- Joined
- Mar 3, 2013
I'm on the East coast, and for the longest time you'd only ever get games in Dixons or Woolworths. We didn't actually get a proper computer game shop until 1998, and even then it didn't last long. Electronics boutique (later became game) opened up soon after and got a Gamestation years later, and yeah, they has a cabinet with retro and odd stuff in. They were also considerably more generous when it came to trade ins, which was another thing Game fucked up when they took over, the shops essentially became another Game store with metal music being played and neckbeards and "alternative" looking girls behind the counter.Where are you from? I'm from Paisley and we only ever had one decent import shop which was Computer Genius on New Street. That shop had a Jap Mega Drive way before it was released here and one quiet day they let us have a shot and we got to play one of the Thunderforce games and Rambo 3. My mate got his SNES on the day it was released here (around Spring 1992) and the first game he bought for it was SF2 which cost £60 and £20 for the converter (it was a US import) £80 for the lot was pretty good considering that at the time some of the importers advertising in Mean Machines wanted £100 and that was before the cost of your converter.
Paisley was quite a handy town to live in then because it was only 10 minutes on the train to Glasgow and there were some good importers there. G Force on Union Street was quite popular but there was a really great wee import shop in the Savoy Centre that we used to visit quite often. I got my Jap Final Fight there with its great box art and fully uncensored (I couldn't believe they took the girls Roxy and Poison out the western releases).
It was around 1993 (Super Streetfighter was available on import at the time) we took the SNES up to the Solid Gold Exchange Club for its 50/60Hz switch. My mate's cousin had a US SNES and after trying out SF2 in all its 60Hz glory the PAL release was horrendous and pretty unplayable.
Mean Machines was an awesome magazine and if they highly rated a game then it was a game you must have. They fucked up by splitting it in to individual Sega and Nintendo magazines (and messed up the format) that really bugged me because I had both Sega and Nintendo systems. I started buying Super Play and on the strength of one of their reviews I bought Bart's Nightmare (rated 92%). I'd saved for ages the £45 for a new game and Bart's Nightmare was total shit. I took it up to Glasgow the next week and swapped it for Dino City, I think Mean Machines would have gave Bart's Nightmare a score in the 70s.
I know what you mean about Ebay. I'm registered with Retro Gamer Magazine's message forum and when buying rare stuff on Ebay you are up against guys from there who have serious buying power so getting a good price on anything now is pretty rare.
Do you remember when Gamestation first opened up? My local Gamestation had a great selection of old cartridges but when Game took it over they ruined a great wee chain.
If you can get a US SNES for a decent price you should snap it up. Remember to keep a good quality CRT telly for it though, old console games look really shitty on modern tellys.
They actually lost my business completely one day when I was buying something and the assistant was very aggressively trying to push me towards buying one of their second hand copies instead which was only £5 cheaper, I eventually shut her up by saying "I'd rather support the industry" As a shop, they didn't offer anything that any other store that sold games offered, so I was free to take my business elsewhere at absolutely no cost to myself.
Like I say, we didn't have much money growing up, so until I was nine or ten, the only exposure I had to gamess was at friends houses, but even then I was fascinated, I wasn't even that fussed about having a shot, and would happily watch them play. We got a Master System in the early 90's when everybody else already had a SNES or Megadrive and only ever really played new games when we swapped with friends or saved up our birthday money, and one year I saved up my Christmas and birthday money to buy myself a Game boy, which led to arguably the most important event for me as a fledgeling gamer. I borrowed a copy of Zelda, Link's awakening from a friend, and even at the age of 13 or so I was blown away by the sheer quality of the game and how it exceeded the incredibly limited technology of the console. To this day, I believe it stands as one of the finest examples of game design ever.
We couldn't afford the more modern consoles, but we still bought the gaming magazines, so we were really keyed into what's hot or not.
I still remember pouring over the pages of Sega magazine, absolutely enamoured with the screenshots of Guardian Heroes on the Saturn, dreaming of playing it.
A couple of years later, some family friends gave us their old Atari ST with a shit ton of discs, then a couple of years after that when our finances were a bit better, I got my mates old Mega Drive. My brother got a SNES at some point, I got ahold of my Saturn in 98 (even though I knew it was dead in the water), then my brother got a Playstation and an N64 as he was at uni by this time. We'd finally "caught up" with everybody else and I was there for the release of the seminal Ocarina of Time. I've been really fortunate to have been exposed to almost everything the industry had to offer, and wasn't restricted to just one company.
I still look back on that time with enormous fondness, being a gamer in the late 90's when Squaresoft were absolutely at the top of their game was something else.