Friday, November 15, 2019

Arcade Evolution

When Was the First Arcade Game Invented?
Skee Ball in the 1909-1930s. A man named J.D. Estes from Philadelphia invented the Skee Ball game in 1909, but it wasn’t until 1914 that the first alley was sold to an amusement provider. The first Skee Ball alley was 36 feet long and required a great deal of strength and accuracy to play.

Can you imagine trying to roll a ball that far accurately?
Today, you can find Skee Ball at most arcade or amusement centers, including Chuck E. Cheese. Chances are, you're familiar with what Skee Ball is. Just for kicks, though:
  1. Skee Ball involves rolling balls into uniquely arranged circular targets.
  2. It’s a lot like darts, except with balls and bowling-like alley.
  3. At the end of the target field or alley are five target areas.
  4. Each area is worth ten more points than the last, with the hardest being the top-most target for 50 points.
The invention of Skee Ball served as the big bang. Amusement-like activities had been around for much longer, of course, but this is truly when the concept of an arcade cabinet or game came to fruition. It was also the start of a more social experience for arcade-goers.

In 1928, the Skee Ball alley was upgraded, and the size reduced to 14 feet. This made it easier for the average person to participate in and enjoy the game, and it also allowed for bigger crowds to see what was happening. This was important because at the time arcade experiences were largely social in nature.

The Game of Chance: Pinball, 1931-1950s:
Much later, in 1931, amusement providers caught on to the idea of coin-operated machines. The first to use coins was released in Chicago, called Baffle Ball. It was essentially the first type of pinball machine, though much smaller than the machines you're probably familiar with.This one resembled an old telephone box more than a free-standing pinball chest. In addition, it was meant to sit on a countertop or bar, as opposed to standing on its own with legs.
At the time, coin-operated machines were considered gambling by the powers that be. They were imposed with similar regulations and restrictions as popular gambling activities and outright banned in some states. It wasn't uncommon for people to call those playing these style of games riff-raff and whippersnappers. These early gamers were often reminded of the neighborhoods located nearby and encouraged to calm down.

Pinball: A Societal Ill?

This thinking was still in place when the first modern pinball machines appeared in 1933. Controversially, they were labeled as “games of chance,” which put them right in line with gambling. Fun or not, they weren’t seen in a favorable light for some time.
Some places — New York City, for instance — banned pinball machines entirely because of their perceived connection to gambling and organized crime. It’s hard to believe, but yes, at one time organized criminals loved to play them. Plus, they served as a great source of passive income.
The first pinball machines didn’t have flippers. Those weren’t introduced until 1947. That’s also why the game was classified as chance-based. You’d shoot the ball up and simply watch to see where it went on the table. There were no side buttons or ways to interact with the ball after it was launched.

Though the machines were expensive, some people shook them to try to get the ball to land favorably. These earliest pinball games were more akin to pulling the lever and watching, requiring little to no skill.

Who Invented the Pinball Machine?

Bally Hoo is a countertop-based pinball game introduced by the Bally Corporation in 1932. The company's founder, Raymond Maloney, is credited with inventing the game and machine. Many consider him the father of modern pinball machines.

Years later, the flippers introduced a modicum of skill to the game, which also made them less gambling oriented. Yet even with the flippers, pinball still wasn’t accepted as a positive experience. At that time, you could find them primarily in bars and back-alley stores.

Eventually, pinball cabinets became more accepted and more popular, primarily among younger audiences. It does make you wonder how many of them were sneaking into bars just to play a silly game before they were more widely accepted.

All Hail the Video Game: 1970-1980s

And now we come full circle to the first true console-based video game, Pong, which was released in 1972. Around that same time, Galaxy Game, the first coin-operated video game, made its debut at Stanford University. Created by Bill Pitts and Hugh Tuck, it cost a dime to play one game and a quarter to play three. A cabinet would set you back about $20,000, which amounts to $115,000 today when adjusted for inflation.
It begs the question, what was the first video arcade game? Was it Pong or Galaxy Game? Pong, actually, is considered by many to be the first video game ever created. A physicist named William Higinbotham created the first instance of the game in 1958, much earlier than when it debuted to the public.
Galaxy Game used a version of the existing Spacewar title, similar to Computer Space. The unique experience was programmed by Pitts and Tuck for GG.

Pong and Beyond

In November that same year, another game called Computer Space was released. It was the first mass-produced video or arcade game that made an impact all across the country. Many places installed the cabinet, so it could be found in different arcades. This is really where the birth of the arcade cabinet occurred.

Of course, Pong landed in 1972 and almost immediately saw success. This encouraged a variety of companies — more than 15 total — to begin developing their own video games. In 1975, Pong had a limited release through the Sears catalog, selling about 150,000 units for the holiday season.

Atari even earned a Sears Quality Excellence Award for its success. This spawned a variety of clones and copycats from companies vying to cash in on the title’s success.

The Progression of the Video Game

In 1975, Gun Fight launched and was the first game to utilize a microprocessor under the hood. This introduced a slew of advanced techniques and functionality for games.

In 1978, Taito Corp released Space Invaders, which became one of the most popular games of all time. Following that, Atari released Asteroids in 1979, and it became another hit, especially in arcades. The company sold well over 70,000 cabinets. It eventually became the company’s highest-selling game ever, which should come as no surprise.

Between 1978 and 1982, the arcade business saw something of a golden age:
  1. Business expanded rapidly. People loved arcades, and video games in particular, and they reeled in lots of money.
  2. The average machine earned $400 a week in quarters alone. Multiply that by at least 13,000 — about the number of arcades that existed at the time — and you get over $5 million a week.
The Modern Arcade Cabinet: 1980-2000
In 1980, Pac-Man officially dropped and became just as successful — if not more so — than some of the other games mentioned thus far. A whopping 350,000 Pac-Man cabinets were sold, at a value of 2 billion dollars. For inflation, that’s about 3.4 billion today. How many of you guessed Pac-Man was worth so much? We sure didn't!

As you may remember, Pac-Man was a universally family-friendly game that appealed to just about anyone from young kids to adults. It quickly became a pop culture phenomenon and introduced the arcade and video game scene to the greater world.

From 1980 to 1983 tons of new games were introduced to market, including titles such as:
  1. Donkey Kong
  2. Frogger
  3. Galaxian
  4. Centipede
  5. Dig-Dug
  6. Tron
In 1981, Donkey Kong was one of the first to utilize a storyline, similar to a movie or book. A damsel had been kidnapped by a huge beast, and you had to save her. Donkey Kong also marked the first appearance of fan-favorite character Mario, who would later go on to become Nintendo's mascot. The company featured the plumber in many games in the years to come, but in the original, he was known only as "Jumpman" and had no conventional name.

Donkey Kong Junior in 1982 was the first game that actually mentioned the character's trademark name, Mario. You could almost say he was never formally created but instead came to be by sheer happenstance.

The Modern Arcade Cabinet: 1980-2000

In 1983, the industry ran into a bottleneck. It is often referred to as the “great crash” or recession. Too many games and competing consoles were produced on a massive scale while younger audiences spent lots of time in arcades.

On top of market saturation, this led to the concern of parents, who became embroiled in a moral fight against the video game industry. Stagnation and conflict caused the industry to become stifled, and nearly killed it altogether.

In 1985 and 1986, the Nintendo Entertainment System and Sega Master System consoles were launched, shifting focus from public arcade cabinets to home gaming systems. This reinvigorated the industry and kickstarted a new era.

The Impact of Home Gaming Consoles on Arcades

Around the mid to late 1990s, Multiple Arcade Machine Emulators, or MAME, cabinets began cropping up in most arcades. The idea was a single arcade cabinet would house multiple games.

This boosted the value of the average arcade cabinet and increased replayability for customers. You no longer purchased a cabinet with a single game but several at once. MAME became popular but not enough to make a huge difference in business.

While home console games continued to gain popularity, the average arcade needed some new excitement. Capcom saved the scene with the launch of Street Fighter II in 1991. It introduced a new form of cabinet incorporated fighting games. The local multiplayer aspect really caught on as gamers loved to fight friends and peers in a digital plane. Eventually came the release of games like Mortal Kombat and others that continued to boost the popularity of this multiplayer combat genre.

A Revolution Revelation: Dance, Dance Blows Up

In 1999, Konami released Dance Dance Revolution, an entirely new type of arcade game that encouraged you to, well, dance. Despite many of the arcade cabinets being fighters at the time, the company took a risk.

It worried American audiences wouldn’t catch on to the idea, simply because it was too quirky. Yet it was a huge success and garnered 6.5 million in total unit sales by 2003.

Immersive Gaming: Late '90s-2013

From the mid 1990s on, the arcade industry and games in general further evolved. In 1996, the Nintendo 64 launched, and in 2000 PlayStation followed up with the PlayStation 2, after its hugely successful PlayStation console. Then came the introduction of 3D gaming and many new genres. With each console iteration, the technology advanced considerably, looking more and more realistic.

By the time the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 hit the scene, games had progressed to something truly amazing. Of course, all these visual and performance updates meant bigger and better arcade cabinets, too.

We’re talking about a multitude of cabinets, from Mario Kart to Deal or No Deal. The 2000s saw the evolution of driving and racing simulators, basketball machines and the infamous shooting games. Big Buck Hunter, anyone? Really, it was the golden age of the modern amusement cabinet that featured a variety of interactions and immersive experiences.

Basketball Amusement Games

Basketball arcade games with real balls became popular during the late '80s to early 2000s. Basketball arcade games had been around for decades, of course. Play Basketball by Aero-Matic in 1920 used a setup similar to the earliest pinball cabinets. Taito’s Basketball (1974) was one of the first conventional arcade cabinets to feature the sport. It had a black and white display with a blank background that symbolized the court. Players would control on-screen avatars using an arcade joystick.

It wasn’t until games like 1988's Competition Basketball from Intermark Amusements Inc. and 1993's Hot Shot Basketball from Midway Manufacturing Co. launched that the use of actual basketballs became a practice.

Today, Super Shot Basketball from Bay Tek Games — and some of its many variations — is one of the most popular arcade cabinets around. In fact, the company revised the arcade for 2018.

First-Person Shooter and Gun Arcades

Light gun shooters, or arcade games that use a gun-shaped controller, have believe it or not, been around for a long time. Some of the first used mechanical light guns in the 1930s and operated much differently than modern game setups. The mechanical setup gave the impression the player was shooting the gun when they actually were not.

Sega’s electro-mechanical arcade cabinet featuring Periscope launched in 1966. Players targeted cardboard ships moving within the unit.

In the 1970s and 1980s, video shooter games appeared. In 1969, Sega created the original Duck Hunt, which featured moving targets onscreen. After the player finished, they received their score, which was printed out on a paper ticket. The Nintendo Entertainment System later adapted Duck Hunt, which featured a plastic gun-like controller.

In the 1990s, the genre evolved considerably to include much more realistic and immersive experiences. On top of featuring 3D graphics and realistic artwork, such as what you’d see in 1994's Virtua Cop and 1995's Time Crisis, the guns were much improved, too.

In 1996, House of the Dead launched in Japan and was internationally released in 1997. It featured a reactive gun controller that had moving parts, which would provide feedback as you played the game. Eventually, these games gave way to the more modern first-person shooters and gun arcades we know today.

Racing Simulators

In 1973, Atari released Space Race, which allowed players to control spaceships flying around a unique track, avoiding comets and meteors. Taito launched a rival game called Astro Race, which employed the same theme. While these two games aren’t technically the same style of racing simulators we know today, they were a couple of the first to introduce racing to the masses.

Taito’s 1974 Speed Race was one of the first such games to introduce driving. The course became narrow or wide as the player moved along the road. The same year, Gran Trak 10 launched, which featured the first use of a gear-stick, steering wheel and foot pedals.
A number of games were launched from then on into the early '80s that also used racing as a theme. This included titles such as:
  • The Driver, 1970
  • Super Bug, 1977,
  • Speed Freak, 1979,
  • Rally-X, 1980,
  • Alpine Ski, 1981,
  • Turbo, 1981
Intro to 4D Gaming

In 2013, the first 4D gaming cabinet launched, called Dark Escape 4D. It uses a combination of:
  • 3D visuals
  • Surround sound
  • Vibrations
  • Blasts of air
This truly immerses the player in what’s happening. There’s even a heart rate monitor that will tell you when your heart is racing. Spoiler alert — it goes crazy the entire time unless you're superhuman.

Games and arcade cabinets have really come a long way over the years. It’s hard to imagine that first shoe-box-sized Baffle Ball cabinet evolving into what we have now, but that’s exactly what happened.

The Future of Gaming: 2018 and Beyond

The excitement surrounding the traditional arcade remains strong today. Amusement centers and arcades have spread around the country, though they’re a different beast than they were 50, 30 or even 10 years ago.

Home console gaming and its massive surge in innovation changed the scene. You also can find games in cafes and coffee shops, giving gamers a space to play modern entertainment.

The video game industry is seeing a huge boom in consoles like the Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4 and Xbox One introducing games that people also play at arcades. Next on the horizon for the future of arcade games, lie with vintage arcade games and the current state of the VR industry.

Virtual reality will deliver truly immersive experiences, allowing players to step into the shoes of an adventurer or race car driver. They're not just looking at a screen simulation. They're in the cockpit. We will see the technology deployed in arcades, too, an exciting next step for devoted gamers:
  • In 2014, Facebook bought the VR company Oculus for $400 million in cash and 23.1 million shares of the social network.
  • That’s a massive investment, and it highlights the potential for the technology.
  • If Facebook, the largest and most successful social network in the world, has faith in the VR industry, then it’s probably going somewhere.
Build Your Own Arcade

Today, arcades remain a fun place for people of all ages to meet with friends and compete in games, though you probably won't hear people calling them whippersnappers anymore. If you grew up in arcades and still love the games, you're in luck. You can enjoy the nostalgia of the arcade with your kids at a classic arcade or with friends at any of the new "barcades" that are popping up across the country. Of course, if you love classic arcade games and enjoy hanging out at home, you could always build your own arcade or game room using beloved arcade cabinets from the past.

Whether at an arcade or at home, you can experience the joy of arcade games and pinball machines just as they were in their prime thanks to M&P Amusement. If you're in the York, PA area, visit our showroom to see your old favorites or perhaps find a new favorite arcade game to bring home. Our friendly staff of arcade enthusiasts will be happy to answer any questions you might have. If you're not local to York, you're still in luck, you browse our arcade machine inventory online and buy your new arcade game today!

Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Arcade A Great Comeback

The arrival of the arcade business is unavoidable, yet not in the manner in which you think.

            Entertainment arcades were clamoring social habitats for children and youngsters during the '80s and '90s. It was paradise on earth, a spot where children could get away from the tensions of school, disregard their folks, make wickedness with their companions, and become mixed up in the chase for the ever-subtle high score.

    Tragically, over the recent decades, arcades have assumed a consistently lessening job in the gaming business. Saving the historical backdrop of retro games develops progressively troublesome as time moves on as claim to fame parts become scarcer and the games business advances. Yet, trust lies in new, limit pushing entrepreneurs who intend to celebrate and safeguard arcade culture while bundling the wistfulness such that spares these exemplary machines from insignificance and ushers them into the future by matching them with stylish nourishment and specialty lager.

   Lately, entrepreneurs have perceived that arcade evangelists who long for "past times worth remembering" speak to an undiscovered market and have begun opening new sorts of gaming foundations. Those '80s and '90s children are presently all adult, which has prompted a string of nourishment and liquor furnishing arcades discovering achievement in significant urban areas like New York (Barcade), Chicago (Emporium Arcade Bar), and Los Angeles (Button Mash). Arcade bar Coin-Op, which has areas in San Diego, San Francisco, and Sacramento, has become a go-to goal for supporters hoping to kick back, taste on some art mixed drinks, and play retro games with companions.

“The original idea behind Coin-Op was to open a bar-restaurant concept with something of an entertainment aspect to it,” says Coin-Op CEO Mark Bolton. “Me and my business partners grew up going to arcades in malls and entertainment centers in the ‘90s. We wanted to tie that into our new passion for cocktails and going out to bars and restaurants.”

For Bolton, the appeal of an arcade-bar hybrid arose out of the current generation’s desire for interactivity and constant engagement.


“People are looking for something to do other than just sit at a bar these days,” Bolton says. “There’s so much interaction in your daily life with social media and having your phone in your hand at all times. It’s nice for people to play games with their friends rather than just sit there.”


Cocktails and coin-ops are a match made in paradise. Dave and Buster's has advertised this creation to extraordinary accomplishment for a considerable length of time, flaunting 117 areas the nation over starting at July 2018 and $332 million in income in Q1 2018, however there are as yet a couple of foundations out there that attempt to save the virtue of the '80s and '90s-style, family-accommodating arcade experience.

All about Cocktail Arcade PC Software


        In this article we will help you out in learning all the primary things regarding Arcade PC software. Read this info till the end.  If you purchase a cabinet or controller it is suggested exploring the very helpful information about free to download PC emulation and arcade software downloads and set up.
You would have heard about arcade cocktail table and cocktailtable arcade game before today. He will suggest us cocktail arcade cabinet sooner or later. In case you have a PC nearby, you can trail the info and download the free software that will offer you the basic tools to recall every standard arcade game from the 80' and 90's!




You can also spend thousands of needless dollars on an arcade cabinet with this software already installed, though; again the software is free of cost to download.




How it Functions??

·         Get to know, what MAME is, then download the MAME MAMEUIFX 0.175 software to your PC. Make it sure to pick in case you have a 32 or 64 Bit PC.
·         Press on the video tutorial and go for the commands to set up the MAME software and install your ROMs.
·         At the end just plug in your Xtension TM Emulator Edition controller and it will auto detect the MAME app? You can ensue to utilize the controller to play your MAME games.

What’s MAME?

MAME is an abbreviation for "Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator" which is a free of cost and open source PC emulator software made to create the hardware of arcade game systems on your modern personal PC again, raspberry pi and numerous other technology platforms.
One of the best things is 60 in 1 arcade cocktail table offer. Get to know about cocktail arcade machine from many online sources. The purpose is to save gaming history by stopping vintage games from being mislaid or overlooked forever.

Easiest way to Install MAME

·         Please refer to the video shown for directions on how to download MAME. There are video tutorials that should have you playing arcade games in a few minutes. These video tutorials are best for users that are new to MAME and PC game emulation and who have no idea how to install or utilized MAME before.
·         When have your games up and working, the Xtension TM Emulator Edition Controller is pre-configured to the MAME software. The time your Xtension TM Emulator Edition Controller is plugged in, it will find out the MAME app and you can continue to utilize the controller to play your games.

Streaming "MAME" Arcade Games Online

The Internet Arcade is known as a web-based library of arcade video games from the era 1970s through to the 1990s uploaded to outdid arcade game play via MAME without any downloads. The archive comprises hundreds of game titles differing via numerous dissimilar genres and styles along with arcade given research, marquee artwork and in entertainment in the area of the Video Game Arcade.