by Flack » Sun Mar 07, 2010 9:03 pm
My friends from Lawton (the guys who owned the arcade that burned down last year) were in talks with Peter at one point to either buy or co-locate his machines. It fell through at some point -- I wasn't privy to the details so I'm not sure what happened. All I know is, it was a possibility at one point and then it never happened.
I've never been there personally, but Peter's place looks awesome in every picture I've seen. Still, taking over that many machines at once would be a nightmare. I mean, it's all good as long as they're all running, but like I said in my book, if you want to own arcade games then you have four options: learn how to work on them, make friends with people who work on them, get ready to pay people to work on them, or enjoy your new broken games. No matter how good of condition games are, you're still dealing with things that are 20-30 years old. They all fail, eventually. I don't know about your games Jonsey, but I don't think I own one that I haven't had to do at least SOMETHING to.
By the way, not to derail but in case you didn't see it, I went down to check out the warehouse of the guys that owned the arcade that burned down. (That was an awful sentence.) Check it out; at the end of the page is a link to about 100 pix of their machines that I took on Saturday.
http://www.robohara.com/?p=2025
My friends from Lawton (the guys who owned the arcade that burned down last year) were in talks with Peter at one point to either buy or co-locate his machines. It fell through at some point -- I wasn't privy to the details so I'm not sure what happened. All I know is, it was a possibility at one point and then it never happened.
I've never been there personally, but Peter's place looks awesome in every picture I've seen. Still, taking over that many machines at once would be a nightmare. I mean, it's all good as long as they're all running, but like I said in my book, if you want to own arcade games then you have four options: learn how to work on them, make friends with people who work on them, get ready to pay people to work on them, or enjoy your new broken games. No matter how good of condition games are, you're still dealing with things that are 20-30 years old. They all fail, eventually. I don't know about your games Jonsey, but I don't think I own one that I haven't had to do at least SOMETHING to.
By the way, not to derail but in case you didn't see it, I went down to check out the warehouse of the guys that owned the arcade that burned down. (That was an awful sentence.) Check it out; at the end of the page is a link to about 100 pix of their machines that I took on Saturday.
http://www.robohara.com/?p=2025