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The Last of Manhattan's Original Video Arcades

lundi 14 janvier 2019, 20:10 , par Slashdot
Video arcades -- those recreational arenas of illuminated screens and 8-bit soundtracks -- have been fading from the cultural landscape since the end of the Donkey Kong '80s. The advent of home video game consoles, hand-held gaming devices and smartphones has all but rendered them relics of a Gen X childhood. Yet somehow, Chinatown Fair Family Fun Center lives on.

From a report: The cramped downtown institution is among the last of the city's old-school arcades, often filled with gamers too young to remember Street Fighter IV a decade ago, let alone Missile Command in the Reagan years. 'Chinatown Fair should have closed years ago, along with all the other arcades in the city, due to rising rent and the shift to online gaming,' said Kurt Vincent, who directed 'The Lost Arcade,' a 2016 documentary about the arcade's enduring legacy in the city. 'But it's still there on Mott Street after all these years because young people need a place to come together.'

Say this about Chinatown Fair: It has been defying the odds for decades. The place opened in the 1940s as an 'amusement arcade' in an era when Skee-Ball represented the apex of arcade fun. As youth tastes changed in the ensuing years, so too did Chinatown Fair. The arcade survived the rise and fall of pinball, the rise and fall of Pac-Man, the rise and fall of Super Nintendo, and perhaps most unimaginably, the rise, and rise some more, of Manhattan real estate prices.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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