Archives for category: Nostalgia

king_of_kongEver since seeing King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters I’ve wanted to go visit the American Classic Arcade Museum at FunSpot in Laconia, New Hampshire. The original plan was to spend my birthday weekend up there but getting a broken ankle back in February put a damper on that plan.

After a lengthy project at work I finally put in for some vacation time and was determined to get myself up to FunSpot. It was a little over 5 hours away but after a recent drive to Florida and back that seemed like nothing. As long as I had some good music to listen to it wasn’t going to a long drive. I left around 10:30am and made good time with the help of iPhone’s Maps application. That is until I got about an hour away from Laconia.

That’s when my cell service suddenly disappeared. Given that it’s AT&T I was honestly surprised that it was with me for the majority of the trip. It’s at this point that I got a little lost but realized that I still had G-Map on my phone as well. I’ve complained about G-Map via Twitter before – my first time using it it sent me on the most roundabout route just to get back on the road I was originally on. The one upside it has versus Apple’s Maps application is that all the maps are stored on the phone so as long as you have GPS reception (which I get even when my cell service is dead) you are good to go. It did the same thing again where it wanted me to go down some side street, up another street, back up another street JUST to get back on the road I was already on, so I just ignored it this time and kept going straight. I eventually arrived at FunSpot and decided to check it out before looking for a hotel.

Entrance to FunSpot

I went on a Tuesday so that place itself was pretty dead. At any point during my gaming there I didn’t see more than 10 people in the upstairs “museum” section of FunSpot. This meant it was pretty quiet and I wouldn’t look too foolish taking pictures of each game before I played it.

Before the trip I debated trying to play every game there at least once but with over 200 games it would’ve required at least 2 days straight playing video games (assuming about 5 minutes for each game, time for eating, bathroom trips) and while that might’ve been fun to document via video and such I don’t know that it would’ve been much fun. Instead I decided to just play the games that caught my eye. The ones that triggered memories just by looking at them. I got $10 worth of tokens and made my way through the arcade.

Marble Madness (Wikipedia | Killer List of Videogames | Marble Madness Homepage)

Marble Madness

There was one game I definitely wanted to play before I left and I made it the first (and last) game I played at FunSpot. I remember playing this every time my family went to Fuddruckers (oh the naughty jokes we made about that name!) on Central Avenue in Yonkers when I was a kid. I’ve always been drawn to this game for some reason, so much so that I eventually created a Marble Madness modification for Unreal Tournament called Marble Mania with the helper of an UnrealScript programmer a few years ago. I think I just loved the idea of an abstract geometric world and at the time I thought the graphics were pretty damn cool. It’s funny how over the years better resolutions and color depths seem like the best things could get.

Marble Madness High Scores

The machine was in pretty good condition though the left speaker was being flakey and would turn on and off on it’s own, resulting in the music sometimes just blasting away in my face. If you know the music for Marble Madness you know that it can make you a bit tense and anxious while you’re playing, moreso at loud volumes. I only managed to make it to level 4 while playing but did end up knocking all the lower scoring players off the high score list. Still, my 24,000 score was nowhere near the 110,000+ scores of the top 4 spots. By the next day I was debating trying to obtain my own Marble Madness arcade machine so I could practice like some Steve Wiebe wannabe. I still may do it one day…

Dragon’s Lair (Wikipedia | Killer List of Videogames

Dragon's Lair

Speaking of state of the art graphics, how much better could things get than actual cartoon animation in a video game?! Dragon’s Lair was the first in a line of laserdisc-based video games that, at the time, seemed pretty amazing. In truth it was nothing more that Memory + Choose Your Own Adventure really – an animation was played and you had to either push the joystick in the correct direction or press the buttons at the right moment. Doing so took you further in the storyline. You could lose a lot of quarters trying to memorize all the moves needed to finish the game.

I think my first exposure of this type of game was Cliff Hanger which my brother and I saw as kids at Kiawa Island in South Carolina. They might’ve had a Dragon’s Lair as well – it was a posh resort where hot dogs cost like $5 so they could afford to have two state of the art laserdisc games.

Unfortunately the audio level on this game was very low making it difficult to hear where I was supposed to in a certain direction. I didn’t last very long at all and didn’t feel like dumping too many tokens into it.

Krull (Wikipedia | Killer List of Videogames)

Krull

As if the movie Krull was enough exciting adventure for one person, apparently a video game was also made of this riveting story of a guy with a neat dagger-disc and annoyingly upbeat perspective on life. I never actually heard of the game until I saw it at FunSpot but wanted to give it a try considering how crappy the movie is.

Unlike the movie you actually get to use the Glaive for most of the game. The first level consists of you collecting the 5 pieces of it strewn across a boulder infested mountain. Once you have the weapon you can use the right joystick to fire it off in different directions. It seemed like you could fire up to 5 of them at a time but I wasn’t paying close enough attention. The next level has you saving soldiers in a forest, the next saving soldiers in a cave and then a level where you are trying to break your way through a set of hexagonal barriers constantly changing colors. You had to hit it when it was black or you glaives would get stuck in it. I sucked at that part. I gave the game another try later in the night but didn’t fare any better.

Continue? 10… 9… 8…

I was thinking I could squeeze all the games I played into one post but it’s turning out to be longer and more work than I thought it would be so I think it’s better to break this up into multiple posts.

Next time: Patrolling the moon buggy-style, bears looking for gems in castles (what?!), strong aversions to aliens and racing way too fast in a tube (no, not the london underground)

I went through archive.org tonight and found all the major designs I could of spilth.org.  I registered the site back in May of 2000… wait a minute… my first post was in March of 2000… er, maybe I started the site on alienwebshop.com…

Anyways, I made a Flickr set of all the designs that spilth.org has gone through:

spilth.org - August, 2000

I’m not sure if this was the original design of spilth.org but it’s the first that archive.org has. Green is my favorite color so I made sure to use lots of it. This was back when I was still reading scripting.com and I think the sidebar was a list of blogs that I pulled from some Userland feed or something. I’m too lazy to actually read through my blog to figure out what I was doing then.

spilth.org, December 2001

I guess at some point I got bored with the 100 blogs sidebar. I was also revolting against all the tiny-fonted blogs out there and decide to make my font one size bigger than the default size, while so many people seemed to like to use one size smaller. Who could read that crap?

spilth.org - September 2002

Another design I did myself. I think this one is pretty cool, if a little too gray. Unfortunately archive.org seems to not grab background images. The sidebars had some cool light gray images of a Beholder and I think an Orc sitting behind them. The upper left image is a silhouette of The Avengers and the dice represented the fact that I’m a RPG/boardgamer.

spilth.org - November 2003

Slight adjustment of the previous design.

spilth.org - November 2004

Another cool design ruined by the fact that archive.org doesn’t seem to grab background images.  These was my Magritte design. It had a cloudy background image and I turned Magritte’s famou Pipe painting into my tagline – This is not a web site. I was so hip back then!

spilth.org - August 2006

This is when I got tired of keeping up with CSS and all the cross-browser incompatibilities. I decided to just use some pre-made WordPress theme.

And as you can tell, the site has a new design. Again, it’s just some WordPress theme but I’m not completely happy with it, so I wouldn’t be surprised if it changes in the next few weeks again.

Something I’ve always wanted to be able to do since I was little was learn to skateboard. When my ex-girlfriend (that’s a whole other story) was getting started with roller derby and practicing in the parking lot I decided to pick up a skateboard and some pads and give it a real try for once and be out in the parking lot with her. I went around the parking lot a bit but never managed to do a successful ollie and got discouraged.

So this past weekend I decided to give it another go. It’s something I always wanted to do and it was a form of exercise that I felt like I could really get into. I kept putting it off because I was worried about looking like a fool in front of a bunch of young kids. So I finally signed myself up for a lesson at Drop In Skate Park in Hillburn, NY on Saturday at noon.

The lesson went pretty well. The instructor showed me various things and helped me relax more and learn how to not be so stiff on the board. He also suggested a wider board since I have such a big foot. I still wasn’t doing ollies (something that will take time) but I was going up and down some inclines and just getting comfortable in general.

After the lesson I decided to make the invest in a new, wider board. The board I had previously was a small one I got at Sports Authority one day. One of my favorite skateboard companies has always been Alien Workshop because I love the alien head symbol. I have a tattoo on the back of my neck of an alien and even started a web hosting company with some friends back in the day called alienwebshop. So I ended up picking up this board:

Alien Workshop Skateboard

After the instructor set it up for me I went out and gave it a try. I definitely felt more comfortable on it and practice turning on a incline for a bit. A ~10 year old kid even came over at one point and was giving me tips and suggesting tricks to try. He was showing me how to do a Pop Shuvit even though I couldn’t even really Ollie yet, but I was almost actually able to land it. After a while I decided I wanted to try going down a 6 foot incline that I found a bit intimidating. I went down it several times and, even though I was still nervous after the 10th time, I didn’t have any problems. I was feeling good. I was having fun, getting my heart rate up and exercising in a way I really had an interest in.

I gave the 6ft incline another go and went across to a 1 or 2 foot high fun box. I went up, across and something happened on the way down that I think I lost my balance and my board shot out from under me. I must’ve landed on one foot and then fell onto my back and hit my head on the ground. Fortunately I was wearing a helmet, but I felt a shock when I hit and knew it was a bad fall. When I looked up I saw that while my righ foot felt like it was going straight up it was actually twisted off to the side. I knew something bad had happened.

I started waving to some of the kids and eventually started yelling “I NEED HELP!”. One of the owners came in and took a quick look and went to call an ambulance. The pain in my foot was a throbbing numbness and not a sharp intense pain. Some kids came over and asked if I was alright. Some of them asked things like “Is the bone sticking out?” and suggested I pull up my jeans to take a look. I told them “I don’t think I want to know.” One of the kids brought me my bag with my phone in it and I called my brother and my friend Nelson who I had plans with that night to tell them what’s up. I almost tweeted the incident but didn’t want my parents to to see it and start worrying prematurely.

The ambulance arrived and they put me on a stretcher and brought me to the ambulance. The woman told me that when they were called they were told they were picking up “an eldery gentleman”! The brought me to the hospital and took me into the emergency room. I met a bunch of nurses and doctors. I kept pointing out the image on my board to them and ended up asking one of them to take a picture of me with it:

Broken Ankle

“At least he has a sense of humour about it,” the woman from the ambulance said.

The x-rays showed that I had discloated my foot and broken both bones in my right ankle. I ended up having to get my foot “re-set”, which they thankfully knocked me out for. I was afraid it was going to be that scene in the movies where somebody dislocates something and the person who fixes it puts a stick in their mouth and says “This is going to hurt like hell! One… Two… SNAP!”

When I woke up my brother and John where there. I was really groggy for a while but eventually came out of it. John kindly took my car from the skatepark to his place and my brother stayed late into the evening. Around 8:30 I went into surgery where they put some screws and plates in my ankle. I was knocked out for that as well. I spent the night at the hospital, got horrible sleep and waited around most of Sunday for the Physical Therapist to come show me how to use crutches and evaluate wether I was in good enough shape to go home. He gave me the okay and left the hospital around 7:30pm.

The hospital was Good Samaritan Hospital in Suffern and was a very nice place, other than the anesthesiologist who walked right against my foot to which I had to yell “EXCUSE ME!” for him to pay attention. All the nurses were really great and attentive.

So I’m going to be in a cast and on crutches for at least 6 weeks. I’ll probably be doing lots of telecommuting to work during that time. I don’t know that I will jump back into skateboarding when I’m healed up, but I’m glad I took a stab at something I really wanted to try and got a high out of doing it.

Comes a time when
You can’t judge no more
Go out shopping
Can’t see the store

I can’t believe that
We’re really all good
One of us has gone
Where they never should

Comes a time when
You really can’t judge
Should go walking
You don’t even budge

I can’t believe how
Far we have gone
One of us has
not come along

Get up and tell the sun
That you don’t feel love
Get up and tell the sun
That you don’t feel love

How long can you
Keep circling round?
Like paris, texas
’til she found out

- nada surf