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Having an arcade cabinet of one’s own is a common dream among those who grew up during the video game arcade heyday of the 80s and early 90s. It’s a fairly common build that doesn&#8217… ...
We’re guessing that if you ever though of buying an arcade cabinet it was only briefly, and you decided against based on the difficulties of moving and finding a place for such a large and he… ...
Armed and Gelatinous: Building an arcade cabinet that sticks. Rob Howland and Anthony Prusakowski on taking a goopy game jam title to the arcade, and why that approach might benefit indie developers.
This guy also misses playing in his arcade back home and decided to create a cabinet that is supposed to resemble a Japanese head-to-head arcade machine.
The good news is the Mortal Kombat Arcade1Up cabinet (See it at Walmart) manages to distill the arcade Mortal Kombat experience into a device without a lot of sacrifices. Mortal Kombat Arcade1Up ...
For those that grew up with even a vague interest in video games, the movie to watch was The Last Starfighter. Ironically enough, the game to go with the film was never published or put into the ...
Unless you have the skills and time to build an arcade cabinet case (and room to put it somewhere), there is no reason why a Raspberry Pi arcade shouldn't be your next gaming console.
My Arcade’s Micro Player Pro cabinets tend to cost $39.99, while the Nano Player Pro units are priced at $29.99. The difference usually comes down to the unit’s size, but in some cases, it can ...
The Arcade YouTube community was out to help one another too; I was able to follow an in-depth walkthrough from Kongs-R-Us, a channel dedicated to cabinet modding.
Hertz, an engineer, designer and artist, came up with the idea when he spotted an OutRun cabinet at an arcade in 2008. A few months later, he found one for sale online and bought it.
When my arcade cabinet turned into a brick overnight, I set out on a hardware hack that would teach me the joy of hardware modding.The Latest Tech News, Delivered to Your Inbox.
By now, most gamers are familiar with the general arc of American arcade games. They were a huge deal in the '70s and '80s, then they slowly faded into obscurity as home consoles got cheaper and ...