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Pac-Man Will Die: Cynicism and Retro Game “Endings”

Wednesday, Jul 28, 2010
Donkey Kong will get the girl. And you won’t.

Pac-Man will die.


The space invaders will win.


Donkey Kong will get the girl.  And you won’t.


Sorry about spoiling the endings of all those classic games.  A warning seemed a touch superfluous. 
  
Since viewing the Fine Brothers farcical video on game endings, 50 Nintendo Games Spoiled in 2 Minutes, I’ve been pondering the relative weirdness of video game resolutions.  While the Fine Brothers video merely reveals the simplicity of a lot of game endings (yes, plumber saves princess), the seeming simplicity of the plots of games of the mid- to late-‘80’s really have nothing on the sort of thing offered by early arcade game “endings.” 


Now, certainly the creators of Pac-Man, Space Invaders, and Donkey Kong really had no intention of creating a traditional plot for their games—something complete with introduction, conflict, and a final resolution (let alone much in the way of characterization or thematic interest).  However, these games still contained rudimentary narrative elements (space invaders were apparently “invading,” and the Earth, or something, needed defense from them).  These elements do provide the player with a vague sense of purpose besides merely racking up points.


Since the advent of games like Super Mario Bros. on the arcade (and home console) scene, the idea of a game being resolvable at all and playing a game in order to complete it or “see its ending” has become more the norm than anything else.  It is with that in mind that I ponder the sheer cynicism of the bare narratives of earlier arcade games of the early ‘80’s. 


Early arcade games were made to be potentially perpetual experiences, and ironically, looking at these narratives now makes one realize that the idea of being “unwinnable” has relatively horrific narrative consequence.  Again, this isn’t really an intentional goal of game design, just an interesting notion to ponder in retrospect (specifically, from the vantage point of an era where storytelling has become almost intrinsically entwined with video game design). 


Any player of the arcade Pac-Man knows the ending of the game before going in: Pac-Man will die; the ghosts will win.  The “story” is designed that way.  In other words, almost all early arcade games had unhappy endings.  They spoke themes of doom and inevitable failure.  Seen in this light, early arcade plots border on the nihilistic.


The only “reward” that might be possible for playing the game is not the thrill of Pac-Man completing his final maze to return home to Ms. Pac-Man and Baby Pac-Man; instead, it is the possibility of a kind of transient fame on an arcade machine scoreboard.  You can “carve” your initials into the video game (at least until someone unplugs it for the night) and revel in your standing in the rankings.  This kind of reward exists in a manner very different than the narrative resolution in most games now.  It exists external to the game itself, whereas the idea of “beating” Super Mario Bros. by saving the princess is an accomplishment embedded in the world and narrative of the game itself.


Instead, the only thing embedded in the narrative (in terms of resolution) in earlier games is the same inevitability of failure embedded in the endless repetition of Donkey Kong’s plot (yes, you could get the girl back from Donkey Kong but that “success” is always rewarded with a new level in which the monkey snatches her up again, so you have to start over—once you run out of lives, I guess the monkey wins).  That repetition broken only by regular loss complements an intentional goal of the arcade machine, though.  Early arcade games were about failure; it’s how video game owners made money on them.  The interest of the game was always in killing you, so that you (or the next guy in line) would slip another quarter in the slot.  The more plays an hour, the more quarters an hour.  They are games meant to extract from the player, much like gambling (be it machines or casinos).  The allure of continual play in this sense rests on failure and the idea of possibly “improving” the next time.  However, the story remains the same: the house wins, the space invaders crush the Earth’s defenses, the monkey gets the girl.  Oh, and Pac-Man will die.


While Mario’s (or Jumpman’s) experience of being a perennial loser in Donkey Kong probably wasn’t meant to parallel the player’s experience of being the same (as they plunked down another quarter to fail a game once again), it is ironic those experiences do run in parallel.


This cynicism of purpose in games is in stark contrast to the idea of actual win states for video games.  One can see why adding a resolvable narrative as a way of concluding a game was almost an inevitability in the evolution of gaming.  It is hard to continue wanting to play games with such a cynical outlook on the world, telling tales of losers and failure.  While the “guy saves girl” plotline of most early narrative-focused games may have seemed trite and over used, it is a hell of a lot more motivating than the “guy can never ever, ever save the girl” of the early arcade era.

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