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Arcade Infinity closing its doors: The end of an era

Twit
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
EDITOR'S NOTEfrom Demian Linn

[Update: In true Christmas-miracle style, it looks like Arcade Infinity may not be down for the count just yet! Thanks to William Swann for the tip.]

Marcel offers up a nice eulogy for Arcade Infinity, one of the last great arcades. R.I.P.

This January 15th, I will go to the (semi-) famous Arcade Infinity for the last time. AI has had its fair share of skilled players, celebrities, and crowds walk through its doors, but after the 15th those doors will close forever. A long history of rent hikes and waning business has finally driven AI's health bar down to zero, and it was down to its last round.

I've probably been to Arcade Infinity five times in my entire life. Once I went there with an idea for a feature story, and the last time I went just to take in the sights and sounds.

Nearly every game in AI had someone playing on it  -- often two people, because of AI's reputation as a fighting game community. AI was one of the first places in the U.S. to get Street Fighter 4 as well as Blazblue: Calamity Trigger and King of Fighters 11, and games like these brought in all manner of people to test their skills, from students to businessmen, fair-weather fans to competitors bound for EVO. To me, there was no other place like AI, and it was a miracle such a place still existed. Like a zombie it continued to shuffle forward when all its brethren had long decayed.

 

Many gamers from before 2000 may remember a time when arcades were widespread. I would look forward to visiting Redondo Beach when I was 10 as much for the beach as the Redondo Fun Center, where I could try my hand at The Simpsons arcade game. But nowadays arcades are a relic of the past. Is history just catching up with AI? Arcades are certainly expensive ventures to run, and consoles make it easier to find competition.

Of course people are bitter about it. One particularly vocal person from iPlaywinner caught my eye -- not only is he bitter that such an acclaimed arcade is dying, but he blames so-called "SoCal scrubs" for the lack of support for arcades in the area.

"A whole generation of scrubs that wont leave their god damn living room let AI die. Everyone claims they love the arcade culture and what not but their full of shit. SoCal has so many fighting game players and are you telling me you couldn't go down to your local AMAZING Japanese style arcade once a fuckin week so it could stay around."

One thing is for certain: It was an amazing run. Whenever someone would talk about the death of arcades, I'd always think about Arcade Infinity as the exception. Regardless of the support it received, the service it gave, and the acclaim it earned, Arcade Infinity will always be one of my fondest memories.

Regardless of whether or not arcades are still relevant in an age of online gaming and instant connection, the arcade is like a grandfather to modern consoles, much like the much-beloved Atari 2600 or the NES. Is it really the fault of the local community for letting such an iconic place disappear? After all, no matter how good business was or could be, rent in that the area has been on the rise.

I personally think a reaction like the one above is just the voice of a particularly bitter fan. One who blames the new and refuses change. Blaming the console version of Street Fighter 4 seems a bit much. After all, SF4 coming to consoles was singlehandedly responsible for breeding new interest in the long-stagnant fighting game genre.

How do you feel about this news? And where do you stand on this issue of supporting a long extinct breed of gaming?

 


 
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Comments (7)
Alexemmy
December 29, 2010

Pssh, everything I ever want to go to is a 45 minute drive from my house, and I drive it all the time. Sadly, there are no arcades anywhere around me, unless there are any in Detroit I don't know about. Or if you count Chuckie Cheese.

Twit
December 29, 2010

I used to love playing Jurassic Park the arcade game at my local Chuck E. Cheese.

Come to think of it, the fighting game scene was thought to have died with arcades, but what's the harm if fighting games were revived by Street Fighter IV on consoles but possibly an opposite effect on surviving arcades?

Dscn0568_-_copy
December 29, 2010

I have to drive long commutes everywhere as well, though to be fair to Marcel I don't know how far-off Arcade Infinity is relative to his job/school. SoCal traffic is probably a nightmare as well. My friend went to AI while on vaction and talked like he would go there every day if he could.

I wouldn't blame Street Fighter 4 since I'm sure Arcade Infinity benefited from the year or so where the game was exclusive to the arcades.  But Capcom's reluctance to update the game with the console characters hurt it later on, even if most people would have still used shotos/Sagat. SSF4 Arcade Edition is the first time they are available in arcades, and even that game didn't come out until 7-8 months after the console version and 2 years after arcade SF4. Arcades need those exclusive characters and balance changes to draw crowds who wouldn't normally go there and make back their investment. I'm sure console players won't be seeing the changes to AE and BlazBlue: Continuum Shift 2 for a couple of months because of that.

Default_picture
January 12, 2011

Alex- The only two arcades i go to in the Metro Detroit area (that arn't Chuckie Cheese, as you said) are the American Fun Center in Oakland Mall and Pinball Pete's in Ann Arbor. Pinball Pete's is the better arcade, more older games and less ticket/prize games than AFC.

Twit
January 12, 2011

Yup. I wanted to get in but BM kept crashing on me. But as AI stated in some public circles, Round 1, a new family fun center just down the way, is pretty stiff competition.

Things are looking up at least but the article now feels... awkward. Hopefully it still comes through as a discussion of the significance of arcades(?).

Default_picture
January 13, 2011

I always loved arcades. To me that was true social gaming. Nowadays social gaming is getting cussed at by a 13 year old on Xbox Live.

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