Why Isn't There a More Prominent Game Boy Scene?
Posted: Fri Apr 03, 2015 1:14 am
Aside from the latest Wii U title, the only video game I buy is an occasional GB/GBC/GBA cart. Game Boy games are still shockingly cheap, and the binder storage method keeps my horde neatly compact. Even the rare titles really are affordable when compared to other consoles. I'm so proud to own Kid Dracula and Snow Bros for the GB, and I really didn't spend all that much when I bought them in early 2014.
At my local haunts, I've yet to experience a single person browsing through the Game Boy section along with me. The NES/SNES areas see enough traffic, so why not more love for the less costly, comparable Game Boy family? After all you can play these games anywhere, even on your television.
Most titles are $6 or less, and I know of two stores that sell them at a $2 flat rate - aside from the Mario/Zelda/Metroid/Final Fantasy/etc. displayed under the counter. These two stores don't even bother including the other titles in their inventory systems. I asked to see "the cardboard box with all the Game Boy games in it" last night and one of the two clerks uttered, "I didn't even know we had that," to his co-worker. I couldn't help but laugh.
Whenever I play my GBA SP in between classes, the only question I ever hear is, "Is that Pokemon!?!?" I don't mind the question, as I understand people are just trying to be friendly. It's just surprising to never hear anything else - even with a fat grey cartridge sticking out of the bottom.
Jeremy Parish has Game Boy World, and then there's Tiny Cartridge (which is more current-handheld related), and of course noiseredux's Game Boy Player blog. For a library with decades-worth of games, sites like these shouldn't be such anomalies.
Better yet, where's all the love for the non-Nintendo retro handhelds? Why don't modern mobile games inspire more collectors to explore their nostalgia for portable games? I'm especially concerned with the GB/GBC/GBA library though. What other console legally plays Mario, Sonic, Crash Bandicoot, Banjo Kazooie, Spyro, Bonk, Klonoa, Conker, and even Aero the Acrobat games?
At my local haunts, I've yet to experience a single person browsing through the Game Boy section along with me. The NES/SNES areas see enough traffic, so why not more love for the less costly, comparable Game Boy family? After all you can play these games anywhere, even on your television.
Most titles are $6 or less, and I know of two stores that sell them at a $2 flat rate - aside from the Mario/Zelda/Metroid/Final Fantasy/etc. displayed under the counter. These two stores don't even bother including the other titles in their inventory systems. I asked to see "the cardboard box with all the Game Boy games in it" last night and one of the two clerks uttered, "I didn't even know we had that," to his co-worker. I couldn't help but laugh.
Whenever I play my GBA SP in between classes, the only question I ever hear is, "Is that Pokemon!?!?" I don't mind the question, as I understand people are just trying to be friendly. It's just surprising to never hear anything else - even with a fat grey cartridge sticking out of the bottom.
Jeremy Parish has Game Boy World, and then there's Tiny Cartridge (which is more current-handheld related), and of course noiseredux's Game Boy Player blog. For a library with decades-worth of games, sites like these shouldn't be such anomalies.
Better yet, where's all the love for the non-Nintendo retro handhelds? Why don't modern mobile games inspire more collectors to explore their nostalgia for portable games? I'm especially concerned with the GB/GBC/GBA library though. What other console legally plays Mario, Sonic, Crash Bandicoot, Banjo Kazooie, Spyro, Bonk, Klonoa, Conker, and even Aero the Acrobat games?