NCHEG Welcomes Videotopia to Strong
Prior to the museum opening of Videotopia, I was assigned to “test” the vintage arcade games that were arriving as part of the exhibit. That’s right—I got paid to play arcade games for the better part of a week. I know what you are thinking, but this is research. At least that’s what I keep telling everyone.
It’s hard work navigating virtual asteroid fields, battling predatory insects, and saving the planet from pixilated alien invaders, but someone had to ensure the games were running properly. It is all in a day’s work at NCHEG. And the best part is, I had an unlimited stash of tokens to play everything from Space Invaders to Robotron: 2084 to Virtua Racing.
As NCHEG curator, I found it both fascinating and informative to play a number of the culturally significant games that predated my own gaming experience, including Computer Space, the first coin-operated arcade game. I even got to play a round of Pong against NCHEG Director J.P. Dyson during an interview with a Russian television station. He won, but my pride wasn’t damaged too badly because Pong—or at least the Atari home version I remember playing—was never one of my favorites growing up.
Now had he beaten me on Galaga, Joust, or Atari’s vector classic Star Wars, that would have been a different story. These were the games I prided myself on having mastered in my youth, so it was with great satisfaction that I piloted my X-wing fighter down the trench and destroyed the sinister Death Star with my very first token some twenty years after I’d last played the game.
As much as I enjoyed battling Darth Vader and the dark side of “The Force,” that was nothing compared to my addiction to Atari Games’ Gauntlet. I loved this game. For those not familiar with it, Gauntlet is a simultaneous four-player game where each player controls a different character (Warrior, Wizard, Valkyrie, Elf), each with distinct skills. While the game has no set objective, players navigate a mazelike dungeon, engaging in close-quarter combat along the way with hordes of ghosts and demons. The key to success was cooperation among players, and I remember lengthy strategy sessions with my friends as we waited in line—often a long line—for our turn to play at a local mall’s arcade.
Playing Gauntlet again certainly took me back to my younger years (all I needed was a jean jacket, plastic comb for my back pocket, and a Duran Duran cassette to complete the experience), but Videotopia goes beyond the nostalgic in its effort to highlight significant games in the video-game industry and explain the context in which they were created. It’s truly a fun and informative experience.
Now, you’ll have to excuse me. Each day I head down to the exhibit gallery with a handful of tokens to conduct an additional round of research. I’m off now to try to break my high score on Paperboy.

I went a couple of weeks ago and had a blast. My kids enjoyed it as well, but not as much as me. It’s like a time machine. All those old games all in one place. When I started playing Donkey Kong I began to smell pizza and realized that it was smell association because I used to play that game all the time in a pizza place back in the day. That was really cool but weird. I got the high score on Astroids, and that’s after a 25 year break from the last time I played that game. Played Paperboy, Donkey Kong Jr., Pac Man, Mrs. Pac Man, Space Invaders, Centipede, and a few more. I really wanted to play Joust, but in keeping with the “Video Arcade” theme that was out of order. The only new experience I had was feeding a ten dollar bill into the token machine. That was something I had never done before. Then of course my kids took most of them because they suck at those old school games and burn through tokens like it’s their job. I plan to go back at some point on my own. If you grew up in the 80s then you have to go check it out. The only thing missing is some classic 80s music playing over a sound system.
This place was amazing. We snuck out a couple of weekends ago and spent a few hours plunking quarters into the machines. First time in 5 years I come back to the Rochester – and it’s to play video games.
I love the old school video games from the 80′s. The beginning of the end for me was double dragon and Mortal Kombat as these games weren’t as creative as others and too many joystick/button combinations. I remember going to Putt Putt on Super Saturday’s and there would be a new game to play every week.
Anyways, you can turn your PC or iphone (not working on v3.0 yet) into an arcade emulator for free using MAME (Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator)
http://mamedev.org/
Get ROMS here:
http://www.romnation.net/srv/roms/mame.html
read the post, stopped in, and the games are way cool. most are a little before my time but wicked fun to play. a few of teh old ones were a little hard to get. the classics like pac man and stuff were great cause i never played them in the arcade just on a computer so that was fun. you have a cool job bro. enjoy
I have visited the Museum every weekend except 2 since the exhibit opened up with at least one of my children. It’s a great feeling to have your 6 year old daughter want to visit the Museum to play these ‘retro’ games that I enjoyed when I was young. Every game she likes happens to be the same games I loved as a child: Crystal Castles, Q*Bert, Dig Dug, Tapper, Frogger, and Ms. Pac-Man. I have to admit, I’m hooked on the trivia machine. I’m very pleased that the Strong National Museum of Play brought Videotopia to Rochester. I can’t wait to see what NCHEG has in store for the future.
Hey i just visited your site for the first time and i really liked it, i bookmarked it and will be back