In May 2000, after new
work experiences in the lovely city Zwolle, I found a new job in a customs
agency. The company, that originally started in Germany, had a small and old
office in a building from the dutch railway company in the city of Zutphen.
This implied that I didn´t have to travel so far anymore and besides I could go
and have a couple of pints in my favourite bar on Fridays.
With one of my friends
who liked bundles (you know, stuff where the Lovin´ Spoonful sings about) I had
already made holiday plans. In July, we were brought to the small railway
station Ruurlo and left to the south.
When I finally bought
my Interrail ticket in Maastricht, we crossed the border to Belgium, in Liège
we hopped on a train to Namur, and from there we went via Luxemburg and
Strasbourg to the Moselle area. The train didn´t get further than Saverne and
we jumped on a bus there to get to Sarrebourg. There we took a taxi and arrived
in Gondrexange, a small village with a lake on a camping.
Camping sites had
changed, I figured. As a kid, I hung out in camping arcades, if there were any.
But in 1992 I was injured and in 1993 there was no arcade (former Eastern Block
holiday in Hungary), whereas in 1994 I had more interest for the bar in the
french village Volonne (area 04, Alpes d´Haute Provence) and the chicks from
the southern part of the Netherlands.
There was no arcade on
the small french camping in 2000. Well, it was no big deal. We didn´t need an
arcade, we came to explore “la belle France”. At the reception we both bought a
packet of Gauloises, we sat down in the grass and smoked our cigarette.
Yet in the last week
of our holiday, when we finished the 24 hour Strasbourg-Avignon-Strasbourg
roundtrip (which started in a Strasbourg night bar at 4 AM where we sang
Another Brick in the Wall with great enthousiasm) we stayed in Sarrebourg and
took a hotel for only 30 francs per night. We spent hours in the pub, just
across the Sarrebourg station, drinking a nice coffee and there was a Tales of
the arabian nights pinball machine to make sure you´d get rid of your small
change. This was also the place where I celebrated the french EURO2000 victory.
Basically the
retrogaming part of the stories starts here. My friend N. invited me over to
his place and opened a closet. The bloke had 2 or 3 commodore 64 machines. I
still have a C64 somewhere in my parents home, with a lot of floppies. No idea
whether they still work, if it hasn´t been thrown away then it has been kept
for already 14 years in a dark cabinet behind my old sleeping room.
Due to circumstances I
leave my country in 2003. 7 years after my 7 weeks “practical holiday” in
Salamanca, I go back to my dear Spain, now to the city of Valencia. But the
weekends are dull and I have a lack of social life.
When I finally move to
the city of Barcelona 18 months later, the gaming aspect returns. 2 boys from
Basque country move in with us (typical “piso” for students) and show their
pirate playstation 2 with Burnout Takedown, we play it for a couple of hours,
with a Xibeca bottle on the table to keep the glasses filled with beer.
In a very short period
of boredom I spend money on a playstation 2 with GTA San Andreas and Pro
Evolution Soccer part 4. One of my friends from Russia plays with me. We both moved
out of the small flat to rent a room from a very nice Catalan girl. Naturally
we keep on gaming while we listen the Skeletons in the Closet album from the
Grateful Dead.
During a visit of
Pamplona in the early autumn of 2007, I get introduced to the Nintendo Wii. I
sleep a couple of nights in the house of a friend of my homie. Pamplona
celebrates the “small” San Fermin, and everybody is busy partying. One morning
I wake up and start to play tennis, baseball and golf with another friend. A
little later I take the bus from Villava back to Pamplona. Pamplona has a nice
square in the centre. After hanging around some time I decide to return to the
quarter Txantrea to search for my homie. But he isn´t there yet. His parents
invite me another beer, and in the evening we reunite in the emblematic bar
Akelarre.
In November 2008 I
leave the house in Barcelona, because the girl (George Thorogood would´ve said
landlady, but she was a bit young to be called a lady) wants to go and live
elsewhere with her boyfriend. My new friend from Pamplona also moves out of the
house, he works in a bar in our area and he can stay there temporarily.
One of my colleagues
from work offers me to move in his flat, a 6th floor attic without a lift.
Since I do not really have any other choice I agree. My friend is from Algeria
and his “cuadrilla” are from North Africa as well. A typical Saturday dish they
like to prepare is cous cous, and often we enjoy a can of Estrella beer in our
street or the nearby square. Arabic is very complicated for me and I only
remember the word “sukran”. My arab friends like music such as Zebda and Gnawa
Diffusion.
One of the guys is
from Guelmim, a hot desert city in the southwest of Morocco. He´s got a Dr.
Hyde inside himself after 3 beers which can cause pretty annoying situations.
After an old fashioned
Dutch Christmas holiday with a new years eve in Enschede, I come back to
Barcelona on the first Saturday of January, and we hit the town with another
arab friend from France.
3 months later I meet
Yina for the first time. We start to develop a relationship and in November I
move into her place in a whole new quarter.
My Play2 comes with me
and I connect it to her small TV to play Crazy Taxi and Flatout. After a couple
of years we move to the republic of Bolivia.
Wow, I just crawled
out of a time machine in this whole new continent for me. March 20, 2013. The
cans of beer in the plane were small, but I´ve slept wonderfully well. It rains
outside, we pass the customs, do not need to open our suitcases and stash
everything in the early 90s Toyota of my brother in law. The stores and houses
are more “messy” than in Europe. After approximately 1 and a half hour we
arrive at El Torno. This village is about 33 KM southwest of Santa Cruz on the
national route 7. From this village it is 24 KM to La Angostura, that is where
the mountains begin, and even more to the west is the touristic town of
Samaipata.
OK, so the country
looks a bit old fashioned. Every city of village has a small collection of
arcade machines. For a half peso you get a coin that you can use in an arcade
machine. For what is just one US Dollar, you can buy 14 credits.
After some exploring
on Twitter I found many retrogaming fans. When I uploaded some pictures of the
Sega games Road Rash and Columns, which must´ve been part of a torrent,
suddenly I received a lot of followers. It is very cool to see that there are
so many fans of 20 & 30 year old consoles and their games.
Because of misfortune,
the retrogames on my laptop were gone for a long time, the harddisk suffered
damage. Also my PlayStation 2 has been out of the running for some time because
the controller was completely worn out.
In the meantime, we
bought a chinese retro console here on the Ramada in Santa Cruz. The Ramada is
a crowded dirty open market place where you can buy a lot of stuff; food,
veggies, chemicals to kill insects, clothing, and generally it is cheaper than
in the supermarket. At some place there is an arcade with an Outrun game.
However I would get lost on the Ramada cause it has a strange structure,
generally the streets here do have names, but the people don´t usually know
them. If you ask directions, they will never give you street names, they will
say: 4 blocks, then left, 5 blocks, then right, or they will tell you that a
place is between the 1st ring and 2nd ring. But after a few years, if you come
to the city often enough, you´ll know which minibus to take and also if you
fetch a taxi, you´ll know at which amount he starts to rip you off.
So, the chinese console,
worth 14 bucks, consists of Super Mario Bros 1, 3, Galaga, Bomberman, Dig Dug,
Arkanoid, Millipede, Pinball, Pooyan and a lot more 80s games. It´s connected
on the AV1 of my TV, because my wife has become fan of the bomberman game. On the AV2 I reconnected the playstation 2
because I bought a new controller (the non original controller costs 11.50
dollars) and also my harddisk has been repaired, so I´ve got my MSX, C64, NES,
SNES and SEGA stuff back…
Greetings to all
retrofans, I hope you´ve all enjoyed this little trilogy, I wish you all the
best for 2016.
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