





From the top, Galaga is one of my favorite arcade games of all time, it was surreal playing on an actual cabinet, even if I don't think it was a 100% authentic original. He had some great combo machines, like Double Donkey Kong and Centipede / Missile Command / Millipede.
My kids are total suckers for racing games, so my son played a ton of rounds of Cruisn' Exotica, and was just busting a gut at the antics the whole time. The three of us rotated for quite a while on Daytona USA 2, holy buckets are the graphics in that game good.
The final picture is an authentic Asteroids Deluxe cabinet he had. It was super tough to capture what I was seeing with my phone-- you basically duck your head into the cabinet to block out surrounding light, and the experience is incredible! The vector graphics have aged super well, but the most amazing thing is the contrast as the phosphorous bullets streak and blur as they move: the contrast ratio is insane, better than any 2025-era OLED TV even I'm sure-- and this is a game from 1979!
It shows how we've gone forwards in a lot of ways like resolution, but backwards in a lot of ways too. The people working on the technology for these games back then were absurdly talented. I also give major props to the owner of this arcade for keeping all of these machines running-- that is no easy feat, there are some serious soldering, oscilloscope, and electric understanding going on behind the scenes undoubtedly.
In other news, I've finally decided to burn a vacation day at work, this is exactly what the doctor ordered! I got to sleep in, and sit here on the MacBook, sipping coffee while puttering away on some things. Wonderful! My copy of Monster Hunter Wilds for PS5 should come in today at some point as well, via Amazon. I'm currently plugging through Astro Bot-- solid game, with some occasional moments of real creativity.