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Nostalgia Trips: The bond that ties us all

Face it: We gamers love our nostalgia trips. I think in order to truly call yourself a gamer (I’m leaving the hardcore talk out of it), that you need to know where games evolved from. The video game industry, like any other entertainment industry, has a back story worth learning and appreciating.

If you are a literature major or someone who really enjoys books, chances are you’ve read Catch 22, The Scarlett Letter, Animal Farm, or something of that nature. If you are a movie lover or enthusiast, someone assuming that you’ve seen Casa Blanca, The God Father, or ET isn’t a far stretch of the imagination. Games, in this context, are no different. I’m sure we’ve all played Mario, Tetris, or even Pong just to name a few. Reminiscing on old games is just fun and something that automatically links us all together. Remember the first time you played Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles as a child and got completely owned my Mecha-Turtle? Or the first time you completed Zelda?

These memories are what, in my opinion, shape and mold gamers into the enthusiast we are today. With all the adversity thrown our way from parents who just don’t understand (yes, I went there), politicians trying to get a vote, or even dumbass news reporters who don’t have a clue what they are talking about; I think it’s good that we look at the positives that games have and go back on a trip down Memory Lane.


She’s the owner of the store. Rocking the Wiimote on some Zelda

I recently, today in fact, stumbled across a shop managed and ran by a lady who is in her 40s completely filled with old school games. Complete with games from systems like the NES, Super NES, 32x, Sega, Game Gear, Dreamcast, Playstation, Atari, and even Sega CD. I took a few spy shots of the store. The lady who owned the store was really nice and was even playing Zelda for the Wii while I looked around. I asked her if she heard about the whole Mass Effect hoopla and she told me, “Yes I did hear about that. I can’t believe that Fox ran that story without checking the facts. Just imagine all the ignorant parents who where watching. I’m really upset they didn’t issue an apology and set the story straight.” I really wished more people like her were in a position of power; it would make the acceptance of games in the mainstream so much easier.

I hope you enjoy the pictures taking with my crappy cell phone and let’s take this time to have a huge nostalgia trip. I think we owe it to ourselves.


Is that Burai Fighter I see? OH and Burgertime????


Sadly, I had two of these


DO NOT WANT


Good old Game Genie. You did nothing for me when it came to TMNT


Damn I love this game


Do YOU know what game this is? I do.


Horrible, horrible Superman 64


What happened to you Game Gear? Oh, the Game Boy. I still don’t understand that.


I’m buying that next week. Yes, you Mr. Super Game Boy.


That’s a lot of SNES games.

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I’m going to own like half of these by the end of the year.


Half of these I haven’t seen since I was 7!


LOL. 32x. What was Sega thinking?


More NES games.


Vagrant Story. I still want to play that.


More PS1 games.


That’s a lot of SNES games.

2 Responses to “Nostalgia Trips: The bond that ties us all”

  1. on 09 Feb 2008 at 10:33 amNate

    We need to get a Super Nintendo and a Genesis. My old Genesis broke, but I have a lot of games. I want to play NBA Jam!

    Oh, and 32X FTW. Yeah, it was way overpriced. But playing DOOM on that thing is such a big childhood memory for me.

  2. on 03 Mar 2008 at 7:11 pmJarrell

    Take me there!!!

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