@@CaveyMoth that is the dumbest fucking "joke" anybody ever came up with. It also doesn't even make fucking sense. The whole goddamn thing is a double negative
According to Wikipedia the developer Dave Theurer suffered from nightmares in the midst of the cold war of US cities being nuked, so he got the idea for this game.
When I was informed about this, I have had the same dreams. Worst ones are when I see the flash in the horizon, and I realize my family is close enough to die, but I am not close enough to get to them. It is not fun, I can tell you.
Yeah. For me too especially serving in the West German army in the late 1980s. Worst day was when this pilot-less MIG entered West German air space and we tracked it via radar. Pure horror as nobody knew what will happen next.
Wikipedia has misconstruing those facts. Dave Theurer didn't get the idea for this game, he was tasked to create it by his boss, Steve Calfee, as one of the most talented lead programmers. But it was Atari's president of its arcade/coin-op division, Gene Lipkin, who actually came up with the idea for the game, after seeing a magazine advertisement depicting a radar screen with incoming missiles closing on a cityscape. They discussed and handed it off to Dave to work out the details. The nightmares come from Theurer's tireless work on the project over the next six months, he'd stay up for 3, 4 days working non-stop, consumed with the game, constantly trading off mechanics to get the player choice just right, the need to let cities be hit to survive further rounds, the initial personalization of the cities as the major population centers of California, and the general dread of nuclear confrontation between the superpowers.
Hey LGR, I used to repair arcade machines for a living. I'd be happy to answer any questions you may have about your missile command or any other arcade stuff you get curious about
I’m glad the CRT is in good condition. Lots of arcades don’t maintain the screens and they end up looking really sad after a while. The arcade on the Santa Monica pier was surprisingly unmaintained.
How does one 'maintain' a CRT? I know you can up the voltage on the guns to eek some life from them, but that just degrades them faster. Afaik, turning the house lights down is the best call, lifewise. No slight intended, id really like to know how you maintain a CRT, other than replacement (which can be hard to impossible)
arjovenzia You’re right that there isn’t too much you can do to stop inevitable wear, but there are definitely good practices to extend their lifetime. Even just degaussing the screen regularly, powering it off when not in use, and not displaying 100% static images really helps with screen burn and overall quality. I have heard that good color calibration can help wear the guns down more evenly over time, and I have heard something similar to what you said about higher voltages, I’ve known people that would run the tubes super hard for a brief period of time to “burn off” stuff but I’ve never done repairs that in depth.
@@arjovenzia Ensuring the proper voltage for one. A line conditioner wouldn't be a bad investment. These old machines use a fair bit of power. As for preserving it? Just use it sparingly and it should last for decades more. CRTs are built to last unlike LCDs.
A novel idea would be to use PIR sensors (Think security lights) on top of the machine that are tied into the CRTs power that way it powers on when a customer approaches the unit and off when they leave all while retaining flashy light and sounds.
Aivan, juurikin näin. Indeed, that's correct. 👍 Haven't thought that myself right away when I've read about Ataris game stuff but I've known about the special unit for a long time.
Remember once having the displeasure of playing a constantly-running-for-five-years-straight Galaga machine. The controls were hot, the coin slots were hot, the machine itself radiated 110 degree heat, but it had a specific competition switch setting that allowed the player to skip the formation sequence as well as give themselves an extra life once per level, and I got far with it. If the machine is still working and hasn't been reset yet, there's a good chance that my high score is still number one on the machine... *A S C 782300*
That's how it is with most of those older games, isn't it? There's no actual "end," the game just gets more and more difficult until it's unplayable and you immediately lose.
Aww that's awesome! When I was growing up, my dad used to fix pinball machines all the time, but I always hoped he'd get an arcade machine one day too, but he didn't! The one I remember the most was an unusual machine called Hyperball, that had two "guns" that shot the pinballs out at targets. It wasn't a classic pinball machine at all. It was SO loud, it was amazing. Even without the music on, the sound of the balls hitting the back was incredible! I was so lucky being able to grow up with things like that in my house... (I thought everyone had oscilloscopes in their dining room!) my dad was an electrical design engineer (now retired but still tinkering with stuff!), and he used to get his hands on the coolest things to repair and play with, and things that people would THROW AWAY because they were broken, he would fix and we could play with!! He used to fix classic Jukeboxes and stuff too! It's because of his passions that we had computers all my childhood though, :D The first computers he had, he built himself! I'm waffling, but this sort of brings back memories of the cool stuff my dad used to bring home!
I was absolutely hooked to Atari's Star Wars game. I guess the later version, where you had to climb into. With a cockpit and sht. I felt like Luke in his X-Wing.
All-time classic. They have one of those at Funspot in NH (they have just about everything at Funspot). My daughter got to play it there, so she knows what a great arcade game is like.
I always wanted a home version of the Star Wars control yoke, myself...or even the one from Roadblasters, which is basically the same, just with the up/down axis fixed.
Clint 2 weeks ago: I bought a mini Atari Machine Clint today: I bought a BIG Atari machine Clint 2 weeks into the future: I bought Atari. Just all of Atari.
@Liberalism is a Cultmame is a great alternative and unless you care about the physical aspect, perfect for most people. I use it for replacing faulty boards but retain the crt where possible.
My father used to repair arcade machines in the 80s going through the early 2000s. Good memories of running around the shop and playing the games to ‘test’ them. What a blast from the past!
Really is nothing like the way the sound resonates in and thru true arcade machines, it's irreplaceable. The trackball, the 'start' and play instructions, incredible. Enjoy!
@@ianmiller6040 Good idea! Since LGR mentioned thinking about what cab to get he might have a look at www.ankman.de/mame to get ideas what cab to get for a possible spin off channel. Page has screenshots of arcade video games from the late 1970s to late 1980s that some people might be like "OMG, that game! I totally forgot about that".
Well the 2600 was very limited in what it could do. I don't remember the particulars of the top of my head but that they were able to push it to the length they did for some of the later games says a lot about the programmers. Missile Command was a very simplistic game in its original form, and didn't really push the programmers. Apart from the controller the 2600 was able run a pretty good approximation of the original game. Yes the resolution is much lower and by necessity you only had one missile base, but the simple gameplay really worked. I only mastered two games on the 2600, Pacman and Missile Command. Of these two Packman was the easier as the ghosts had very simple rules for how they moved. That meant that if you ran a certain path the ghosts would always do the same thing. So find a winning path and keep to it and you will always win. A friend got to the point he could do it without watching the TV or even hearing the sounds. Missile command on the other hand was more random. You could end up in situations where you had no choice but to sacrifice one or more cities, but once you got good enough you could easily lap the score counter. You just had to know when to give up on cities and concentrate on the base and a couple of the closest cities. I can tell from experience that being able to lap the counter in the VCS version doesn't carry over to the arcade version...
My dad works for a vending company. He bought a hallowed cabinet and centipede, millipede, and missile comand game boards that didnt work from the company he works for. I dont know how he did it but he set that cabinet up so you can interchange between one of those three games. Kind of wished i went to school to be electronic technician like he did. I would of rebuilt so many of these by now.
Takes me back to my childhood in the late 80s LGR! Amazing isnt it, how much pleasure can still be found with this very simple machines and hardware! Excellent!
Back in "the day" of this game, 3D movies were the rage in theaters (think Jaws 3D). Grab a set of old school 3D glasses (red/blue lens) and play the game with them on. The explosions are amazing with the glasses. At least it was for a young teen back in the early 80s. Maybe today as a jaded 50-something with everything UHD, it may have lost some of its luster. I hope not though....
Galloping ghost (which is in Brookfield, for anyone who was wondering) is one of my favorite places to go whenever we go to Chicago because it's about 15 minutes away, not accounting for traffic and we can usually get to it on the way back from or to Chicago.
First year of college at Penn State Beaver Campus we had a space invaders game in the Student Union. Next year there was a true "arcade" in the basement with this machine and a few others. I wish i had all the money i put into those machines now.
Nice purchase. The store fixing made you a bonafide trackball Service Tech. Got 6 here. Pole Position, Defender, Hang On, Xevious, Topspeed and a homebuilt which is 13 years old itself.
I saw you have a stack of old receivers and audio equipment on your desk. Do you think you'll do a video about any vintage audio equipment in the future?
Thanks for the trip in the Way Back Machine. Back in the day my friends would call arcades "Space Bongos" cuz you would always end up slapping the cabinet like a madman.
Excellent choice for a first arcade cabinet! We have some brilliant folks preserving this old arcade tech now, but older machines like this with large analog portions are the hardest to get right by emulation, including FPGA which is also handling things in the digital domain. The trackball behavior in particular in machines like this is incredibly hard to dial in correctly by other means. I saw you got Raiden also, being a longtime fan. (I am too!) A great pickup also- but just keep in mind that the ones with hard to replicate analog internal components will be the most important to keep originals for, if they are favorites of yours- like the legendary Missile Command! Cheers!
WOW!! Having grown up in the '80s I can say- you've got one of the coolest ATARI arcade machines you could have picked! Love the cabaret size machines, definitely less common, certainly cool factor x100 for the woodgrain to surface area ratio!! I'm SO excited for you! I'm totally vicariously giddy right now!
I am a big advocate for the Arcade 1up, but there is something truly magical about actual arcade cabinets! Especially Atari ones! You don't know who played that exact cabinet, maybe even Nolan himself!
Nice find! I share your fondness for the cabaret cabinets. Gotta love when you finally track down and get those games from your childhood. *sighs wistfully at the pinball machine in his living room*
My old next door neighbors had this machine in their living room, made me want to get one but it was about 15 or more years ago when I was in my mid-teens, definitely couldn't afford one. This is rekindling that desire to get one :)
Please tell me where that footage of the arcade is locate at the beginning of your video (0:59). I need to make the pilgrimage there to see V.I.N.CENT.
This is such an awesome game. Wish I had one. Atari should start making FPGA full sized replica cabinets. Be a better use of their time then whatever they're currently doing. And remember: every time you fail, millions of people die.
@@badmeme486 It'd be a bit rough since like half of their early library uses Vector rather than Raster graphics. Plus you would have to account for all the different control schemes. There's also the question of which games. I'd love to see more obscure ones like I, Robot, but I doubt they would bother. It'd be better if they sold them as individual cabinets licensed by some 3rd party manufacture tbh. CRTs and computer hardware are relatively cheaper now, so maybe like $300-$400 a pop? Maybe have cheaper version that uses mame rather than true tech? IDK.
@@warbossgegguz679 Honestly I think the vector games are the best place for them to start. A cabinet with a real vector monitor would provide a much stronger argument against the "just use mame" crowd since it's impossible to properly emulate a vector display, especially if they did it right and included all of the games from the start and allowed you to add your own homebrews. Hell, even a mini-arcade or vectrex style system would be pretty awesome. They could call it the Nextrex.
@@67amiga Atari in it's current incarnation is an independent company. They maintain most of the rights to their old titles, save for a few like Battlezone. Midway/Williams bought a few atari titles but were bought out by WB in 2009, hence MK, though some Midway games were liquidated to other companies like hydro thunder. Only really the Japanese arcade manufacturers remained independent to this point.
That's awesome! Congratulations and thank you for rescuing a classic from the arcade golden era. Nothing beats that original hardware. That stuff is just endlessly fascinating.
I remember am episode of Robotech that had three of the bridge team using track balls to guide Shields around the fortress. always reminds me of Missle Command lol
There's some perfectly fine feeling watching Clint this excited. I felt most of the feelings i had during childhood which was an absolute delight. Keep it up !
Nice find! I got an Asteroids Deluxe cocktail version, which still saves the top 3 scores. With cherry woodgrain, which I haven't seen that often. I'm not that good at missile command, but it is a good game. I need to get the multigame kit for my Asteroids Deluxe machine at some point.
Luck was very much involved in getting that machine. I love both as well, though I'm better at Deluxe because of the shield, which is a bit nerve wracking when I play normal asteroids in MAME because I press hyperspace by accident thinking its the shield button.
@@FamilyGuyBob I'd kill for any vector-based arcade game. Gameplay-wise I'd prefer Battlezone or Tempest, but anything with a true vector display would be amazing to see in action imo. I'm a zoomer, but I love retro arcade games for their sheer historic value and innovation alone. Not that they aren't fun too.
Games were great in the 1980's...a huge wave of video game creativity for this new genre of entertainment...I may sound old when I say they were the good old days
The best old school golden-age Arcade games are Game-design at its finest imo. Easy to grasp and figure out with simple objectives, yet with a level of difficulty that hooks you into wanting to keep trying. And despite their goal of earning money you never feel cheated when you fail so you always have the urge to keep retrying, unlike now where games usually have to be obtuse or have unfair AI to provide a decent sense of challenge (a great example being Souls-likes, which I do enjoy, yet often feel do difficulty the wrong way). That or they're just piss easy and boring as a result. There are some standouts in indies and more arcady AAA games recently, but I still wish the industry would learn from them. And I'm not even old. I'm 21. Just a bit of a retro enthusiast I guess.
arcades, home consoles and computers I think all had significant advantages over each other. arcades had the freedom of being custom hw handpicked to best serve the game and requirement to balance the time/reward ratio to keep the money rolling in (which can sound like a limitation but actually leads to more immediate experience rather than with home systems that could just waste people's time freely.. who'd return a game to store if there's too much dialogue)
One thing I miss about playing the truly classic Atari arcade games are those red lit cone style buttons and to think Missile Command hits its 40th birthday next year - a true gem.
Damn I wish I was able to get one of these but I have like a 250 sq ft studio apartment in the fourth floor with no elevator so I think I'll pass until I can get a proper place of my own eventually
The need to keep track of the three fire buttons and manage the bases' missile supplies separately adds a whole other aspect of challenge to the arcade game (one I've never fully adapted to). The 80s home ports generally simplified that down to a single fire button, and it made the game easier.
I got to play one of these Missile Command cabaret machines at a retro arcade in Huntsville along with a Taito Space Invaders cabaret and it was very fun! Great find!! I would love to own a Centipede cabaret one day.
Awesome pick up! That's a cool cabaret! Congrats on the pick up, old arcades are super fun to have. I love how the Marquee lights up in the middle of the cabinet.
5:35 Haha, you gotta hang out with musicians more, they LOVE their worn, chipped, and ripped-in-places instruments so much, a restoration actually LOWERS the price! It's a different mentality where having natural color fade or wear is considered a sign of authenticity and aging like fine wine - to the point some "relic" guitars artificially kinda like fashionistas rip, bleach and damage new jeans to make them look distressed. So, keep the wear on cabinet - especially the woodgrain part, it's something you don't really want to restore with putty or filler - at most it will take a new finish to protect it. The restoration Joe did seems to be just right, without adding new or out of place components. Oh, and huge props for buying locally, small arcades and game shops need support!
My life long dream is to one day own authentic cabinet for Capcom/DataEast's "Commando" the very first game I ever played as a 1 year old baby because my late grandfather owned one (that much to my disappointment he sold years later)
I would love an original MK2 or Pac Man arcade. I think Pac Man was the first arcade I played at the local laundry mat when I was a little tater tot. Im hungry.
Cool find!. I have an original Atari Tempest which I bought in 1983 when arcade gaming was at its peak. It's totally amazing that arcade games were about 16K in size, running 8bit processor at 1.5Mhz. David Theurer designed both Missile command and Tempest, two of the greatest arcade games of all time.
First he bought a tiny Atari arcade machine, then a big Atari arcade machine, next time on LGR we're liquidating Atari's buisness assets
Ha!
That shouldn't be too expensive, surely the ad money will pay for it.
Next time: he's buying an actual missile base
Does that mean he also would own the rights to all those crapstastic ET carts in that hole in the ground in the desert? Not exactly a great deal.
He's going to need a bigger house if he's going to buy all those arcade machines from Atari
If you get enough machines, please make a new channel called LGRcade. :)
I second this motion!
Ohhhh that's a great alliteration.
Niice!
sick pun! also yeah love the arcade footage. cabinet hovering simulator
Great name!
The woodgrain compels you! Nice purchase Clint.
LGR's name is Clint?!
@@TheAtoll yes
@@CaveyMoth that is the dumbest fucking "joke" anybody ever came up with. It also doesn't even make fucking sense. The whole goddamn thing is a double negative
How do you know his name?
LGR magic. Woodgrain actually increases telepathic abilities.
According to Wikipedia the developer Dave Theurer suffered from nightmares in the midst of the cold war of US cities being nuked, so he got the idea for this game.
It was that era...
Very interesting
When I was informed about this, I have had the same dreams.
Worst ones are when I see the flash in the horizon, and I realize my family is close enough to die, but I am not close enough to get to them.
It is not fun, I can tell you.
Yeah. For me too especially serving in the West German army in the late 1980s. Worst day was when this pilot-less MIG entered West German air space and we tracked it via radar. Pure horror as nobody knew what will happen next.
Wikipedia has misconstruing those facts. Dave Theurer didn't get the idea for this game, he was tasked to create it by his boss, Steve Calfee, as one of the most talented lead programmers. But it was Atari's president of its arcade/coin-op division, Gene Lipkin, who actually came up with the idea for the game, after seeing a magazine advertisement depicting a radar screen with incoming missiles closing on a cityscape. They discussed and handed it off to Dave to work out the details.
The nightmares come from Theurer's tireless work on the project over the next six months, he'd stay up for 3, 4 days working non-stop, consumed with the game, constantly trading off mechanics to get the player choice just right, the need to let cities be hit to survive further rounds, the initial personalization of the cities as the major population centers of California, and the general dread of nuclear confrontation between the superpowers.
That booming bass-y sound is what I remember most about old school arcade cabinets. I love that it really takes me back
Hey LGR, I used to repair arcade machines for a living. I'd be happy to answer any questions you may have about your missile command or any other arcade stuff you get curious about
drivethrufiend I’m definitely not lgr but I do have a question as I want to get my own arcade machine where would I look to get one
I actually dont care much about arcade itself, but I am SO glad to hear this sheer happiness in LGRs voice :зз
I love watching these with captions, [laughs in walnut] is my new favorite line
How would you caption 12:48?
i'm willing to help you get the coin mech working, worked at a video arcade in portland for 7 years now in nc myself
It looks like it was working fine (?)
I'm in the middle of writing a version of this for BASIC. One of my favourite arcade games. Great choice Clint 👍
I’m glad the CRT is in good condition. Lots of arcades don’t maintain the screens and they end up looking really sad after a while. The arcade on the Santa Monica pier was surprisingly unmaintained.
How does one 'maintain' a CRT? I know you can up the voltage on the guns to eek some life from them, but that just degrades them faster. Afaik, turning the house lights down is the best call, lifewise. No slight intended, id really like to know how you maintain a CRT, other than replacement (which can be hard to impossible)
arjovenzia You’re right that there isn’t too much you can do to stop inevitable wear, but there are definitely good practices to extend their lifetime. Even just degaussing the screen regularly, powering it off when not in use, and not displaying 100% static images really helps with screen burn and overall quality.
I have heard that good color calibration can help wear the guns down more evenly over time, and I have heard something similar to what you said about higher voltages, I’ve known people that would run the tubes super hard for a brief period of time to “burn off” stuff but I’ve never done repairs that in depth.
@@arjovenzia
Ensuring the proper voltage for one. A line conditioner wouldn't be a bad investment. These old machines use a fair bit of power.
As for preserving it? Just use it sparingly and it should last for decades more. CRTs are built to last unlike LCDs.
A novel idea would be to use PIR sensors (Think security lights) on top of the machine that are tied into the CRTs power that way it powers on when a customer approaches the unit and off when they leave all while retaining flashy light and sounds.
Fun fact: Atari in Finland is also associated as an acronym for Professional and Prone-Criminality Supervision unit.
(Ammatti ja TApa RIkolliset)
Skipper The Anime Inspector huh. You learn something new every day. And I am a Finn, lel.
Aivan, juurikin näin.
Indeed, that's correct. 👍
Haven't thought that myself right away when I've read about Ataris game stuff but I've known about the special unit for a long time.
That doesn't translate to English very well but I get the drift
Not a fun fact at all, actually.
Whuaaa?! First time I heard about that! That is just hilariously terryfying.
YES!! I had 3 years ago. Pac-Man, Donkey Kong, and a Millipede machine. All heated the house very well 😉
Remember once having the displeasure of playing a constantly-running-for-five-years-straight Galaga machine. The controls were hot, the coin slots were hot, the machine itself radiated 110 degree heat, but it had a specific competition switch setting that allowed the player to skip the formation sequence as well as give themselves an extra life once per level, and I got far with it. If the machine is still working and hasn't been reset yet, there's a good chance that my high score is still number one on the machine...
*A S C 782300*
LOL!
But /had/? Why no have?
sinephase Bad decisions were made. I bought them from a bar going out of business for $300 together. Sold them for $300 each about 6 months later.
@@scotttaylor9961 OOOF
Missile Command is such an existentially jarring game. You don't beat Missile Command, you are just prolonging the inevitable.
It's hard too
What I mean is, you're trying to prevent your destruction but no matter how well you do, you can't prevent it. It's going to happen.
The same could be said about any arcade game or life in general.
That's how it is with most of those older games, isn't it? There's no actual "end," the game just gets more and more difficult until it's unplayable and you immediately lose.
I own a Golden Ax machine. Hearing it blair at parties is awesome .
This video smells like an old bowling alley.
Aww that's awesome! When I was growing up, my dad used to fix pinball machines all the time, but I always hoped he'd get an arcade machine one day too, but he didn't! The one I remember the most was an unusual machine called Hyperball, that had two "guns" that shot the pinballs out at targets. It wasn't a classic pinball machine at all. It was SO loud, it was amazing. Even without the music on, the sound of the balls hitting the back was incredible!
I was so lucky being able to grow up with things like that in my house... (I thought everyone had oscilloscopes in their dining room!) my dad was an electrical design engineer (now retired but still tinkering with stuff!), and he used to get his hands on the coolest things to repair and play with, and things that people would THROW AWAY because they were broken, he would fix and we could play with!! He used to fix classic Jukeboxes and stuff too! It's because of his passions that we had computers all my childhood though, :D The first computers he had, he built himself!
I'm waffling, but this sort of brings back memories of the cool stuff my dad used to bring home!
I was absolutely hooked to Atari's Star Wars game.
I guess the later version, where you had to climb into. With a cockpit and sht.
I felt like Luke in his X-Wing.
All-time classic. They have one of those at Funspot in NH (they have just about everything at Funspot). My daughter got to play it there, so she knows what a great arcade game is like.
I always wanted a home version of the Star Wars control yoke, myself...or even the one from Roadblasters, which is basically the same, just with the up/down axis fixed.
Loved that game, one of my favourites as well Also spent a fair bit of time and money on Sega Rally a bit later on.
Clint 2 weeks ago: I bought a mini Atari Machine
Clint today: I bought a BIG Atari machine
Clint 2 weeks into the future: I bought Atari. Just all of Atari.
Something about that THE END game over screen is chilling, even all these years later.
We're so glad to see the beginnings of the LGRcade
You should watch John's Arcade but take it from me, once you buy one they multiply. Started with 1 and I'm up to like 35.
Exactly, haha. Started with 1 in 2012, now I have 8.
Such is the case with coin-op / amusement devices of any ‘species’... My weakness is jukeboxes. I only have seven of them in the house, mind you. 😊😂
@Liberalism is a Cultmame is a great alternative and unless you care about the physical aspect, perfect for most people. I use it for replacing faulty boards but retain the crt where possible.
My earliest memory of Missile Command was seeing John Connor play it in T2.
My father used to repair arcade machines in the 80s going through the early 2000s. Good memories of running around the shop and playing the games to ‘test’ them. What a blast from the past!
Seeing those manuals took me back to the days that I worked at an arcade. Hope you're good with a soldering iron! Congrats, Clint.
Really is nothing like the way the sound resonates in and thru true arcade machines, it's irreplaceable. The trackball, the 'start' and play instructions, incredible. Enjoy!
Now it's LAR
Lazy Arcade Reviews xD
But nice purchase, and have fun with it!
This needs to be a spin-off show, Clint! Do it!
@@ianmiller6040 Good idea! Since LGR mentioned thinking about what cab to get he might have a look at www.ankman.de/mame to get ideas what cab to get for a possible spin off channel. Page has screenshots of arcade video games from the late 1970s to late 1980s that some people might be like "OMG, that game! I totally forgot about that".
This was one of my favorite Atari 2600 games, and even after watching your video I still think the port was very good, the arcade had so much more!
Well the 2600 was very limited in what it could do. I don't remember the particulars of the top of my head but that they were able to push it to the length they did for some of the later games says a lot about the programmers.
Missile Command was a very simplistic game in its original form, and didn't really push the programmers. Apart from the controller the 2600 was able run a pretty good approximation of the original game. Yes the resolution is much lower and by necessity you only had one missile base, but the simple gameplay really worked.
I only mastered two games on the 2600, Pacman and Missile Command. Of these two Packman was the easier as the ghosts had very simple rules for how they moved. That meant that if you ran a certain path the ghosts would always do the same thing. So find a winning path and keep to it and you will always win. A friend got to the point he could do it without watching the TV or even hearing the sounds. Missile command on the other hand was more random. You could end up in situations where you had no choice but to sacrifice one or more cities, but once you got good enough you could easily lap the score counter. You just had to know when to give up on cities and concentrate on the base and a couple of the closest cities. I can tell from experience that being able to lap the counter in the VCS version doesn't carry over to the arcade version...
F@&*ING MISSILE COMMAND!!! ( what a great 10 year anniversary present for ones self, congrats! )
Missile Command and Stargate Defender were my 2 favorite arcade games back then. Dropped tons of quarters in those cabinets
"Factory Original Atari Installed Woodgrain: The LGR Story"
Could work for a memoir title. You did that, Clint, not me. Cheers
My dad works for a vending company. He bought a hallowed cabinet and centipede, millipede, and missile comand game boards that didnt work from the company he works for. I dont know how he did it but he set that cabinet up so you can interchange between one of those three games.
Kind of wished i went to school to be electronic technician like he did. I would of rebuilt so many of these by now.
It is now OK for today to be Monday. Thanks for this LGR
Takes me back to my childhood in the late 80s LGR! Amazing isnt it, how much pleasure can still be found with this very simple machines and hardware! Excellent!
Back in "the day" of this game, 3D movies were the rage in theaters (think Jaws 3D). Grab a set of old school 3D glasses (red/blue lens) and play the game with them on. The explosions are amazing with the glasses. At least it was for a young teen back in the early 80s. Maybe today as a jaded 50-something with everything UHD, it may have lost some of its luster. I hope not though....
Try dropping acid before playing for extra effects.
Seems like a fun thing to try, though I was as unimpressed with early 80s 3D movies as I am with contemporary 3D movies.
England is glad you called yourself a jaded old man. You are extremely ugly and decrepid.
Its great seeing your child like glee with an arcade machine that obviously brings back so many memories. Thats the beauty of retro gaming.
i think this is the game played in Terminator 2
Yes, it is.
It's one of them. John Connor also played some After Burner for a few brief seconds.
It is, it's obviously some kind of wink at the future that may become if john fails to prevent judgement day... nuclear strikes all over the place.
Galloping ghost (which is in Brookfield, for anyone who was wondering) is one of my favorite places to go whenever we go to Chicago because it's about 15 minutes away, not accounting for traffic and we can usually get to it on the way back from or to Chicago.
First year of college at Penn State Beaver Campus we had a space invaders game in the Student Union. Next year there was a true "arcade" in the basement with this machine and a few others. I wish i had all the money i put into those machines now.
if you had the machines then you could sell them for even more =P
Hard driven’, full console with shifter, key, and feedback steering. I love that machine.
Congratulations, welcome to the arcade cabinet in your house club! Be prepared to discover how many 30+ can throw down.
Thanks very much for rekindling some memories. I remember playing on that type of cabinet at my little local 10 pin bowling alley when I was young.
That is a thing of beauty Clint
Nice purchase. The store fixing made you a bonafide trackball Service Tech.
Got 6 here. Pole Position, Defender, Hang On, Xevious, Topspeed and a homebuilt which is 13 years old itself.
I'm like that for pin tables... man, I would do unspeakable things for an Elvira & The Party Monsters table. Congrats on your new Atari bride!
This is way before my time. It's so cool that people are keeping this old stuff alive so we can still see it in all its glory even today :)
I saw you have a stack of old receivers and audio equipment on your desk. Do you think you'll do a video about any vintage audio equipment in the future?
I don't have any plans to at the moment. It's one of my few personal hobbies that still brings me joy, no pressure to monetize it :)
That sample and hold sound of getting a bonus city really takes me back.
THAT'S SICK! I would love a Defender arcade cabinet.
Wow. Those pyramid style buttons bring me back. With the tiny round buttons. CLASSIC!
Oh man, I remember playing Missile Command on my Atari XE back in the day!
How about that woodgrain, huh? * chef's kiss*
This is the game I played most on my 2600.
Thanks for the trip in the Way Back Machine. Back in the day my friends would call arcades "Space Bongos" cuz you would always end up slapping the cabinet like a madman.
That’s amazing and gotta love the wood grain
Excellent choice for a first arcade cabinet! We have some brilliant folks preserving this old arcade tech now, but older machines like this with large analog portions are the hardest to get right by emulation, including FPGA which is also handling things in the digital domain. The trackball behavior in particular in machines like this is incredibly hard to dial in correctly by other means. I saw you got Raiden also, being a longtime fan. (I am too!) A great pickup also- but just keep in mind that the ones with hard to replicate analog internal components will be the most important to keep originals for, if they are favorites of yours- like the legendary Missile Command! Cheers!
Let's get LGR to get a Dance Dance Revolution machine!!!
WOW!! Having grown up in the '80s I can say- you've got one of the coolest ATARI arcade machines you could have picked! Love the cabaret size machines, definitely less common, certainly cool factor x100 for the woodgrain to surface area ratio!! I'm SO excited for you! I'm totally vicariously giddy right now!
I am a big advocate for the Arcade 1up, but there is something truly magical about actual arcade cabinets! Especially Atari ones! You don't know who played that exact cabinet, maybe even Nolan himself!
I would totally watch every episode of LGR: Arcade as long as there was at least one teardown/restoration episode
Great! I love it! I hope I'll find a working Wizard of Wor arcade machine (cocktail) I used to play as a child. =)
Nice find! I share your fondness for the cabaret cabinets. Gotta love when you finally track down and get those games from your childhood.
*sighs wistfully at the pinball machine in his living room*
"I'm not sure where I'll put this in my house"
I vote bathroom
My old next door neighbors had this machine in their living room, made me want to get one but it was about 15 or more years ago when I was in my mid-teens, definitely couldn't afford one. This is rekindling that desire to get one :)
Please tell me where that footage of the arcade is locate at the beginning of your video (0:59). I need to make the pilgrimage there to see V.I.N.CENT.
ua-cam.com/video/rvM82T3C2Ik/v-deo.html check out this video apparently it is a home arcade near, or in, Dallas Tx
JUST WOW! Im so jealous. Of course keep the woodgrain! The marks are part of the nostalgia. Lucky you. Enjoy!
I'm honored to be number 98. First time I come in under 100th in an LGR video. Best of luck, Clint! Love your work!
This machine was sitting down in a little store when i was a kid during the early 90s. Its the reasom that I started liking video games and arcades.
This is such an awesome game. Wish I had one. Atari should start making FPGA full sized replica cabinets. Be a better use of their time then whatever they're currently doing.
And remember: every time you fail, millions of people die.
Yep, I'd love to buy a machine loaded with Atari rooms! Actually licensed/sold by atari
@@badmeme486 It'd be a bit rough since like half of their early library uses Vector rather than Raster graphics. Plus you would have to account for all the different control schemes. There's also the question of which games. I'd love to see more obscure ones like I, Robot, but I doubt they would bother.
It'd be better if they sold them as individual cabinets licensed by some 3rd party manufacture tbh. CRTs and computer hardware are relatively cheaper now, so maybe like $300-$400 a pop? Maybe have cheaper version that uses mame rather than true tech? IDK.
@@warbossgegguz679 Honestly I think the vector games are the best place for them to start. A cabinet with a real vector monitor would provide a much stronger argument against the "just use mame" crowd since it's impossible to properly emulate a vector display, especially if they did it right and included all of the games from the start and allowed you to add your own homebrews.
Hell, even a mini-arcade or vectrex style system would be pretty awesome. They could call it the Nextrex.
I believe classic Atari arcade games are owned by Tradewest Games. Tradewest bought out Midway Games, who last held the Atari Classic Arcade games.
@@67amiga Atari in it's current incarnation is an independent company. They maintain most of the rights to their old titles, save for a few like Battlezone. Midway/Williams bought a few atari titles but were bought out by WB in 2009, hence MK, though some Midway games were liquidated to other companies like hydro thunder.
Only really the Japanese arcade manufacturers remained independent to this point.
That's awesome! Congratulations and thank you for rescuing a classic from the arcade golden era. Nothing beats that original hardware. That stuff is just endlessly fascinating.
You and Brootalmoose-Ian should go to an arcade together.
We plan to! So many coin pushers, so little time.
@@LGR Nice! Looking forward to the videos. :)
I remember am episode of Robotech that had three of the bridge team using track balls to guide Shields around the fortress. always reminds me of Missle Command lol
General Breetai wants to know your location.
jedigecko06 tell him our plan of attack is coming. We Will Win. Lol
"I will sleep with you!"
Women the world over just got a shiver.
There's some perfectly fine feeling watching Clint this excited. I felt most of the feelings i had during childhood which was an absolute delight. Keep it up !
Nice find! I got an Asteroids Deluxe cocktail version, which still saves the top 3 scores. With cherry woodgrain, which I haven't seen that often.
I'm not that good at missile command, but it is a good game. I need to get the multigame kit for my Asteroids Deluxe machine at some point.
You lucky bastard .. that game is awesome (not sure if i like Asteroids or Asteriods deluxe more .. they are both great).
Luck was very much involved in getting that machine. I love both as well, though I'm better at Deluxe because of the shield, which is a bit nerve wracking when I play normal asteroids in MAME because I press hyperspace by accident thinking its the shield button.
I'd kill for an original asteroids arcade machine
@@FamilyGuyBob I'd kill for any vector-based arcade game.
Gameplay-wise I'd prefer Battlezone or Tempest, but anything with a true vector display would be amazing to see in action imo.
I'm a zoomer, but I love retro arcade games for their sheer historic value and innovation alone. Not that they aren't fun too.
@@warbossgegguz679 Oh asteroids is definitely fun but I agree on the whole vector graphics thing. They're a thing of beauty.
I love Missile Command it's such fun and I have very fond memories of playing it in the arcades back in the early 80's ..imo the golden era of gaming.
Games were great in the 1980's...a huge wave of video game creativity for this new genre of entertainment...I may sound old when I say they were the good old days
The best old school golden-age Arcade games are Game-design at its finest imo. Easy to grasp and figure out with simple objectives, yet with a level of difficulty that hooks you into wanting to keep trying. And despite their goal of earning money you never feel cheated when you fail so you always have the urge to keep retrying, unlike now where games usually have to be obtuse or have unfair AI to provide a decent sense of challenge (a great example being Souls-likes, which I do enjoy, yet often feel do difficulty the wrong way). That or they're just piss easy and boring as a result. There are some standouts in indies and more arcady AAA games recently, but I still wish the industry would learn from them.
And I'm not even old. I'm 21. Just a bit of a retro enthusiast I guess.
arcades, home consoles and computers I think all had significant advantages over each other. arcades had the freedom of being custom hw handpicked to best serve the game and requirement to balance the time/reward ratio to keep the money rolling in (which can sound like a limitation but actually leads to more immediate experience rather than with home systems that could just waste people's time freely.. who'd return a game to store if there's too much dialogue)
One thing I miss about playing the truly classic Atari arcade games are those red lit cone style buttons and to think Missile Command hits its 40th birthday next year - a true gem.
Damn I wish I was able to get one of these but I have like a 250 sq ft studio apartment in the fourth floor with no elevator so I think I'll pass until I can get a proper place of my own eventually
Get one of the mini ones
Brings back memories of visiting the arcade in the mall. After my mom or dad got off from work.
Missile Command is awesome. :D I didn't remember that it had 3 fire buttons. I'd want Omega Race
The need to keep track of the three fire buttons and manage the bases' missile supplies separately adds a whole other aspect of challenge to the arcade game (one I've never fully adapted to). The 80s home ports generally simplified that down to a single fire button, and it made the game easier.
I got to play one of these Missile Command cabaret machines at a retro arcade in Huntsville along with a Taito Space Invaders cabaret and it was very fun! Great find!!
I would love to own a Centipede cabaret one day.
Before you know it, you'll have a housefull. it's what happened to me!
I started with a centipede now I have 8 machines lol
Awesome pick up! That's a cool cabaret! Congrats on the pick up, old arcades are super fun to have. I love how the Marquee lights up in the middle of the cabinet.
Awesome! Love your channel buddy
5:35 Haha, you gotta hang out with musicians more, they LOVE their worn, chipped, and ripped-in-places instruments so much, a restoration actually LOWERS the price! It's a different mentality where having natural color fade or wear is considered a sign of authenticity and aging like fine wine - to the point some "relic" guitars artificially kinda like fashionistas rip, bleach and damage new jeans to make them look distressed.
So, keep the wear on cabinet - especially the woodgrain part, it's something you don't really want to restore with putty or filler - at most it will take a new finish to protect it. The restoration Joe did seems to be just right, without adding new or out of place components. Oh, and huge props for buying locally, small arcades and game shops need support!
Leave the cabinet ‘as is’. There’s nothing wrong with a bit of character. That wear speaks a bit to the unit’s ‘past life’, as it were.
My life long dream is to one day own authentic cabinet for Capcom/DataEast's "Commando" the very first game I ever played as a 1 year old baby because my late grandfather owned one (that much to my disappointment he sold years later)
These are the type of Play Throughs I would love to watch on UA-cam!
oh yes he finally got a real one :D
I love how happy this made you! Looking forward to seeing your new collection grow
Holy crap man beautiful
It's the sounds that are giving me a nostalgia overload. I could seriously just sit and listen to this all day. :D
Wife: "Sweetey please go to bed already."
Clint: "Just a few more rounds of Missile Command and I'll be there honey."
Its always fun going back in time for all the NOSTALGIA !! all the feels, keep up the great content and never forget where you come from :)
I would love an original MK2 or Pac Man arcade. I think Pac Man was the first arcade I played at the local laundry mat when I was a little tater tot. Im hungry.
Woooooooo I love Joe's Arcades. I live about 30 minutes away from his store and visit it quite frequently.
btw LGR, ive played that very same Cabinet you played at Galloping ghost, it is pretty legit :3
Glad you found this and you're so excited! So fun to watch 🙂
Man, that's super neat, I wish I could afford one for myself, can't even on actual cabinets around here, no arcades around
Cool find!. I have an original Atari Tempest which I bought in 1983 when arcade gaming was at its peak. It's totally amazing that arcade games were about 16K in size, running 8bit processor at 1.5Mhz. David Theurer designed both Missile command and Tempest, two of the greatest arcade games of all time.
Wow, surprised that it still has its original CRT.
Congratulations Clint. 😄
Great find indeed. 👌👍
...woodgrain... 😍