ClubNinja
06-11-2003, 03:18 PM
This topic is probably going to seem a little odd, but stick with me. I'd like to think I'm not the only one who's had these thoughts ;)
What really prompted this was the recent topic surrounding Air Raid for the 2600. It's still a cart that very few people have gotten their hands on, and most never will. It's also a release that still raises many questions. Who/what really was Men-O-Vision? How many carts are there? Does Uncle Bill have hundreds of these in his garage? Etc. Anyway, I started poking around on the RGVC archives for mentions of Air Raid, but soon started reading loads of old threads. Of course, we've probably all done this, but this is first time I felt like I "missed" those days. This is where I may stop making sense.
Many of the posts made in the early/mid 90s seem pretty naive compared to those of today's "veteran" collectors. A few folks were trying to make sense of the Imagic games re-released in Activision cases. Some others were convinced that a reference to the Atari 2800 must have been a typo. Stuff like that. It made me miss being new to the scene. I remember thinking that Chase the Chuckwagon was the rarest of the rare. I thought that Intellivisions were the most obscure machines ever produced. I was certain that I struck gold the day I found a loose Kung Fu Master cart. I had no idea what Mythicon was (and in that respect, I was surely better off!) Now, I can name every title that was released for the 2600 under any company name. Every stack of carts I find at a flea market is just the same old stuff. I find myself getting cynical about hunting for games - a drastic change from my wide-eyed excitement several years back.
It's not that I don't enjoy the hobby, the hunt, and the gaming. It's just entirely *different* now. Reading about Air Raid recently has been a refreshing experience. The whole mystery that once surrounded all the old games still lingers over that one cart, at least. It's nice.
So, anybody else ever pine for the days when you didn't know any better? When Laser Blast was just as exciting as Eli's Ladder to learn about and dream of finding?
What really prompted this was the recent topic surrounding Air Raid for the 2600. It's still a cart that very few people have gotten their hands on, and most never will. It's also a release that still raises many questions. Who/what really was Men-O-Vision? How many carts are there? Does Uncle Bill have hundreds of these in his garage? Etc. Anyway, I started poking around on the RGVC archives for mentions of Air Raid, but soon started reading loads of old threads. Of course, we've probably all done this, but this is first time I felt like I "missed" those days. This is where I may stop making sense.
Many of the posts made in the early/mid 90s seem pretty naive compared to those of today's "veteran" collectors. A few folks were trying to make sense of the Imagic games re-released in Activision cases. Some others were convinced that a reference to the Atari 2800 must have been a typo. Stuff like that. It made me miss being new to the scene. I remember thinking that Chase the Chuckwagon was the rarest of the rare. I thought that Intellivisions were the most obscure machines ever produced. I was certain that I struck gold the day I found a loose Kung Fu Master cart. I had no idea what Mythicon was (and in that respect, I was surely better off!) Now, I can name every title that was released for the 2600 under any company name. Every stack of carts I find at a flea market is just the same old stuff. I find myself getting cynical about hunting for games - a drastic change from my wide-eyed excitement several years back.
It's not that I don't enjoy the hobby, the hunt, and the gaming. It's just entirely *different* now. Reading about Air Raid recently has been a refreshing experience. The whole mystery that once surrounded all the old games still lingers over that one cart, at least. It's nice.
So, anybody else ever pine for the days when you didn't know any better? When Laser Blast was just as exciting as Eli's Ladder to learn about and dream of finding?