by Ice Cream Jonsey » Thu Apr 03, 2008 12:11 am
Oh, it will rain blood. It will rain blood.
As some of you may be aware, the Milker and I did a viral video about the Polybius urban legend. We did that in, hoooooooooah, say June of last year. I actually got the Polybius cabinet at the end of April, during the Rocky Mountain Pinball Showdown.
It was a magical time. Jon Exidy, who is an amazing collector with probably a hundred games in his basement, sold it to me before the Showdown - it was originally a JAMMA game called "Egg Venture." I don't know anything about Egg Venture - however! The control panel for Egg Venture says, in big, dramatic letters, that:
YOU ARE NOW ENTERING THE ADVENTUROUS WORLD OF EGG!
But what is JAMMA, you may be asking?
Okay, you know how each arcade game is essentially a custom-built computer designed to run a single game? For instance, you can't switch out parts between Asteroids and Donkey Kong, and either of those and Dance Dance Revolution. In the beginning, the arcade games really were unique.
Well, one day, someone realized that it would be pretty convienent to have a standard. So you can take out a printed circuit board for one game, drop in a new PCB, and more-or-less be assured that the process would work. This standard is called JAMMA. And there were hundreds, if no thousands, of games that were created on the JAMMA standard.
Let's say you have a Mr. Do! cabinet, and people at the pizza parlor got sick of Mr. Do!. "You could never get sick of that much Do!" I hear you saying. And you're right! I couldn't! But there is a serious discrepancy here, because it's been about twenty years since the last Mr. Do! game, and they didn't exactly stop making video games in that time. Since Mr. Do! was a JAMMA game, you can swap it for a different JAMMA game, so long as you have the new PCB!
By the 90s, most arcade games were of the JAMMA standard.
Anyway!
While digging around the inside of my cab, I noticed that the goddamn thing has a JAMMA connector in it! And it appears to be working just fine! Couple that with the 48-in-1 board! The 48-in-1 is a circuit board that plays 48 different games. Some I already have, some I know are horrible, some I don't know about, and some I desperately want. Let's organize them as such:
Games I want in the 48-in-1
Donkey Kong, Donkey Kong Jr., Galaga, Frogger, Galaxian, Dig Dug, Galaga3, Ladybug, Millipede, BurgerTime, Jr. Pac-Man, Mappy, 1942, Centipede, Phoenix, Time Pilot, Super Cobra, Super Breakout, New Rally X, Arkanoid, Qix, Juno First, Xevious, Mr. Do's Castle, Scramble, Bomb Jack, 1943, Zaxxon
Games I already have
Pac-Man*, Ms. Pac-Man*, Super Pac-Man*, Space Invaders*, Pengo*, Gyruss, Mr. Do!, Pac-Man Plus*
* = thanks to the 96-in-1 kit
Games that are fucking pants
Donkey Kong 3, Dig Dug 2,
Games I'd never heard of
Crush, Tank Battalion, Hustler, Space Panic, Moon Cresta, Pinball Action, Shao-Lin's Road, King & Balloon, Van-Van Car, Amidar
So that's pretty good. There are several games in the 48-in-1 that I am LEGITMATELY crazy about, mainly Donkey Kong, Qix and BurgerTime, to keep it to three. Centipede will be weird with a joystick, but that's OK. The best part is, people from the KLOV forum are doing a group purchase of the 48-in-1, and getting a board is seriously cheap because of it!
So, further bulletins when it comes in!
Oh, it will rain blood. It [i]will[/i] rain blood.
As some of you may be aware, the Milker and I did a viral video about the Polybius urban legend. We did that in, hoooooooooah, say June of last year. I actually got the Polybius cabinet at the end of April, during the [b]Rocky Mountain Pinball Showdown[/b].
It was a magical time. Jon Exidy, who is an amazing collector with probably a hundred games in his basement, sold it to me before the Showdown - it was originally a JAMMA game called "Egg Venture." I don't know anything about Egg Venture - however! The control panel for Egg Venture says, in big, dramatic letters, that:
[b]YOU ARE NOW ENTERING THE ADVENTUROUS WORLD OF EGG![/b]
But what is [i]JAMMA[/i], you may be asking?
Okay, you know how each arcade game is essentially a custom-built computer designed to run a single game? For instance, you can't switch out parts between Asteroids and Donkey Kong, and either of those and Dance Dance Revolution. In the beginning, the arcade games really were unique.
Well, one day, someone realized that it would be pretty convienent to have a standard. So you can take out a printed circuit board for one game, drop in a new PCB, and more-or-less be assured that the process would work. This standard is called JAMMA. And there were hundreds, if no thousands, of games that were created on the JAMMA standard.
Let's say you have a Mr. Do! cabinet, and people at the pizza parlor got sick of Mr. Do!. "You could never get sick of that much Do!" I hear you saying. And you're right! [b]I[/b] couldn't! But there is a serious discrepancy here, because it's been about twenty years since the last Mr. Do! game, and they didn't exactly stop making video games in that time. Since Mr. Do! was a JAMMA game, you can swap it for a different JAMMA game, so long as you have the new PCB!
By the 90s, most arcade games were of the JAMMA standard.
Anyway!
While digging around the inside of my cab, I noticed that the goddamn thing has a JAMMA connector in it! And it appears to be working just fine! Couple that with the [b]48-in-1[/b] board! The 48-in-1 is a circuit board that plays 48 different games. Some I already have, some I know are horrible, some I don't know about, and some I desperately want. Let's organize them as such:
[i]Games I want in the 48-in-1[/i]
Donkey Kong, Donkey Kong Jr., Galaga, Frogger, Galaxian, Dig Dug, Galaga3, Ladybug, Millipede, BurgerTime, Jr. Pac-Man, Mappy, 1942, Centipede, Phoenix, Time Pilot, Super Cobra, Super Breakout, New Rally X, Arkanoid, Qix, Juno First, Xevious, Mr. Do's Castle, Scramble, Bomb Jack, 1943, Zaxxon
[i]Games I already have[/i]
Pac-Man*, Ms. Pac-Man*, Super Pac-Man*, Space Invaders*, Pengo*, Gyruss, Mr. Do!, Pac-Man Plus*
* = thanks to the 96-in-1 kit
[i]Games that are fucking pants[/i]
Donkey Kong 3, Dig Dug 2,
[i]Games I'd never heard of[/i]
Crush, Tank Battalion, Hustler, Space Panic, Moon Cresta, Pinball Action, Shao-Lin's Road, King & Balloon, Van-Van Car, Amidar
So that's pretty good. There are several games in the 48-in-1 that I am LEGITMATELY crazy about, mainly Donkey Kong, Qix and BurgerTime, to keep it to three. Centipede will be weird with a joystick, but that's OK. The best part is, people from the KLOV forum are doing a group purchase of the 48-in-1, and getting a board is seriously cheap because of it!
So, further bulletins when it comes in!