(I went and ate spicy paneer chapati wraps in the park instead.)
On a scorching day pushing past 35° Celsius, I did what I always used to do on hot summer days, and went into a dark room to play computer games!
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This is only half of it! |
It's debatable whether Power Up! is truly an exhibit at all, but I don't suppose it matters. For an old fart like me it was an exercise in nostalgia, playing games from my youth on the original hardware, and for youngsters -- of which there were not many, as it was a school day -- it's an opportunity to see where computer games came from, and that there is fun to be had with the older systems.
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This was a pleasant surprise. A version of this -- I think the Mark 6 -- was my first console. |
It was £12 for a day pass, which isn't terrible for a London museum and by my rough count I played around 27 games, so that's money well spent I reckon. Yes, I could emulate all of them, but it was good to play on the original hardware and I got the chance to handle some consoles I have never seen in the flesh before, like the 3DO, NeoGeo, or WiiU; there is something of a thrill to experience them for the first time, but perhaps I'm just a big saddo.
Aside from the N64 controllers almost all having that distinctive loose thumbstick, all the hardware was in excellent condition, and I wonder where it all came from. It's a brave collector who would donate their vintage console to be handled by thousands of grubby mitts, and I can't imagine the Science Museum itself has a stack of old SNESes in a back room. That said, the Amiga CD32 had its launch at the Museum, so it's possible that the machine there was indeed owned by them!
I have only a couple of minor criticisms. There were a few notable omissions, such as the PC Engine and any handhelds that weren't produced by Nintendo, and not all of the games were the best showcase of their machines; are we really saying Frogger is the Commodore 64's killer app?
(I would also have loved to see a Wondermega or "tower of power" in the flesh, but those are the nittiest of picks.)
Otherwise, Power Up! is an interesting if superficial look at the history of computer gaming, but also a great day out if you're a fan of computer games.
Arbitrary score: Blast Processing out of MOS6510.
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Your humble correspondent, having completed Sonic 2, entirely legitimately, honest. (And no, no idea what happened to my hair.) |
That looks amazing! Surely there has to be/have been something like that near me (i.e. in NYC)...but I don't recall ever seeing that comprehensive of a selection of old consoles available for play anywhere around here.
ReplyDelete(I was also unfamiliar with the tower of power. I happened to have a 32X because they were available REALLY cheaply during the run of the Genesis...but I don't even know if we got 32X + CD games. I have to assume we did, because 'Murica, but I don't remember ever seeing any...)
I believe there were a handful of CD32X games, but I wouldn't be able to name one off the top of my head.
DeleteSounds like a great place! My first computer was a Commodore 64, which had a bit of a mishap at some point because all of the sudden all the colours were funky (it may have had something to do with me turning it on in the morning and getting it to start loading a game from tape, and then heading off to school for a whole day, thinking it would be ready to play when I got home...)
ReplyDeleteHa! I'm intrigued by these funky colours, as the C64 had some odd colour choices to start with!
DeleteYeah it was like it had done some sort of palette shift.
DeleteNow that I think of it, I had a similar experience with a monitor to my old PC many years ago: there was this rainbow effect going on around the edges of the screen, and in the centre (like 5 cm radius) everything was normal. Sometimes it helped hitting the screen with a firm hand, but hardly the proper solution I reckon…
If it works, it works!
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