This exhibition (aka Videogame Nation) was being held in what's known as the Urbis - a glass isosceles triangle of truly grotesque proportions:
Urbis, yesterday. Sans legions of skaters usually found outside.
Anyway, I grabbed a mate and went to check it out. It cost £3 to get in and was overrun by shouting kids, but it was quite a decent little exhibition - indeed I was initially impressed by the first display case I was greeted by because it housed copies of long defunct games mags and consoles of yesteryear. So I wandered around, played on a NES and an Amstrad GX4000, posted a lap record on WipEout and even had a quick bash on Banjo Kazooie...but something was niggling at me. And as I approached the end of the trip down memory lane, it hit me in the face like a massive wet fish swung by an irate cybernetic clown: The was no mention whatsoever of the Dreamcast, or for that matter, the Saturn!
As such, I was forced to draw a Dreamcast logo on a piece of paper and pin it to the comments board on my way out, along with the caption: "Dreamcast - gone but not forgotten!"
The Dreamcast Junkyard: still spreading the good word. I suppose I should've written "All Hail the Undead Console," but you can't have it all, eh?!
I went to a 'Game on' exhibit in London that not only mentioned the Saturn and Dreamcast, they had more than one of each set up to play including a ten player Saturn Bomberman! Which was nice. I did a blog post about it back at Gagaman is in: http://gagaman.blogspot.com/2006/11/game-on-exhibit-science-museum-56k-no.html
ReplyDeleteBloody hell, that was three years ago.
Well, you know what they say GM - time flys when you're sticking pencils in your eyes...or something...
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of games expos, I hear there's one in London at some point in the near future. Anyone know any more about it?
Neato!
ReplyDeleteI wish there was some sort of convention like that within reasonable driving distance of me.