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 Arcade Fever

Originally titled Arcade Planet in early sales materials
(compare the original and final covers below), Arcade
Fever is an irreverent, never-too-serious look back at the video game era's
greatest boom, the early 80s, fueled by the arcade game craze. Now, I know a
thing or two about this subject myself, having written almost a book's worth of
material in the form of theLogBook.com's
own Phosphor Dot Fossils section, so I'm a bit of
a stickler when it comes to accuracy (even though I myself have gotten it wrong
from time to time, sometimes spectacularly). And in Arcade Fever, 80s
trivia expert John Sellers, who has created questions for Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? as well as writing 80s
trivia books of a more general nature, proves that he's got a good grasp of the
quarter-munching hits (and misses) of old.

Sellers' text is amusing, observant, and conveys both the essence of the games
and the author's estimate of a given game's place on the "cool" scale.
Each article is accompanied by MAME screen shots aplenty, as well as some
gorgeous photos taken by Steve Belkowitz at the well-stocked traveling
Videotopia retro-gaming exhibit. The photos, which really bring out the
long-forgotten beauty of many games' controls, cabinet art and design work, put
Arcade Fever on a plane above Van Burnham's Supercade, a book that
a lot of us assumed would be the definitive history work on classic
arcade games. Anyone could've slapped a bunch of MAME screen shots
together with a bit of commentary and called it a book. Sellers goes the extra
mile, offering some pop-culture context for the years covered.
Not that this doesn't have its downside; occasionally that commentary goes a
little overboard (jeez, was Pooyan
really that bad?) and there are a few places where I feel like it
would've been better to squeeze in a couple more game reviews. Extraneous
features like the "glossary" at the back - much of which is the
author's invention - and pieces on video game characters' fashion flubs and
video game-inspired movies that thankfully didn't happen...well, your mileage
may vary, but I tend to skip those sections whenever I picked up Arcade
Fever.
Overall, Arcade Fever impresses as a nice, somewhat cursory history of
the arcades about 20 years ago - back when the games were fun - and is aimed at
those who are casual fans of that era, not die-hard game collectors. And that,
ultimately, is the book's greatest strength.
Reviewed by Earl Green
theLogBook.com webmaster


- Year: 2001
- Author: John Sellers
- Genre: Non-fiction
- Length: 160 pages
- Publisher: Running Press
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