15 Kopeks Amazing: a virtual look inside Moscow's Soviet Arcade Games Museum
This started to make the rounds a few weeks back, but hasn't gathered nearly as much attention as it should, for as outstandingly wicked as it is: you may have originally heard of Moscow State Technical University 'Soviet Arcade Games Museum' from an April 2009 Edge article that told the story quite well, but was accompanied by painfully tiny images.
But now, of all people, Art Lebedev's design studio -- the same creators as the OLED-driven Optimus Maximus keyboard [the same as was featured on, of all things, a 2007 cover of Edge] -- has given the museum a full website makeover, complete with a growing collection of its games recreated and playable online.
Of the collection, the most playable is Sea Battle (above, dig the fantastically ambient faint whirr of its machinery as you play, and its rustically smudged viewfinder), but there's also the Street Racer-esque game Magistral (right), Rally, another competitive racer, and finally Gorodki, a digital adaptation of a traditional sport that, even now having read about, I still don't quite understand.
In addition to the recreated versions (look around for the 'play' link on each page), the site's collected PDF versions of the machine's manuals, close-up money shots of its coin slots, and more gorgeous photography of each machine than you could ever want.
The only thing it currently lacks is a full English translation (I've somewhat annoyingly linked to Google translations of each of the pages above), but presumably they're being added over time, as the museum itself continues to restore and collect more historical information on each game.
If you only visit one site today, make it this one.




KenSmith
#1 – 7:26 PM June 30, 2009
Oooh boy, it's been ages since I played arcade games. I thought they're extinct already. LOL..This made me curious about the gaming industry in Moscow, was it dominated by PC and console games as well? And speaking of PC games, did you know that the Chinese government wants to nuke all sellers of World of Warcraft gold?
Andrey
#2 – 1:34 AM July 1, 2009
As I understand it, Gorodki is a cheap and portable version of bowling. You throw a stick instead of rolling ball, and a figure made with chunks of wood replaces the pins. The more chunks you move the more scores you get.
@KENSMITH
Arcade was very popular in the last years of Soviet Union. But no new games were made and the old ones became outdated, broken and incompatible with new coins. In early 90s you still could find an arcade room here and there (they were using tokens instead of classic 15 koppek coins), but then the market became dominated by NES clone 'Dendy' and first PCs. As for the russian game devs, they were first in love with Sinclair ZX Spectrum and then moved to PC. Consoles are still terra incognita for most of them.