The Joy of the Vintage Shop
If you’ve looked at the PopMatters front page recently, there’s a good chance you’ve seen the recent (and ongoing) set of features dealing with the world of secondhand books. If you haven’t seen them, go look at them, because each and every one of them thus far is an interesting, absorbing look into either an individual store or the culture of the used bookstore in general.

Squeee! Pitfall! Perhaps my first
video game love.
Being based in Buffalo, I didn’t really see this happening until recently—not until the last couple of weeks did I even realize that a shop dealing in vintage games even existed in this city, given that most of the web hotspots for locating such things (the Cheap Ass Gamer forums, the AtariAge forums, and so on) seem to leave a gaping hole where Buffalo should be in terms of shops in which to buy my old Nintendo / Dreamcast / Genesis / etc. games. As such, any travel to another town is an immediate excuse to look up the possible vintage gaming destinations. A trip to Columbus this past month revealed a number of potential hotspots, most notably a place called “BuyBacks”.
Now, BuyBacks isn’t your typical mom ‘n pop shop; at least one of their locations looks more like a competitor to Best Buy from the outside than anything else, though the Ohio State location was at least commingling with the rest of the shops in town. Even so...wow, is it a rush to have an alternative to the GameStop / GameCrazy block that I’m used to.

This makes me happy in unquantifiable sorts of ways.
Vintage shops are where we can indulge in a minor case of arrested development and recapture the joy of walking into the toy store and seeing, say, Zelda II: The Adventure of Link up there on the shelf in all its golden glory. Even better, Zelda II won’t even cost you $69.99 (+ tax!) anymore.

Vintage gaming also invites us to
remember a time when box art had something
in common with Harlequin romance novels.
Still, more and more aging gamers (such as myself) are finding joy in playing, in the most pure way possible, the games of their youth, and discovering games that they may have missed all those years ago.
Retrogaming fans might want to check out the excellent newsletters at Retrogaming Times Monthly for some good reading that’ll bring you back. Or, you could join The Brainy Gamer’s newly established (and highly informal) Vintage Game Club, if you actually want to participate in the discussion. Me, I’m off to scratch the itch at a Buffalo-based shop that copious Googling eventually uncovered. Hopefully, it’s worth the search.


That’s the Only Qix Neo video on youtube? I’m a little saddened at that news. There needs to be more love for these retro titles.
Comment by GeorgeR from North Eastern US — July 10, 2008 @ 9:35 pm