The game box that dropped our jaw.

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osg87

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Jul 31, 2010
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I work in retail. During this time of year it gets quite busy and i get frustrated quickly. On a day when i felt i had just about enough, something amazing caught my eye. I seen a kid holding a box to a video game he just purchased.
He simply stared at the box. He was struck in awe at the box. The kid must have been under 10 or 11 and there he was holding a box to a video game he really wanted. His jaw open. his eyes racing franticly across the box. His mind filled with open possibilities that the game may have had in store for him. His mom walked up to him and he started to speak to her franticly. He talked about stuff he had heard the game had. He talked about what he wanted to do. And the mom gave him a look that i knew all to well.
She just smiled and nodded at him. Clearly uninterested in the game. Why is this important. Cause in that brief time i noticed this. I recalled the days i use to hold a game box and stare at it in a store. I couldn't wait to get home. I couldn't wait to play. It brought me back to a time when i feel i may have truly understood what it meant to play video games.
It took that feeling of stress and pressure. Removed the feeling of chlosterphobia away from me as i remembered what not only this holiday season and video games in general is really about. Excitement, joy,....Hope.
Please if you read this do not take the games you have for granted. Please enjoy everything you have. For me. If i had to pick the game that as a child i just stood in the isle and looked at the box. Eagerly awaiting to get home and throw it into the console.
House of the dead 2 for the sega dreamcast. I had the light gun. the game. and i remember the car ride being the longest car ride of my life. Post some of the games that you looked foward too more then anything. Lets take a trip down memory lane and return to our childhood. when gaming truly felt better
 

Jumplion

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Mar 10, 2008
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I remember one time during Hannukah, I was around 11 or so, and my best friend's grandmother bought Jak 3 for me.

It was kickass, both the game, and the grandmother.
 

Busdriver580

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Dec 22, 2009
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I remember getting my friends together after school in the 4th grade for Goldeneye 64, it was good times
 

Danceofmasks

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Jul 16, 2010
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Parents that understand are a rare breed.
Watch Day[9]'s daily #100 where he tells his life (starcraft) story ... there's a mom that gets it.

Consequently, his brother Tasteless is now making a very nice living commentating a game he loves (Starcraft 2) on GOMTV.
 

Spy Killer

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Feb 4, 2010
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Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time. Remembering fond memories of playing A Link to the Past on my brothers Super Nintendo. I begged and pleaded for that game, day after day. Upon christmas day I ran down the stairs to see the presents laid out under the tree. I found the present that was clearly the box for a N64 game. When the family was up I opened the gift, hands shaking...

Me and my bro had so much fun playing our new game, Goldeneye 007. Happy Holidays!
 

SimuLord

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Aug 20, 2008
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My mom used to roll her eyes at me when I'd rave about games like Civilization and SimCity 2000 (Christ, I'm old.) She just couldn't wrap her head around the idea that building things like cities and nations on a computer could be fun.

It's not that she was completely ignorant of gaming---she understood the fun in a game like Madden or NHL Hockey (my brother's favorites), and she certainly got the appeal of Tetris (since she actually got a Game Boy to play it at bedtime.) But simulation and strategy games she just couldn't grasp (never more so than when I saw Aerobiz in Nintendo Power magazine and had to have it.)
 

The Rogue Wolf

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When I was in high school, my best friend and I decided to head down to the mall to pick up Street Fighter II for the SNES. As he drove back, I practically cradled that box in my hands, gently flipping through the instruction manual, imagining all the fun we'd have fighting against each other in the game.

Then we got back to his house... to find out he'd forgotten his house key. So we sat on the porch for an hour, waiting for his parents to get back home, talking about aaaaaall the fun we'd have once we actually got to play the game.

Totally worth the wait, though.
 

Dog Wednesday

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Apr 21, 2010
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The Legend Of Zelda on the NES. 1989 in a busy Myers store in Melbourne. $110. The same price many games retail for today. Never kid yourself into thinking games were so much cheaper 'back in the day'
 

Danceofmasks

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Dog Wednesday said:
The Legend Of Zelda on the NES. 1989 in a busy Myers store in Melbourne. $110. The same price many games retail for today. Never kid yourself into thinking games were so much cheaper 'back in the day'
Umm, you bought a game from Myers then, and lemme guess, EB now?
Australian retailers have always overcharged for games ... you gotta know where to buy them.

For example, I bought Civ 5 new, a week after release, from a retail store in Melbourne for $60.
The store is Dungeon Crawl.

Google them, visit them, they are awesome!
 

Sephychu

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Dec 13, 2009
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Bagh, humbug.
In my opinion, we should do away with boxes, and it should all be digital download!

Naw, seriously, I remember those days. Good days. I wonder how long they'll last?
 

Drakmeire

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Seeing the box for Majora's Mask with the mask in such detail and then seeing the gold, holographic cartridge. I knew I was about to play something special.
 

RatRace123

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Dec 1, 2009
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Damn man, that brings me back.
I remember when I first got my N64, and the first game I got with it was Diddy Kong Racing. I was 5 at the time and I remember just being entranced by the box, it was like I was in a whole different plane of reality.
First exposure to videogames... definitely a memorable moment in my life.
 

The_Deleted

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Aug 28, 2008
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My son does this. He's nearly five and he looks at the game boxes the same way I do. Holding the box at the top and flipping over to the reverse. He's pretty damned good at them too. Have a feeling LEGO Harry Potter might prove a challenge, but his mum will play through with him.

My one year old daughter is starting to handle boxes the same way too. So here we go again....
 

Dog Wednesday

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Apr 21, 2010
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Danceofmasks said:
Dog Wednesday said:
The Legend Of Zelda on the NES. 1989 in a busy Myers store in Melbourne. $110. The same price many games retail for today. Never kid yourself into thinking games were so much cheaper 'back in the day'
Umm, you bought a game from Myers then, and lemme guess, EB now?
Australian retailers have always overcharged for games ... you gotta know where to buy them.

For example, I bought Civ 5 new, a week after release, from a retail store in Melbourne for $60.
The store is Dungeon Crawl.

Google them, visit them, they are awesome!
No I dont buy from EB. And just so we are clear, the year was 1989. I was 7, there were very few options back then for the consumer and seriously EB? Low blow bro! Lets be civil and not speak of such foul things.
 

Danceofmasks

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Jul 16, 2010
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Dog Wednesday said:
Danceofmasks said:
Dog Wednesday said:
The Legend Of Zelda on the NES. 1989 in a busy Myers store in Melbourne. $110. The same price many games retail for today. Never kid yourself into thinking games were so much cheaper 'back in the day'
Umm, you bought a game from Myers then, and lemme guess, EB now?
Australian retailers have always overcharged for games ... you gotta know where to buy them.

For example, I bought Civ 5 new, a week after release, from a retail store in Melbourne for $60.
The store is Dungeon Crawl.

Google them, visit them, they are awesome!
No I dont buy from EB. And just so we are clear, the year was 1989. I was 7, there were very few options back then for the consumer and seriously EB? Low blow bro! Lets be civil and not speak of such foul things.
Haha fair enough ... I still can't believe EB pretends to be credible with their "we ship the vast majority of units" and "we'll match any price" ..
It's really quite a horrible state of affairs.
 

SheleKnights

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Oct 6, 2010
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Danceofmasks said:
Parents that understand are a rare breed.
Watch Day[9]'s daily #100 where he tells his life (starcraft) story ... there's a mom that gets it.

Consequently, his brother Tasteless is now making a very nice living commentating a game he loves (Starcraft 2) on GOMTV.
My mom plays WoW. We do instances sometimes. I'm glad I convinced her to try playing.
 

leviticusd

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Mar 19, 2009
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SimuLord said:
My mom used to roll her eyes at me when I'd rave about games like Civilization and SimCity 2000 (Christ, I'm old.) She just couldn't wrap her head around the idea that building things like cities and nations on a computer could be fun.

It's not that she was completely ignorant of gaming---she understood the fun in a game like Madden or NHL Hockey (my brother's favorites), and she certainly got the appeal of Tetris (since she actually got a Game Boy to play it at bedtime.) But simulation and strategy games she just couldn't grasp (never more so than when I saw Aerobiz in Nintendo Power magazine and had to have it.)
I should feel lucky then. My parent bought our first personal computer so I COULD play Civilization. We saw it at one of my dad's friends house (he owned an office supply store). He let me play it and I was smart enough to rave about the educational side. Next thing I know we had a computer and Civilization for Christmas that year.

And Chuck Yeager's Air Combat...that was awesome!
 

cannot_aim

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Dec 18, 2008
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The Orange Box

I have never been so happy to love video games as the day that I picked up that box.
 

4nthr4x

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Jun 5, 2010
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The day I got my SNES with Donkey Kong Country. It was 1994, I was 7-8 years old.

It was 1 year before PS1 was released.

I wore it out for 6 years, until the exact day I got my hands on the PS2. So, that's 5 years of SNES while everyone else has a PS1.