Between the less than ideal lighting and the huge crowds photography wasn't easy. Here is what I managed to pull off. Most of it isn't the Japanese 16-bit stuff people here, including me, are primarily interested in, but I've kind of...seen all that stuff. Its the computers and pins that were the most foreign to me. I've never once see a Macintosh XL or a Bally Astrocade before. (Note: Wizard of War on the Bally makes the 2600 seem like SUCH a piece of shit, I tell you). Its truly a privilege to be able to play with this kind of gear as much as you want without having to be the poor SOB that actually has to keep it up and working.
Yeah, Atari made a video phone 30 years ago. I thought you knew!
That's a Next there, deep in the shadows of its own absolute blackness. The monitor is still hella slick.
Here is one half...
...and here is the other...of an all Power PC iMac Quake LAN set-up. This was one of the best ideas at the show, IMHO, along with the "Light Gun Room" and splitting Bomberman SS onto two TVs.
RAD.
The unessentialness that is Jag-fest.
Saucy!
This pinball machine has more technology in it than the first three decades of video gaming. Sadly, I did not get to play it.
Yet another arcade section. I didn't even notice this little one until almost closing time on Saturday.
Its very dark in the "80s room". Sorry.
An actual video game.
An actual MoDem.
Television for intelligent people (but not intelligent enough to buy a Colecovision, heh).
Yes we Super A 'Can.
Harmony! (The X68k was running Vampire Killer).
WTF is this thing?