Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Guest Post: The Golden Age of Videogames


I first discovered my friend Cole Bradburn via Gentlemint, when I stumbled upon a post that he wrote about "The Legend of Zelda." Being a child of the 80's, I was drawn in immediately.

Like myself, Cole is also an expectant father. During the day, he is a doctor of chiropratic. By night/free time, he writes at ColeBradburn.com. He writes good things. You should read them.

Cole was kind enough to guest post for me during my absence. Appropriately, the blog has to do with old school Nintendo.

Hope you enjoy.
Once upon a time, there was this magical place in history. People called it: "the Eighties." What made it magical, you ask? Colors were bright, hair was big, and games were 8-bit.

At the time, I didn't know that I was living in what would become the golden age of videogames. I don't think any of us knew, it just sort of happened around us. Here's a trip back to that plaid couch in my basement; stomping on Goombas, drawing out maps and eating pizza rolls, all while listening to the wonderful bleeps and bloops of chiptune music.

It was a simpler time.

Controller Perfection.
I know I risk sounding like the old codger here who "gamed uphill both ways barefoot in 5 feet of snow," but I still think simple, linear games on the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) were superior. You had a clear purpose (that generally involved running from left to right) and limited attempts to accomplish that purpose. The message that the games were sending was clear. Either adapt and improve, or die trying. No fluff, just your skill, two buttons and a D-pad. Which brings me to my next point...

It was a harder time.

You couldn't simply exist in the game and win by putting in enough hours. You had to work. No handholding, no regenerating health, no gimmicks for "casual players" (I still am completely against the whole everyone gets a trophy movement). 8-bit games would chew up mediocrity and laugh at you. Don't believe me? 

Watch this:


Games were a competition between the developer and the player. Sure, there were cheap ways to spike the difficulty – I'm looking at you, bats over every pit in "Ninja Gaiden" and "Castlevania." Why was it always bats? – but when you finally tasted victory, it was oh, so sweet. You earned victory through your courageous determination. You defeated Bowser/Ganon/Dracula/Robotnik/(insert other big baddie here) and saved the day. You became the hero of an 8-bit world. Not bad for an 8-year-old. Not bad for a 30-year-old re-visiting his childhood either.

It was a more adventurous time.

Games in "the Eighties" didn't feature heavy-handed narratives that bottle-fed a story to you. They presented a world with which your imagination created the story by filling it in. It became your story, your adventure. It was something you would talk about on the playground or at lunch tables. It was a shared experience that meant something different to everyone. I still remember sharing secrets, tips, and tales of battle. Speaking of that...

One of my favorite things about the NES era was my game journal. Now I understand that you may not know what this is, but after some digging, I found out that this was a worldwide phenomena! I still smile when I read someone else's tale of their game journal. It transports me back to drawing maps, scribbling down the locations of secrets and devising boss battle strategies in my journal. Even now, I think that journal oozes with creativity and cunning of a time long gone. With today's elegant game displays and pop-up maps, there is no need to keep track of anything, nothing to engage you outside of the game. Nothing to make you think. 

Not to say that games from my childhood are better...

Well, yeah, that is what I'm saying. I've already decided that my son will start on the NES first and work his way up to current day if he wants to game. He has to appreciate the classics.

If this resonated with you, watch "Go Right." It is pure nostalgic awesome:

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