Heh yeah that would be great. I'd love a website with a comprehensive list of UK indie import shops from late 80's early 90's complete with pictures of the insides and display shelves
Yeah I would like to see pics from back then.
http://www.jammaplus.co.uk/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=46461&title=the-pc-engine-appreciation-thread
Nice I'll check it out.
When I used to visit Shekana on Tottenham Court Road it was essentially a small glass cabinet of games hidden at the back of an electronics shop full of hifi equipment.
Yeah.
The space in the shop they got for games did seem to get larger as the years went by, but still relativity a small part of the shop.
On that last note, did anyone else find themselves really drawn to the small form factor of the mini disc format when it first arrived? Like an extension of an existing fetish for hucards
I never got into mini disc myself but a lot of my friends had them. Were popular for recording DJ sets from your decks.
...notable exceptions to this were Video Game Centre in Bournemouth and the early incarnations of the Tottenham Court Exchange that went on to later become CEX, both of which where crazy places to walk into at the time. Raven Games always sticks in my mind as being the most impressive though, especially once the arcade cab was present (R-Type Leo anyone?).
The most impressive stores I remember were Machine Shack in Streatham and Computer Exchange in Notting Hill Gate in the early days.
But probably the no.1 as you said and we discussed earlier was when CEX first unveiled their "retro museum", with that wall of thousands of PC Engine games and thousands of other platform games too, that was just mental.
I wasn't keen on those 2 guys who ran Raven Games, so kind of spoilt the experience for me there.
I wanted DAT, too.
I didn't realise consumers bought DAT machines?? I thought they were only for studios to record music. I had a DAT machine as I used have a hardware studio. It cost me an absolute fortune at the time (like all the other gear did)
I had this model: