I haven't really gone to a Circus Circus or Chucky Cheese in a while. But twice now I've gone to these new more adult arcades.
We went to a Dave & Busters last winter, and I was wholely unimpressed with the giant arcade room. I mean, for having 100 arcade machines, it felt like they had nothing.
About half of the machines were lightgun shooters, and half of the machines were racing. There was not a single 1 on 1 fighter in the whole place, and there was not a single traditional shooter in the whole place.
They didn't even have a DDR, just a Beat Me Up or some other copycat.
They had a bunch of casino/deal or no deal type games.
The only game in the entire place that was shooting was this like 4-in-one game where you sit in this moving bubble and you can either be like a tank turret or a helicopter shooter. But the gameplay and cameras were not very good.
I'm serious. You walk up and down, and every single large arcade machine in the middle of the floor is a gun shooter, and every machine against the wall is a competition driving. I mean, a few, of course, even I enjoy a gun shooter. But the whole place? There are so many different types of arcade games out there. I remember when I used to go to Chucky Cheese or Circus Circus as a kid, and every arcade game would be something differfent. There'd be the 4-player brawls (TMNT), 2-player beatemups, one on one fighters, 1st person shooters, flyers, scrolling shooters, gun games, driving, and classic arcade, etc. Lots of variety.
As I mentioned in a previous thread, I recently went to Brunswick Zone XL, and this also had a large arcade in it. And again, same thing, all gun shooters and drivers. That's why I was so surprised to see Afterburner Climax. It was the only different game in the whole place. Though they did actually have a DDR there, but nobody was playing it.
Is this the future of arcades? 10000 square feet catering only to the top grossing genres, with no variety, and no attempt to cater to hard-core gaming fans?
I can just imagine some rich old guy sitting on the 100th floor decide to add an arcade to his latest million dollar moneymaking expensive dining entertainment scheme, and just looks at some rich-person business newsletter and sees that racing and gun games are easy and make money, and loads it up with those, and doesn't actually have anyone who cares about true gamers involved in the decision making process.
We went to a Dave & Busters last winter, and I was wholely unimpressed with the giant arcade room. I mean, for having 100 arcade machines, it felt like they had nothing.
About half of the machines were lightgun shooters, and half of the machines were racing. There was not a single 1 on 1 fighter in the whole place, and there was not a single traditional shooter in the whole place.
They didn't even have a DDR, just a Beat Me Up or some other copycat.
They had a bunch of casino/deal or no deal type games.
The only game in the entire place that was shooting was this like 4-in-one game where you sit in this moving bubble and you can either be like a tank turret or a helicopter shooter. But the gameplay and cameras were not very good.
I'm serious. You walk up and down, and every single large arcade machine in the middle of the floor is a gun shooter, and every machine against the wall is a competition driving. I mean, a few, of course, even I enjoy a gun shooter. But the whole place? There are so many different types of arcade games out there. I remember when I used to go to Chucky Cheese or Circus Circus as a kid, and every arcade game would be something differfent. There'd be the 4-player brawls (TMNT), 2-player beatemups, one on one fighters, 1st person shooters, flyers, scrolling shooters, gun games, driving, and classic arcade, etc. Lots of variety.
As I mentioned in a previous thread, I recently went to Brunswick Zone XL, and this also had a large arcade in it. And again, same thing, all gun shooters and drivers. That's why I was so surprised to see Afterburner Climax. It was the only different game in the whole place. Though they did actually have a DDR there, but nobody was playing it.
Is this the future of arcades? 10000 square feet catering only to the top grossing genres, with no variety, and no attempt to cater to hard-core gaming fans?
I can just imagine some rich old guy sitting on the 100th floor decide to add an arcade to his latest million dollar moneymaking expensive dining entertainment scheme, and just looks at some rich-person business newsletter and sees that racing and gun games are easy and make money, and loads it up with those, and doesn't actually have anyone who cares about true gamers involved in the decision making process.