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Birthday
parties as a kid usually meant a day at the arcade. I can remember not
being able to sleep the night before a friend’s party; the anticipation
was too much. The old Atari 2600, sorry to say, just wasn’t the same as
that dark, black-lit room, buzzing with lights and beeps and the bright
marquees of our favorite video games. Unless you were as cool as Ricky
Schroder (I’ve been
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dying to make a Silver Spoons
reference), who literally had an arcade in his living room, you had to
settle for the next best thing.
Marketed as ‘The arcade games you can take home with you,’ the Coleco
Mini-Arcade tabletop series were probably the coolest of the hand held
video games of the 80s. These arcade miniatures, first introduced in
1981, were by far the most realistic, portable gaming experience of
their day. Ok, arguably, they weren’t that portable (hence the name
tabletop), but they definitely had the look and feel of their larger
originals. Re-creating the arcade experience represented the biggest
challenge for home-based video games; in the early days, the technology
we could experience at home was a bit crude. The closer the game was to
the originals—we all remember dumping our hard earned quarters in at
Chuck E. Cheese or that movie theater game room—the better.
For just under $60 (that’s about $152 in today’s money) you could own one
of several of these gems, including Frogger, Donkey Kong, Pac Man, Ms.
Pac Man, Galaxian and Zaxxon, and Donkey Kong Jr. (which looked a little
different than the others – see below). What set these games apart from
others at the time was the design—a smaller version of the original
full-size arcade game. They not only had the look of a standup arcade
game cabinet, but they had the side art, the marquee (unlit), and cool
artwork on the glass of the multi-colored VFD display. They even had
demo modes—all done to replicate the original.
The game that did the best job of representing the original was Galaxian;
it really looks and sounds like the arcade version. Zaxxon was rather
large and looked a little different than the others, mainly because it
needed mirrors and two
displays on the inside to achieve the infamous 3D effect for which the
original was known.
Then there was Donkey Kong Jr. Coleco planned to make DK Jr. look like the
others, but for whatever reason, they scrapped the idea. Instead, it was
really just a re-branded version of Nintendo’s tabletop game and watch
model, but with better artwork. The Donkey Kong Jr. game is the most
challenging one to play. Because it uses a color LCD display, you need
to have it under a light source (no playing in the dark when you were
supposed to be asleep)—very different from the bright VFD displays of
the other games.
In the 80s, these games were so popular that they occasionally made cameo
appearances in movies and TV shows. In the movie Gremlins,
there’s a scene when the evil Mogwai ‘Stripe’ is playing Donkey Kong.
Pac Man made an appearance in both National Lampoon’s Vacation
and an episode of Knight Rider (S1, E21, Nobody Does It
Better).
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| Image copyright of Warner
Bros. Pictures. |
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Image copyright of Universal
Television. |
There were many other tabletop-style games that came out later, but very
few manufacturers went to the lengths that Coleco did to recreate the
look and feel of the full-size originals (Q*Bert by Parker Brothers is
one possible exception). These games are highly collectible today;
finding one on eBay in pristine condition, and still in its original
box, will set you back somewhere between $200 and $300. The memories
though, are priceless.