
Shot with Canon PowerShot A610 at 2008-10-11
GREAT PHOTO, JONES. Yeah, I know. I honestly cannot shoot arcade games without the flash.
Anyway, I picked this up a couple weeks ago and in trying to find info about the battery issue, I started remembering all sorts of this game from my youth.
1) I had the Q*bert piggy bank. Had totally forgotten about this, but yes, I did have it.
2) I had the Q*bert watch, which would let you play an LCD version of Q*bert on the watch's face. I do remember owning that. I also remembering the time would reset to 12:00 (and flush the high score) if all four buttons were pressed at the same time. This seemed to happen roughly every twenty minutes that I carried it around. I'd probably be wearing it to this day otherwise, so maybe this was for the best.
3) I did remember the Q*bert TV show.
4) I still have the Q*bert plush stuffed animal. That made it to Colorado, and it's on top of the actual game right now.
I had forgotten how amazing the sound is in the game. MAME never bothered to emulate what it does when you first turn it on, which is shout, "HELLO, I AM TURNED ON!" It also will generate speech for Ugg, Wrong-way, Slick and Sam somewhat randomly. Slick and Sam (the green guys) remain the two FRIGGING cutest dudes in all of arcade game history, as far as I am concerned.
I also sat at a talk discussing Q*bert the first time I went to the Classic Gaming Expo, and it's been fun to read in various articles what was said at the panel - apparently, a co-worker of Warren Davis (the programmer) was sitting behind him as he worked, late one night. Rather than murder this interloper (Ron Waxman), as I would have done, he was okay with it.
The interloper says, "What if the tops of the cubes change color when he lands on them?" And at that point, the story goes, they knew they had a game. Awesome.
It was also going to be called "SNOTS AND BUGGERS" originally - @!#?@! was also thrown about, but nobody would know how to pronounce it. (Not an issue for me, personally, as I pronounced even Galaga wrong for like 20 years before being corrected.)