I recently watched a surprisingly good documentary The King of Kong: A
Fistful of Quarters where Steve Wiebe tries to break the Donkey
Kong record held for many years by the popular Billy Mitchell. These
battles take place at video arcades across America as well as Wiebe's
garage in Redmond, Washington. A neat back and forth battle fraught
with controversy for a record that only a handful of people actually
care about. Similar in spirit to many academic battles.
More than just a good movie, it brought back memories from my high
school days when video arcades were at their prime. I spent too many
nights at the Willowbrook Mall arcade in New Jersey playing Donkey
Kong, Pac Mac, Centipede and the like with their simple graphics and
repetitive play. These arcade got quite crowded with a few local
celebrities that could break a machines record with quite a crowd
looking on. Much bigger crowds than Wiebe draws in his world record
attempts in the documentary.
I was never a great video game player, I actually
prefer pinball, but we took good notes and writing microcomputer
simulations of some popular games became a hobby of mine (see Ribbit).
I had just enough success to bring me heavily into computers and thus
computer science. A little more success and I probably would not have
gone into an academic career. Life moves in mysterious ways.
I would reminisce much more about those old video arcades but it's my
turn on Guitar Hero. Rock on.