DarthDigital
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« Reply #1 on: June 02, 2011, 12:20:24 am » |
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I always felt the primary appeal was to preserve every video game ever made for the last 30 years. What's a Mame cabinet but a museum display piece for the next generation who wanted to see what their Grandparents enjoyed?
And I've always felt its not the LIST of games, its the list of CABINETS.
How many have Mame cabs and if just for a moment cringe when they see black lines on a classic vertical game like Pac-Man?
Whereas you take a 19 inch CRT tube, turn it to the side, strip it and place in a vertical Mame-
Sweetness.
I have THREE Mame cabs in my game room. Some would say over kill. I disagree.
For starters, you got horizontal, AND vertical screens to contend with. That alone begs for two cabs,
Then you got different consoles, controls ect ect.
Not everyone has the space for 30 odd cabs.
But imagine multi-Mame cabinets.
All racing games in a wheel/pedal cab All vertical shooters in one cab. All track ball games (horizontal) in one cab All track ball games (vertical) in one cab All six button fighter in one cab All horizontal 2-3 button / 2 sticks in one cab,
Drill in a few 1 1/8 holes to accommodate a few spinners-
Toss in a cocktail cab converted to mame-
And bang!
A mini-arcade, seven/eight cabs strong.
Plug in a few usb-opti-guns, into your horizontal cabs and your laughing.
Make no mistake, if I had the option I'd go with originals like our host, but Mame is the future, and the past. To say nothing of space saving.
Mame is still akin to 'hanging fakes' in an art museum. But its a pleasant start and frankly only the professionals know the difference.
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