View allAll Photos Tagged marblemadness

Taken for the Macro Monday theme of marbles. I tried so many ways of photographing marbles and finally decided on this one as my other ideas just didn't work.

THIS CAB HAS CHANGED it now has a bowed front end \___/ instead of straight out

  

A glimpse of McClellan Hall at Yale University in New Haven, CT, reflected and refracted through the glass marble that now lives in my camera bag.

 

I flipped the image vertically in Lightroom so the buildings would be right-side-up. The wooden surface at the top of the frame is the arm of a wooden bench.

Picked up some classic C64/Apple II software!

 

Now, I just need to find some way to carefully remove these stickers... Though, I may leave them just for "historical" purposes as these were all titles available at the EA Canada "Information Resource Centre" (library), which employees can borrow from. Very interestingly, you can see these copies have been part of the employee "library" since the days when EA Canada was not yet an Electronic Arts studio, but rather the Don Mattrick-founded Distinctive Software Inc.!

 

Also, some of these titles have "Demo/Review Copy - Not For Resale" types of stickers/labels on them, making them even more unique/rare!

Photo of Tomy's Screwball Scramble game, taken from TV Cream Toys www.tvcreamtoys.co.uk - more photos, plus write ups, at the web site.

Video games at EightyTwo in downtown Los Angeles, California.

Best Run, 0 Deaths, Marble Madness.

  

Trip to Game Vault classic arcade in Morristown, NJ. Saturday, September 1, 2018.

 

pictured: Paperboy, Millipede, Marble Madness, Baby Pac-Man, Michael Jackson's Moonwalker, Killer Instinct 2

Is it me or does anyone else feel like grabbing a trackball every time they look up to the roof of Bellevue City Center building?

Maybe seven is the one who should really be afraid.

Marble Madness, 1992, Mark Cerny, Steve Lamb, SEGA Master System.

 

From ‘The Art of Video Games.’

Smithsonian American Art Museum, 8th and F Streets, N.W. Washington D.C. 20004, US.

 

From eyem.ag/EyeEvents

This reminds me of the 80s arcade game marble madness, for some reason.

Marble Madness video game at Pinball PA in Aliquippa, Pennsylvania. (Atari, 1984)

From left to right: astroids, Q*Bert marble madness, star wars, marble madness (again) super punch-out, rampage and defender.

Close up of the Marble Madness video game cabinet. (Atari, 1984)

A bunch of colorful marbles.

Or fuzzy yarbles, I havent decided.

Control panel for the Marble Madness video game cabinet. (Atari, 1984)

Our contestants played the classic "Marble Madness" to win the Wii Nintendo donated for the Symposium

Here's another game that I hadn't seen in ages, but instantly remembered how to play. And then after about 2 minutes, I remembered how frustrating it was! But it's better when your 2-minute game didn't cost you a quarter!

Marble Madness video game at Funspot in Laconia, New Hampshire. (Atari, 1984)

Gurushots - Something round

Arcade machines at Barcade in brooklyn.

Brick Stanley tries to play Marble Madness ... without much sucess.

First paint for 2011, Marble Madness,

 

The Science Museum of Western Virginia, in Roanoke, Virginia, has an exhibit on the science of video games called Pixel Play. There are at least 30 arcade games from the 1980s in the exhibit, and you can play any of them (the only cost is the museum entrance fee). Shades of my youth!

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