, PixelCrib, Retro, Retro Gamers, Retro Gaming, retrogaming, Review, tbt, throwback, Tim Lapetino

Awesome Pop Culture Art Works by Pappas Pärlor

October 29, 2021 By ausretrogamer

There is no shortage of awesome and talented artists in this world. The latest artist to capture our attention is Johan Karlgren, aka: Pappas Pärlor.

Johan’s creations are unique as they are refashioned framed art pieces injected with very clever pop culture themes and franchises, including popular Star Wars and video gaming characters.

Check out all Johan’s art works here. Here are our favourites:

source: Pappas Pärlor




Filed Under: Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Art, Atari, darth vader, Film, He Man, Johan Karlgren, Ken, Masters Of The Universe, MOTU, Pappas Parlor, Pixel Art, Pixels, Pokemon, Pop culture, pop culture art, refashioned art, Retro, Retro Gamer, Retro Gaming, retrogaming, Ryu, Skeletor, sonic, street fighter, Video Games

The Rubber-Keyed Wonder: 40 Years of the ZX Spectrum

October 26, 2021 By ausretrogamer

If you are fans (like us!) of the From Bedrooms to Billions film series then you will absolutely love their latest documentary film, The Rubber-Keyed Wonder: 40 Years of the Sinclair ZX Spectrum. To make Anthony and Nicola Caulfield’s film come true, go and check out their Kickstarter!

Coinciding with the ZX Speccy’s 40th anniversary next year (2022), Anthony and Nicola are aiming to release the film by Christmas 2022 – make sure you let Santa know! The Caulfield’s are aiming to make a thorough and definitive film on the ZX Spectrum, going into all the finer details of how and why the ZX Spectrum was created, what impact the computer had as well as the various versions that followed right the way through to the latest iteration of the system with the ZX Spectrum Next.

The film aims to reunite as many of the original ZX Spectrum hardware team and of course many legendary game developers, artists and musicians, and also talk to fans of the ZX Spectrum as to understand the significance of the machine with the masses.

This Kickstarter campaign once again has some stunning artwork from Oliver Frey available as well as some wonderful posters and other add-ons to get your nostagia gland pulsating!

Now, we are Commodore fans, but we are also aware of the significance of the Sinclair ZX Spectrum, so we are quite excited to support Anthony and Nicola on their new project!

image source: The Rubber Keyed Wonder – 40 years of the ZX Spectrum




Filed Under: Announcements, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 40 years of the ZX Spectrum, 8-bit, 80s, 8bit, Anthony and Nicola Caulfield, classic computing, Documentary, Film, From Bedrooms To Billions, micros, Rebellion, Retro, retro computing, Retro Gamer, Retro Gaming, Retrocomputing, Retrogamer, retrogaming, The Amiga Years, The Rubber Keyed Wonder - 40 years of the ZX Spectrum, ZX Speccy, zx spectrum

What A Japanese Arcade From The 1970s Looked Like

October 19, 2021 By ausretrogamer

We love finding old raw footage from the golden age of arcade gaming. This time, it is from a Tokyo arcade parlour from 1979.

As we wind back the clock some 40+ years, this news story features Tokyo’s arcade parlour, World Game, as it stood in 1979! It is so awesome to see patrons pumping coins into arcade machines, like Space Invaders, just like we did all those years ago!


source: btm0815ma




 

Filed Under: History, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 1970s, 70s, 70s arcade, Arcade, Boing-Boing, Classic Arcade Gaming, coin-op, Japan, Japan arcades in the 1970s, Retro, Retro Gaming, retrogaming, Space Invaders, Tokyo, video, World Games, yen

History: The Birth of the Internet Archive

October 12, 2021 By ausretrogamer

25 years ago, the entire World Wide Web was only 2.5 terabytes in size. Most connections were dial-up, important records were stored on tape, and a young engineer named Brewster Kahle was working on a revolutionary project—a way to archive the growing Internet.

Filmed by Marc Weber for the Web History Project, this video showcases the Internet Archive’s very first web crawl in 1996. In 2001, the project was made accessible to the public through the Wayback Machine. Today, the Internet Archive is home to more than 588 billion web pages, as well as 28 million books and texts, 14 million audio items, and 580,000 software titles, making us one of the world’s largest digital libraries.

As the Internet Archive approaches their 25th anniversary, let’s take a look at the hardware and high hopes that drove the project from the very beginning—and hear from the man whose vision made it all possible – press play here!

story source: Internet Archive




Filed Under: History, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 1990s, Brewster Kahle, digital library, History, Internet Archive, Internet Archive approaches their 25th anniversary, Marc Weber, Old School, Retro, Wayback Machine, Web History Project, World Wide Web

Casio x Pac-Man Vintage Limited Edition Unisex Watch

October 8, 2021 By ausretrogamer


Casio sure knows how to tug on our nostalgic strings! Their vintage classic line of watches brings back the 80s, and nothing screams 80s more than a Casio Pac-Man watch!

The A100WEPC-1B Casio x Pac-Man watch is a collaboration between Casio Vintage and Bandai Namco which aims to immerse you in the nostalgia of one of the world’s first blockbuster video games. Details on the watch glass hint at the exciting chase about to unfold as Pac-Man, surrounded in the square LCD display ghost house, is poised to start running.

Laser engraving on the black ion-plated metal band lays out the game maze. The game begins above the watch face with Pac-Man eating dots as he runs away from the ghosts and continues below the face after he’s devoured a power pellet and turned back to chase them!

The Casio x Pac-Man watch is retailing for AU$299.00! We bet these go fast!

 

source: Casio Watches




Filed Under: Announcements, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: !Arcade!, 1980s, 80s, Casio, Casio A100, Casio A100WEPC-1B, Casio watch, Casio x Pac-Man, Casio x Pac-Man watch, classic arcade game, classic gamer, digital watch, oldschool, Pac-Man, Pac-Man watch, Pacman, pacman watch, Retro, Retro Gamer, retrogaming

Classic Video Games Rated and Auctioned At Astounding Prices

September 21, 2021 By ausretrogamer

First it was NFTs, and now it seems hermetically sealed classic games are being auctioned off at some nose-bleeding prices!

Goldin Auctions have been spruiking their recent record breaking auction sales on their social channels, which want of a better word or phrase, has put a lot of noses out of joint. Unless you are the seller that just pocketed US$430,500 for Sonic The Hedgehog, this rating/grading system and auction of video games is seen as a form of evil in the worldwide retro gaming community.

Final Sale Price: $430,500

An all-time record for any @SEGA Genesis game. pic.twitter.com/aGgBX0cSjh

— Goldin Auctions (@GoldinAuctions) September 19, 2021

Sure, lets WATA-rate games and then pawn (Ed: ahem, auction!) them off for some absurd amounts of money, but this whole setup and process just doesn’t sit right. From our perspective, it is great that video games share the limelight with other highly sought after memorabilia, but c’mon, a Sonic The Hedgehog Sega Genesis / Mega Drive game going for almost half a million US dollars is just mind blowingly ridiculous, or are we missing something here? At this rate, our 1989 factory sealed Commodore 64 disk version of Double Dragon would be rated a 10 and be close to being priceless!

What are your thoughts on these video game rating systems and auctions? Hit us up on Twitter or Facebook and let us know!




Filed Under: Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Games Auctions, Geek, Goldin Auctions, nintendo, Rating System, Retro, Retro Gamer, Retro Gaming, sega, Sonic The Hedgehog, Super Mario Bros, video game auctions, Video Games

C64 Remix Chiptune: Green Beret – Commando Infiltration

September 13, 2021 By ausretrogamer

What do you get when you cross two C64 music maestros like Martin Galway and Rob Hubbard? You get this awesome Green Beret Commando Infiltration SID chiptune (remix) by t-tracker!

Play it loud!

https://ausretrogamer.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/t-tracker-Green-Beret-Commando-Infiltration.mp3

source: t-tracker – Green Beret (Commando Infiltration)

 




Filed Under: Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 8-bit sounds, BGM, C64, C64 chiptunes, C64 remix, C64 remix chiptune, chiptune, chiptunes, Commando, Commodore 64, Green Beret, Martin Galway, Music, Old School, Retro, Rob Hubbard, SID, SID chip, t-tracker, video game music

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