We trawl Scottish arcades for Sega games,
then film & write about them.
Showing posts with label crazy taxi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crazy taxi. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 September 2011

Further Portobello Thoughts: Light-Gun Games


Driving and shooting have been pretty common arcade themes for quite a long time now for very understandable reasons. Even if driving or shooting take a degree of skill to do properly, the fundamentals are basic enough that a casual arcade gamer can apply them pretty quickly and flexible enough that they can drive a respectable amount of variations and sub genres, not to mention the appeal of the novel control methods these games offer, even if the steering wheel or light-gun is a more common control method than the joystick in many arcades.

The dominance of these genres is pretty clear at Portobello, although there is a notable exception in Virtua Striker 2 '98. There hasn't been an update to this series since 2006, although its bright, saturated style would perhaps be a neat alternative on modern consoles to the largely more realistic style of the more popular football franchises around now. The cabinet appears to be in good condition, although I unfortunately didn't get a chance to play it as it was surprisingly pretty popular and I have to confess to not being particular eager to wait around for it to become free with the likes of Crazy Taxi and The House of the Dead II trying to magnetically draw pound coins from my pocket. (This is a lie, pound coins are not magnetic, so the theft magnets installed in Crazy Taxi cabinets don't work in the UK).

Saturday, 13 August 2011

Portobello Beach Arcades, Edinburgh



How weird are arcades?

No, listen, how weird are Scottish arcades?

There's something unique in the way illicit-feeling, mundanely 'adult' activities like bingo and slot machines are soundtracked by Daytona USA's indelible opening theme and crunch and thud of beat 'em up attract sequences, or of how the palm tree lined, perma-summer worlds of Outrun or Crazy Taxi offer only brief escape from the most likely dismal Scottish weather. Unfortunately, due in large part to increases in home console technology, many arcades seem to be committing less space to video games and games that would have once been arcade blockbusters like Mortal Kombat or Marvel vs Capcom 3: Fate of Two Worlds are sadly foregoing arcade releases completely as arcades appear to concentrate on a small variety of proven genres like racing and lightgun games.

Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites More