I got back into video games in my 40's, bought a PS4 and did some all night sessions. I have a PS5 now, but I don't use it as much. My favorite games are Far Cry 4 and Far Cry 5, The Last of Us, and Horizon Zero Dawn. I'm an ADHD person and these things can really trigger my hyper focus superpower like nothing else. The one that did it the worst was Horizon Zero Dawn. The virtual world is so amazing. I would play all night long until my controller went dead and I was completely exhausted. Then I would basically take a long nap, maybe three hours or something, and get up to play some more.
OT Businesses that you grew up with that no longer exist
Re: OT Businesses that you grew up with that no longer exist
Re: OT Businesses that you grew up with that no longer exist
Wild so is it like a drug or alcohol addiction???GL_Storm wrote: ↑Thu Feb 19, 2026 5:56 amI got back into video games in my 40's, bought a PS4 and did some all night sessions. I have a PS5 now, but I don't use it as much. My favorite games are Far Cry 4 and Far Cry 5, The Last of Us, and Horizon Zero Dawn. I'm an ADHD person and these things can really trigger my hyper focus superpower like nothing else. The one that did it the worst was Horizon Zero Dawn. The virtual world is so amazing. I would play all night long until my controller went dead and I was completely exhausted. Then I would basically take a long nap, maybe three hours or something, and get up to play some more.
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- Sibelius Hindemith
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Re: OT Businesses that you grew up with that no longer exist
Where were you when i posted those arcade video game polls a year ago?XpertDBA wrote: ↑Wed Feb 18, 2026 9:34 pmLike I said, I spent thousands of hours when I was at the UW 1981-1982 playing in the arcades. It made me drop out after two years, and I had to go down to Phoenix to finish my C.I.S. degree. So video games almost derailed by career early on. Lol........But talk about the golden age of gaming. Between arcade games and MTV being brand new, I'm not really sure how I made it through honestly.D-train wrote: ↑Wed Feb 18, 2026 9:17 pmMy God I had know idea you were a video game Scientist! So glad that I started this thread.XpertDBA wrote: ↑Wed Feb 18, 2026 8:55 pm
Pacman was just memorizing boards, so that never appealed to me. Donkey Kong was revolutionary and a really fun game. Frogger was fun but I was never really good at it. Tetrus I found really boring.
Now an interesting thing about Galaga. If, on the first wave, you leave one of the two left-hand bees as the last thing on the wave, and let that bee fly and recycle through the screen top to bottom for 15-20 minutes, NOTHING will ever shoot at you for the rest of the game. It's a bug, and we used to use it to play that game forever and turn it over. We'd have dozens of spectators watching us thinking we were good at the game, when really we just exploited the bug to make everything stop shooting at us. The bug is still in the arcade machines today, and can still be exploited.
My personal favorite was Defender, and I got really good at it. When you get to 990,000 points, everything you hit from there until 1,000,000 would give you an extra life, and then stop giving you extra lives for permanently. I believe it was the game requiring the most skill to perfect. Was the first side-scroller arcade game and required you to fly with precision while also handling quite a few buttons.
I also didn't like Space Invaders as it was slow and kind of boring, but Asteroids was a completely different story. For when it originally came out (late 1979), nothing could touch it for how challenging it was. The strategy for that game was to blow up everything but a small little asteroid piece, and then you would fly as fast as you could bottom to top, waiting for the little ship worth 1,000 points every kill. Hopefully, the little ship wouldn't blow up your last asteroid piece or you'd get a new wave of asteroids that was more challenging. You could repeatedly kill the small ship to get to 99,900 and turn that game over.![]()
Re: OT Businesses that you grew up with that no longer exist
They can be. For me, I think it helps that I'm older, that I have other interests, and my favorite games are in-between releases. I'm also not actively seeking out new ones to dive into. For younger guys though, it can be a real problem.D-train wrote: ↑Thu Feb 19, 2026 6:38 pmWild so is it like a drug or alcohol addiction???GL_Storm wrote: ↑Thu Feb 19, 2026 5:56 amI got back into video games in my 40's, bought a PS4 and did some all night sessions. I have a PS5 now, but I don't use it as much. My favorite games are Far Cry 4 and Far Cry 5, The Last of Us, and Horizon Zero Dawn. I'm an ADHD person and these things can really trigger my hyper focus superpower like nothing else. The one that did it the worst was Horizon Zero Dawn. The virtual world is so amazing. I would play all night long until my controller went dead and I was completely exhausted. Then I would basically take a long nap, maybe three hours or something, and get up to play some more.
Technologically, I think much of entertainment will move into various types of AI driven immersive simulations and the ones that hit will be the most addictive experiences we've ever encountered. The technology for this exists now, but the hardware isn't quite there yet from what I understand.
Re: OT Businesses that you grew up with that no longer exist
Just popped in.....not sure if it was mentioned; anybody remember Drug Emporium in Lynnwood?
It was in the lot where a cheapie theater used to be and the small Lynnwood post office still is.
Chuckie Cheese used to be there, too. Lynnwood Convention Center is in that plaza now.
Drug Emporium was an interesting drug store/pharmacy. They never changed prices on any thing.
You might be looking for Right Guard deodorant, for instance. Same size, product might have one can
for 99 cents, another for $1.05, another for $1.18. New stock got priced at whatever their mark-up
formula was. On the shelf stock remained priced as it was.
Bottle of 100-count Bayer Aspirin? Might be two to 4 bottles with different prices.
Fun place to shop. Absurd marketing but drew a crowd and always busy.
It was in the lot where a cheapie theater used to be and the small Lynnwood post office still is.
Chuckie Cheese used to be there, too. Lynnwood Convention Center is in that plaza now.
Drug Emporium was an interesting drug store/pharmacy. They never changed prices on any thing.
You might be looking for Right Guard deodorant, for instance. Same size, product might have one can
for 99 cents, another for $1.05, another for $1.18. New stock got priced at whatever their mark-up
formula was. On the shelf stock remained priced as it was.
Bottle of 100-count Bayer Aspirin? Might be two to 4 bottles with different prices.
Fun place to shop. Absurd marketing but drew a crowd and always busy.
Rocky Colavito is a Hall of Famer in my book!
- Sibelius Hindemith
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Re: OT Businesses that you grew up with that no longer exist
How long ago was that? I know that lot going back to the early 2000s but there was no theatre or drug store there. There was a Joanne Fabrics* and still is a Silver Platters next to it. And on the other side is Apollo Spas or something. The Chuck E. Cheese was still there last time i was there, and the post office.
* another business that no longer exists
* another business that no longer exists
Re: OT Businesses that you grew up with that no longer exist
Wayne Cody used to have a Restaurant across from the Alderwood Mall. Bruce King, Tony Ventrella and Wayne Cody. The Big three of the 70s and 80s on KOMO KING and KIRO.
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- Sibelius Hindemith
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- Joined: Thu May 02, 2019 3:09 am
- Location: Seattle
Re: OT Businesses that you grew up with that no longer exist
Not Walmart....it is near the CostcoSibelius Hindemith wrote: ↑Mon Feb 23, 2026 4:54 pmStill there. One on Alderwood Mall Pkwy near the Walmart.