I'm surprised we don't hear more about the Japanese arcade market since it's still going strong after all these years. I've been curious what the deal is ever since I saw the movie Lost in Translation where some goofy teenager was freaking out to some kind of wacky Japanese arcade game.
I recently spent a month in Tokyo (my first visit) so I made a point of trying to find an arcade. That wasn't hard to do -- they are thriving everywhere. So I wanted to post some pictures and impressions of what life would've been like here in the US, if the arcade industry hadn't died 2 decades ago.
Unfortunately, I only have a few pictures...
1) [pic 1: row of arcade cabinets] All standard, modern arcade cabinets are alike in the arcades I saw. They are all sit-down cabinets with very nice, large CRT monitors.
2) [pic 2: fishing game] Four players stand on each side of a table with a projection of a fish pond. Each player feeds a row of tokens into the coin slot, while using a spinner to aim a fishing net. As soon as the token drops, a fish net is thrown out, and depending on your catch, you can win some tokens. Good players have several rolls of tokens queued up (maybe $10) and push them all into the coin drop when a big school of fish swims past. It looked pretty fun.
3) [pic 3: Kids games] There were a handful of half height kids cabinets at each arcade. They all seemed to have card slots where you can swipe your card with your "monster" data, and once loaded, you can have your monster fight your friends' monster. I didn't get a picture, but there were also a lot of girls photo booths at the arcades that seemed popular with the girls. It looks like these machines let you compose some kind of background and take polaroid with your friends.
4) [pic 4: Half life 2] I'm not sure if this is in the US (I haven't seen an arcade in the US in over a decade, and I've never seen this game). But the Half life 2 game was pretty popular there. You can swipe a card to load and save your game. I played a little bit at the beginner level and the content was taken from the original PC game, but modified a little for the arcade. It was fun, but the interface is nowhere near as good as the PC.
5) [pic 5: Card game]. Now this was something new.... my impression is it's some kind of turn-based multiplayer mecha-themed game, using electronic trading cards. It looks like you buy packs of trading cards (ala "magic the gathering") and take it to the arcade. Laying out and moving the cards on your machine's play field somehow controls the action in the game. There were about a dozen of these stations networked together, each outfitted with controls such as buttons, a trackball, and an electronic card grid, and all of them sharing a projection monitor in the front coordinating the game. Pretty inventive, and it looks like it's doing good business. Nice to see the merchandising and card trading business tie-ins to the arcade. The electronic card grid makes the experience unreproducible on the PC or console, and the card trading aspect should make the game addicting once you're invested in the cards and coming up to speed on the game system.
6) [pic 6: horse racing] Horse racing is huge in Tokyo, and this is another multiplayer game where players race and bet on horses. I didn't pay too much attention to what was going ont.
There were so many other wacky variations of games, and the arcades were everywhere. Pretty exciting. Just as popular: casinos packed with contraptions that look like a cross between an arcade game and a slot machine. The front of these stores were always lined with very thick painted glass to block out the extremely loud noise blasting out of the machines.
Jason