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My brother and his son have been amassing the game consoles. When his daughter moved out, they converted the bedroom into a tacky game room. I don’t have a separate game room, using our tv family area as the gaming center, which I limit to the Wii and 360. So, I’m showing his instead, which includes these consoles:
- Atari Pong Bentley Compu-Vision [1983, one of the last pong consoles made]
- Intellivision
- Sega Genesis
- Nintendo 64
- Dreamcast
- Gamecube
- PS2
- Xbox
- Xbox 360 [downstairs]
- Wii
The video doesn’t serve the room well because it’s pretty comfortable. Their Xbox 360 is connected to the tv downstairs, but my 17-year-old nephew and his friends spend most of their time either in this upstairs room or in their computer room, where they have 3 computers set up for LAN gaming. Earlier in the year, after completing a tough school project, they played Modern Warfare and Halo for a while and then asked about playing on the computers. His friends had never played Diablo II or Starcraft. For the rest of the year, his friends came over regularly to play those older PC games. Several times, he had game parties with friends gaming on the PCs and upstairs [often with Starfox]. My brother and sister-in-law got into the game nights, cooking hamburgers or whatever for the kids.
I’ve been trying to get my son’s friends together regularly for gaming, both board and video games. It is a fun time because, not only is it nostalgic, the kids’ excitement is infectious. When we visited my brother’s family a while back, my kids loved playing Starfox, although it was difficult, especially for my daughter. New multiplayer games are fun, but some of those older multiplayer games have a visceral experience that makes them great even among HD games.
The great thing about all those consoles is so many excellent games to play. Tired of StarFox 64? Then play Champions of Norrath or TimeSplitters 2 on the PS2. Or Star Wars Episode I: Jedi Power Battles or Toy Commander on the Dreamcast. Or Bomberman Blast and Mario Kart Wii. Those boys even fire up Pong on occasion.

3 comments ↓
Despite the lack of both an Amiga and a Spectrum, it’s a fantastic gaming room. wish i had one.
Yeah, we talked about which Amiga to get . . . the 500 for its popularity and history or the 1200 for compatibility. At the time, both seemed to tough to find for a good price.
I really suggest the A1200, as the AGA chipset got itself more than a few classics.
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