This is the best topic ever. EVER!
I have many fond childhood memories of arcade games. There was Happy's, the local flea market/mini-golf/arcade/all around amusement center...they mostly had older b&w games, but as they started paying more attention to the flea market side of things, they got more and more color games. I distinctly remember them having Sprint, Sheriff, maybe a Sprint-8 and a Krull later on.
Then of course there were the games at the grocery stores and drug stores...I would stand next to the Pac-Man Plus and watch for entire time my parents were shopping. I'd also do the obligatory "let me play one of your men" whine. Hey, I was 6, what can I say? Kroger had the best games...they had Pac-Man, Pac-Man Plus, Ms. Pac-Man, and Donkey Kong in succession. They always had at least two games at a time, too.
Then there was the Super-X right next to Kroger (anyone remember when you'd never see one without the other?). I distinctly remember them having DK Jr. and Pole Position. Sometimes I'd go watch those games while Mom and Dad bought groceries.
Tomboy was where my grandmother liked to shop...and they had Xevious. And of course Grandma would *always* give me a few quarters to blow. Man did I love me some Xevious. Right down the road from Tomboy was the Revco drugstore...they had, in succession, Bubbles, Foodfight, Robotron, and a few other great classics. I probably got those out of order but it was 20 years ago!
We also had plenty of arcades where I grew up (Roanoke, VA). There was Time Out at Crossroads Mall...they had a Star Wars cockpit, an environmental Discs of Tron, Gladiator (which for some reason I thought was a great game, until I played it in MAME the other day), Gorf, TONS of pinballs, and a few other games I can't remember.
The best arcade by far, though, was The Electric Connection. It sat in an old Kenney's building about 3/4 of a mile from my house, right on Williamson Road. They had a deal where kids could bring in their report cards and get something like 4 tokens for every A and two for every B. What a great deal! Especially since I was a straight A student with 7 classes (this was when I got to jr. high around 1985-86). They still had plenty of classics at The Electric Connection. Wow...MACH 3, Tempest, Zoo Keeper, Yie Ar Kung Fu (my favorite at the time), Super Mario, Excitebike, Dig Dug, Qix, Mr. Do!, Tron, a Pole Position (maybe II?) cockpit, Donkey Kong, Dk Jr., Popeye, Jungle King (later a Jungle Hunt!)...there were many more, I'm sure. The best was that they were open all day on Saturdays and NO ONE played there during the day. It was mainly a pool hall, so I basically got to play whatever I wanted. Man, those were the days...
And of course there was the arcade at the new mall they built in 1987...Mindboggle! They had all the latest and greatest games...Paperboy, Gauntlet, Marble Madness, Roadblasters, Indiana Jones, 720...as you can see I have a special fondness for Atari games of that era. Great great innovative games with a distinct visual flair. And of course Grandma would take us over there at least once a week and give me a couple of dollars to play with. Ah, the good old days....you know, if I had SAVED all those quarters, I could build the greatest MAME cabinet ever!
And who could forget the Pavilion at Myrtle Beach? Nothing like an arcade on the boardwalk. basically it was a big concrete slab with a roof over it right next to the beach. Just about every arcade game you could think of sat under that awning at one time. You could literally walk right off the beach and into the arcade. One big open space with a couple of hundred cabinets in it. Man, if only I knew the operator...
Clearly I have gone on far too long. But of course this is *exactly* why we're on these forums in the first place, right?
John