The Rise of Retro Gaming During Covid

The retro gaming market has gone crazy over the past year or so and it's been interesting to investigate why this has been the case. The global pandemic left much of the world stuck at home and many looked to the past for familiar comforts such as classic telly, films and video games.

My old mancave was full to the brim of comics, graphic novels, video game vinyl soundtracks and stuffies. It’s my nostalgia den!

So why is the past such a siren, especially when things are going wrong? Well, for many the pandemic caused fear, anxiety and discomfort, and so they looked to find something that would help them; nostalgia. Nostalgia is a sentimental often rose-tinted look at the past. This process helped many to deal with the difficulties of the situation here and now, acting almost as a comforter during these unprecedented times; they offer secure memories about better times. The Rule of Drift is the process whereby we create a cohesive whole by being selective with our information and past memories. For example, we imagine the long summers that seemed to stretch on forever, playing football in the park from morning till evening only going home for lunch and staying home for dinner, the hurricane of '86 where we went to the park and gathered hundreds of fallen conkers to play at school etc. It seems like a single cohesive timeline rather than the confusing hodgepodge that life actually is where we spent rainy Sundays playing Monopoly at home, being bored and fighting with siblings. Nostalgia is a powerful thing and we are selective with what we choose to remember and so, spending hours playing games offered many the comfort they sought. In the gallery below are some of my comfort purchases which reminded me of yesteryear.

I've been into gaming for nearly all my life and, whilst in my younger years I sold my collection to buy the upgraded consoles and games, ever since the N64, PS2 and GameCube era, I've kept my favourites games. About 10 years ago, I got into the retro game collecting scene and bought much of the older games I had liked in my youth for the Mega Drive, Master System and Gameboy, as these were the systems I most associated with my youth. Needless to say, I've got a pretty solid collection of games I've kept and loved but I've had no desire to be a hardcore collector and have every game on a console system or have a complete set of anything; I collect the things I love. But, over the past year some of the prices have doubled, tripled or even more.

My Streets of Rage 1 and 2 mint in box with booklets have jumped in price due to the interest caused with the release of Streets of Rage 4 last year but even the games that haven't been in the spotlight recently have shot up, and many of those aren't even rare or limited in print quantity!
And don't get me started on the mini consoles, my £59 SNES Mini is currently available for about £250 and that's not even at the top end of the scale! Scalpers are definitely price gouging here but there has been genuinely huge interest in the mini consoles, (except the PS One Classic as the games on that were shite) as it was the most affordable and practical way to enjoy retro games on the new television setups.

I did make a retro purchase (kinda) when I bought the Bubble Bobble Mini Arcade Machine but I would have bought that at any time, irrespective of lockdown. I was just lucky it came out then to quench that nostalgia thirst. There is great power in nostalgia, but a rose tinted view of the past doesn't disguise the fact that tastes and things have changed. Many of the gaming norms from days past feel positively antiquated by today's standards. Now, I love Bubble Bobble as it scratches that itch and is pretty evergreen in its gaming loop but I wonder how often Altered Beast was turned on before being swiftly switched out for something more playable this year. I know scalpers have affected the market somewhat but this is more than that. The market is too huge for scalpers to affect it so greatly so I think is genuinely is a lot of people either trying to recapture that memory or fondness of past times or trying to share their nostalgia with their children, who they've had to spend an inordinate amount of time with this past 18 months. I know I've shared Bubble Bobble and the Mysterious Cities of Gold with the girls so far and they've loved this 'Daddy-daughter' time.

I'm not sure if the retro gaming market will balance out or if this is the new normal but I don't care really. I'll keep buying what I like and won't pay the premium to keep up with the Joneses. With the London Gaming Market opening up this weekend, I'll be interested to see what the prices are like as they were always at a premium anyways.

I wonder if any of the vendors will be able to say:

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London Gaming Market Hits the Spot

Today was the first of hopefully many more London Gaming Markets, which was held at the Royal National Hotel.
I have been to the Hotel before on a few occasions when they used to do the Comic Expo but this was a new thing entirely. I expected it to be busy but oh boy was it rammed!
There were people of all ages and backgrounds and it was heartening to see so many female gamers, a high percentage of gamers are females bur not they are not always present in events so it was great to see such a large female turnout here.
The Market itself took the space of 2 halls, with one focused on retro gaming and systems and the other more focused on board and card games like Magic or Dungeons and Dragons.
The main hall was packed tight with sooo much stuff to buy, it wasn't all just games either. There were perler bead stalls with amazing 8 and 16-bit art pieces, t-shirts, fanzines and magazines.

There were also many systems set up around the edge of the hall so people could play for free including Micro Machines 2, Goldeneye, Mega Bomberman, Mario Kart on the SNES and R-type. My cousin and I played R-type as we have fond memories of this game from the arcade and Master System. It was great to see lots of children playing on the games that their parents probably played in their youth.
To be honest if I didn't have priorities (family) and a spending limit (£80) I could have bought so much more but as it was I bought Super Mario World and Allstars on one cartridge for the SNES, a see-through Gameboy Colour for my wife's nephew (I know he was interested in getting one when I saw him a few weeks ago to play Pokemon) and a signed Sonic 2 art print by the game artist who drew the iconic image in 1993, Duncan Gutteridge.
As a whole the Gaming Market was brilliant,
It was all very busy and polite, lots of different games and systems represented... But I still had no luck in finding Thunderforce V on the PS1; my white whale. I could eBay it but I like the thrill of finding it in the wild. Oh well, maybe at the next Gaming Market!

The End Of An Era (Sort of)

People say that fatherhood changes you and it really does. My wife and I were blessed with a beautiful baby girl 7 weeks ago and it's been non-stop, as well as having the baby we moved out to a new house in Kent and have settled in. Settling in means unpacking, organising furniture and the services (including dropping down to just 3MB broadband- eeek!) and sorting out the man-cave. My old man-cave was a wonder to behold; full of comics, graphic novels, many retro and modern computer systems and a plethora of old games. The new place we have moved to is bigger and has 3 bedrooms, however the bedrooms are smaller overall than the 2 bed place we used to rent. So tough decisions had to be made and whilst keeping the man-cave I've had to downsize, the DVDs and my old retro gaming systems (Amstrad CPC 464, SNES, Megadrive, Master System, Xbox, PS1 and XBox 360 RRD version) have gone into the loft, it reminded me of the final scene from Raiders of the Lost Ark where the Ark is kept in some warehouse, left forever more (until the crappy 4th Indy film but no-one counts that).... so in short, end of an era sort of!

In the loft are the Megadrive (Genesis), SNES, Master System, PS1, PS2, Xbox and Amstrad CPC 464. So long and thanks for all the fish!

Keeper of Classic Gaming

As a teacher and a parent many feel that it is my role to impart my knowledge and wisdom to the younger generation. However I got to a-thinking, apart from being older than those I teach what gives me the right to feel that what I say is correct or the choices I present are the correct ones for my wards? Rather shouldn't I help to educate the children so that they can make informed choices independently? These are profound questions which came from a very 'unprofound' place; gaming. What games should I introduce to my nephew as he gained an interest in gaming? My brother asked me to introduce his son to gaming as he had shown a keen interest in the PSP he had been playing.

Now being the Keeper of the Gateway to Classic Gaming, who am I to decide what games he should play? Of course I want him to experience stone-cold classics like Pacman, Sonic and Super Mario Bros. but maybe he should have a chance to experience gaming organically. This could include 'bad' games, like Dragons Lair on the NES or ET on the Atari.

In my formative years I played lots of 'bad' games but isn't taste objective? One only has to look online to find difference of opinion on just about anything. A prime example would be Deadly Premonition, I absolutely loved this game and in my opinion it was one of the best games of the last generation however in much of the gaming media the game was slated for being shonky and awkward. It was one of the most divisive games of the last generation garnering 10/10 on Destructoid whilst also gaining 2/10 on IGN.

Children are explorers, they like to find things out for themselves and decide what they like and don't like. I am not the Keeper of the Gateway of Classic Gaming, rather I am an observer and adviser. If the children ask me what games to play I can advise but I should not impose my tastes on them... let them explore and find their own interests organically.

Retron 5 Review

The Retron 5 has been a long time coming to the UK. Initially planned to be released in early 2014 the clone console was delayed, when the initial shipment was produced the machines went to America to fulfill orders there, unsettling those in the UK. And so we arrive, a year later than expected... But was it worth the wait?

First the preliminaries, the Retron 5 is a clone console which means it plays original hardware using emulation.
The machine has HDMI output and it is excellent, the picture clarity is superb and whilst it wont match the costlier upscalers it does a darned fine job making your old game gleam like they have never gleamed before.
The extensive menus also allow you to tinker with the visuals and add filters which significantly change the look of the game and you can screen capture images.

However its trump card is that it has 6 pad ports for SNES, Mega drive and NES controllers, for many this is the main attraction of the machine. This is just as well as the machine looks like a hideous toaster and comes packed in with a horrible controller which is best used to just navigate the menus.

Remapping joypad buttons is a treat for the games that had the jump button not keyed on for optimum ease and it also lets you save your progress at any time. For the Gameboy games you can change the screen colours and save your progress from cartridges with batteries (brilliant for saving your Pokemon progress from the mid 90s whose battery packs are dying, however this doesn't work at the moment but has been promised as a firmware update).
The machine has an SD card slot and it will only be a matter of time before some hackers figure out a way of allowing you to play the ROMs you want but may not have hard copies of.

So would I recommend the machine? In a word yes! Even though it is quite costly (£129.99) the Retron 5 is a space saving smart solution to playing your old games in the high fidelity you remember from your childhood but even better.

I have started a Retro Games Club in my school and we have been playing a different game each week. We started off with Street Fighter 2 on the SNES, then moved onto Golden Axe on the Megadrive and both games looked stunning on the HD 52 inch screen (for the article on this click here). This is what the machine is best for, not to replace your old original systems but to offer a way to play the games you loved in your youth in the simplest possible way,  As a soon to be father I want to make sure my child has access to the games of my youth to appreciate modern gaming. I look forward to sharing my passion for retro games without it taking over my living room and life.