1984 Arcade
$5 ALL YOU CAN PLAY!CASH ONLY!!!
4pm to 11pm Wednesday through Saturday. Under 16 must be accompanied by an adult.
Phone: (417) 831-3665 We Answer The Phone Only During Open Hours!!!
About 1984
1984 Arcade in its basic form is a classic 1980s Style Arcade. Here at 1984 we feature games from the 80's as well as a few from the 70's and 90's if they "fit". As you enter 1984 you pay five dollars at the door and then you can play all the video games you want. *We do offer Pinball for 25 cent per play. The games we offer are difficult to find and we are really more then just an arcade - it's a classic gaming museum featuring arcade machines that are just not available to the public anymore. We are especially proud of our collection of Vector games like Asteroids, Deluxe Asteroids, Gravitar, Tempest and BattleZone! You will find almost all the classics here including Space Invaders, Ms. Pac Man, Centipede and many more. We have about 50 games and we rotate new games in almost weekly. Of course we offer private parties and an 80's vibe, complete with music videos from ABC to ZZTop... Its all here at 1984.
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Home Wayback Machine Wayback Machine
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An Idiot's Checklist For The 1980s |
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Written by Lincoln Whisler
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Wednesday, 19 November 2008 |
By R. Martin Basso
Compiled Entirely From Memory, This Pretty Much Sums It All Up. Read, Reflect, Remember & Smile... And then lemme know if anything is missing.
THE DEFINITIVE IDIOT'S CHECKLIST FOR THE 1980'S
* SAVINGS & LOANS
* THE FACTS OF LIFE
* SILVERSPOONS
* GARBAGEPAIL KIDS
* MAGNUM P.I.
* BMX
* JORDACHE JEANS
* MUTUAL FUNDS
* CORDLESS TELEPHONES
* THE USFL
* ‘REAGANOMICS'
* HOME SHOPPING NETWORK
* PET PSYCHIATRISTS
* A.I.D.S.
* NORIEGA
* MARCOS
* BOOM BOXES
* VALLEY GIRLS
* "TOTALLY AWESOME"
* COMPACT DISCS
* 'THE GOONIES'
* APARTHEID AWARENESS
* BEEPERS
* PARACHUTE PANTS
* ‘MEMBER'S ONLY' JACKETS
* CAR ALARMS
* TALK SHOWS
* LIQUID DIETS
* COMEDY CLUBS
* MIAMI VICE
* CHALLENGER SHUTTLE
* MLK DAY
* VELCRO WALLETS
* BERMUDA SHORTS
* HACKEY SACKS
* APPLE COMPUTERS
* BOOGIE BOARDS
* SWATCH WATCHES
* YUPPIES
* HEALTH SPAS
* JOHN DELOREAN
* DIANETICS
* NEW ROMANTICS
* ‘SAFE SEX' |
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 19 November 2008 )
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Read more...
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Written by Lincoln Whisler
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Monday, 08 September 2008 |
Ok, so this ad is from 1982... but hey it was such a great product im assuming it was still available in 1984?
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Last Updated ( Monday, 08 September 2008 )
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Written by Lincoln Whisler
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Friday, 07 December 2007 |
Articles Orginal Link
Commodore 64 still loved
after all these years- Commodore 64 loved by many kids coming of age in the 1980s
- Popularity continues today on Web sites, in music and people's memories
- Nostalgia seekers can download their favorite C64 games on sites like C64.com
- C64 Orchestra plays the music from the games, CD release in U.S. in January
By Peggy Mihelich
CNN
(CNN) -- Like a first love or a first car, a first
computer can hold a special place in people's hearts. For millions of
kids who grew up in the 1980s, that first computer was the Commodore
64. Twenty-five years later, that first brush with computer addiction
is as strong as ever. "There was something magical about the C64," says Andreas Wallstrom of Stockholm, Sweden. He remembers the day he first laid eyes on his machine back in 1984. "My
father brought it home together with a tape deck, a disk drive, a
printer, and a couple of games...I used to sneak home during lunch to
play [on it] with my friends." Learn about the components of the C64 system » Wallstrom
is the webmaster and designer for C64.com, a Web site dedicated to
preserving the games, demos, pictures, magazines and memories of the
Commodore 64. C64.com visitors are mostly nostalgia seekers --
men in their 30s looking to download their favorite childhood games.
Emulators let them play the games without having a machine. Popular
downloads include "Boulder Dash," "Ghostbusters," and "The Great Giana
Sisters." "It may have not been the most sophisticated computer,
but it did have a lot of personality and it was lovable and remains
loveable," said Harry McCracken, vice president and editor in chief of
PC World. Often overshadowed by the Apple II and Atari 800, the Commodore 64
rose to great heights in the 1980s. From 1982-1993, 17 million C64s
were sold. The Guinness Book of World Records lists the Commodore 64 as
the best-selling single computer model. The computer featured 64
kilobytes of memory (a lot for 1982), a huge index of games, a
sophisticated sound chip, and a relatively parent-friendly price --
$595. On Monday, the Computer History Museum in Mountain View,
California, will celebrate the C64's 25th anniversary. Computer
pioneers will reflect on the C64's achievements and contribution to the
industry. Jack Tramiel, the founder and CEO of Commodore, will attend,
along with Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak and William C. Lowe, father
of the IBM PC. "It was the right machine for the time," said
McCracken. "The Commodore 64 did a lot to popularize computers." Sold
in shopping malls and discount stores and not just small computer
stores -- the norm for the time -- the C64 became many people's gateway
into the world of computers, said Brian Bagnall, author of "On the
edge: The spectacular rise and fall of Commodore." "It was so new," Bagnall said. Users could play many games and also learn the programming language of computers -- BASIC. Jim
Park, 39, a software developer in Minneapolis, Minnesota, got his start
on a C64 in 1984 when he was 16. Park learned to program
motion-graphics synchronized to dance music and ran a BBS, an
electronic bulletin board system, the precursor to the Internet. "I
really lucked out that something so obscure and nerdy has turned into
the modern business and pop-culture phenomenon that it has," he said. Wallstrom
said it was the simplicity of the C64 that made it so great. "You
switched it on and it was there, ready for input in a second.
Programming on the C64 was straightforward because you got to command
the processor directly. You had full control of the whole
computer...that is something you don't have with any modern PC." Still,
the C64 had an uneven reputation. It was widely considered clunky, its
BASIC outdated and graphics weak in comparison to the Apple II and
Atari 800, according to McCracken. And then there was the quirky floppy
drive. "It was pitifully slow," Bagnall said. "It was big and noisy. It
sounded like a Gatling gun when it was trying to load stuff." The
floppy drive took so long to load, the music would play before the game
did, recalls Rob Kramer, artistic & business director of
Productiehuis ON, a production company based in the Netherlands. "These
tunes would get stuck in your head," he said. In 2006 Kramer came
up with the idea of having an orchestra play the music from the games.
"We found this crazy orchestra that plays on the street. It's full of
young people in music school. They are in their 20s and they'd never
played a Commodore 64. For them it was like 'Wow, this is great stuff.'
" The 12-piece C64 Orchestra has played at churches, musical
venues and festivals. The compositions run 4-6 minutes. The crowds are
mostly fans of the C64. "They really dig it," Kramer said. Watch how I-Reporters are using the C64 today » Kramer
described the music as haunted. "There's a lot of tension, and it
repeats itself. It takes you places where normal classical music
doesn't." Watch as the orchestra plays » The
classical ensemble released a CD in Europe featuring the original
computer and orchestral versions of "Delta," "Commando," Monty on the
Run," "International Karate" and more. The CD will be available in the
United States on January 15. By 2007 computing standards, the
Commodore 64 is a dinosaur. A relic of the past, long made obsolete by
the march of time. But the C64 isn't dead. It's very much alive -- on
gaming Web sites, through music and in the memories of millions who
owned and loved them. "Computer nostalgia is something that runs
pretty deep these days. The memories that people have of this machine
are incredible," McCracken said. Twenty-five years ago computers were an individual experience; today they are just a commodity, he said. "I don't think there are many computers today that we use that people will be talking about fondly 25 years from now." |
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Last Updated ( Friday, 07 December 2007 )
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Written by Lincoln Whisler
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Wednesday, 28 November 2007 |
* The Cosby show premiers
* Sikhs occupy Golden Temple in Amritsar, India
* Indira Gandhi is assassinated
* Chemical disaster in Bhopal, India, December 3rd
* Geraldine Ferraro becomes the first woman Vice President running mate
* Reagan re-elected in landslide election, Walter Mondale is never heard from again
* Congress cuts off aid to Nicaragua, illegal guns sales start to fund the contras
* Stonewashed jeans are introduced * The first megabit chip is made at Bell Labs
* Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, US. The Soviets boycott
* Mary Lou Retton wins two gold, two silver and two bronze medals
* Old nude photos of Vanessa Williams, the current Miss America. She is forced from her throne
* The AIDS virus is discovered
* On January 28, Michael Jackson's hair caught fire during the shooting of Pepsi commercial
* The first infomercials appear on TV due to de-regulation by the FCC
* The first all rap radio format is introduced at LA's KDAY
* Run-D.M.C. are the first ever rap group to have an album certified gold
* The term cyberspace is coined by William Gibson in his novel "Neuromancer"
* Bob Geldof and Band Aid release "Do They Know It's Christmas"
* Vanessa Williams becomes first African American Miss America
* In 1984 Reagan makes famous joke: "My fellow Americans, I've signed legislation that will outlaw Russia forever. We begin bombing in five minutes." He supposedly didn't know the mic was on
* Apple Computer releases the Macintosh personal computer
* Calling themselves the PMRC (Parents' Music Resource Coalition), concerned parents, including Tipper Gore, wife of then-Tennessee Senator Albert Gore, Susan Baker, wife of Treasury Secretary James Baker, Georgie Packwood, wife of Oregon Senator Robert Packwood, and Nancy Thurmond, wife of South Carolina Senator Strom Thurmond, construct a campaign designed to 'educate' parents about certain alarming new trends in rock music.
These events were found at this 80s website. |
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 28 November 2007 )
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Top 100 Hits of 1984 / Top 100 Songs of 1984 |
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Written by Lincoln Whisler
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Wednesday, 31 October 2007 |
1. When Doves Cry, Prince
2. What's Love Got To Do With It, Tina Turner
3. Say Say Say, Paul McCartney and Michael Jackson
4. Footloose, Kenny Loggins
5. Against All Odds (Take A Look At Me Now), Phil Collins
6. Jump, Van Halen
7. Hello, Lionel Richie
8. Owner Of A Lonely Heart, Yes
9. Ghostbusters, Ray Parker Jr.
10. Karma Chameleon, Culture Club
11. Missing You, John Waite
12. All Night Long (All Night), Lionel Richie
13. Let's Hear It For The Boy, Deniece Williams
14. Dancing In The Dark, Bruce Springsteen
15. Girls Just Want To Have Fun, Cyndi Lauper
16. The Reflex, Duran Duran
17. Time After Time, Cyndi Lauper
18. Jump (For My Love), Pointer Sisters
19. Talking In Your Sleep, Romantics
20. Self Control, Laura Branigan
21. Let's Go Crazy, Prince and The Revolution
22. Say It Isn't So, Daryl Hall and John Oates
23. Hold Me Now, Thompson Twins
24. Joanna, Kool and The Gang
25. I Just Called To Say I Love You, Stevie Wonder
26. Somebody's Watching Me, Rockwell
27. Break My Stride, Matthew Wilder
28. 99 Luftballons, Nena
29. I Can Dream About You, Dan Hartman
30. The Glamorous Life, Sheila E.
31. Oh Sherrie, Steve Perry
32. Stuck On You, Lionel Richie
33. I Guess That's Why They Call It The Blues, Elton John
34. She Bop, Cyndi Lauper
35. Borderline, Madonna
36. Sunglasses At Night, Corey Hart
37. Eyes Without A Face, Billy Idol
38. Here Comes The Rain Again, Eurythmics
39. Uptown Girl, Billy Joel
40. Sister Christian, Night Ranger
41. Drive, Cars
42. Twist Of Fate, Olivia Newton-John
43. Union Of The Snake, Duran Duran
44. The Heart Of Rock 'N' Roll, Huey Lewis and The News
45. Hard Habit To Break, Chicago
46. The Warrior, Scandal
47. If Ever You're In My Arms Again, Peabo Bryson
48. Automatic, Pointer Sisters
49. Let The Music Play, Shannon
50. To All The Girls I've Loved Before, Julio Iglesias and Willie
Nelson
51. Caribbean Queen, Billy Ocean
52. That's All, Genesis
53. Running With The Night, Lionel Richie
54. Sad Songs (Say So Much), Elton John
55. I Want A New Drug, Huey Lewis and The News
56. Islands In The Stream, Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton
57. Love Is A Battlefield, Pat Benatar
58. Infatuation, Rod Stewart
59. Almost Paradise, Mike Reno and Ann Wilson
60. Legs, ZZ Top
61. State Of Shock, Jacksons
62. Love Somebody, Rick Springfield
63. Miss Me Blind, Culture Club
64. If This Is It, Huey Lewis and The News
65. You Might Think, Cars
66. Lucky Star, Madonna
67. Cover Me, Bruce Springsteen
68. Cum On Feel The Noize, Quiet Riot
69. Breakdance, Irene Cara
70. Adult Education, Daryl Hall and John Oates
71. They Don't Know, Tracy Ullman
72. An Innocent Man, Billy Joel
73. Cruel Summer, Bananarama
74. Dance Hall Days, Wang Chung
75. Give It Up, K.C.
76. I'm So Excited, Pointer Sisters
77. I Still Can't Get Over Loving You, Ray Parker Jr.
78. Thriller, Michael Jackson
79. Holiday, Madonna
80. Breakin'... There's No Stopping Us, Ollie And Jerry
81. Nobody Told Me, John Lennon
82. Church Of The Poison Mind, Culture Club
83. Think Of Laura, Christopher Cross
84. Time Will Reveal, Debarge
85. Wrapped Around Your Finger, Police
86. Pink Houses, John Cougar Mellencamp
87. Round And Round, Ratt
88. Head Over Heels, Go-Go's
89. The Longest Time, Billy Joel
90. Tonight, Kool and The Gang
91. Got A Hold On Me, Christine McVie
92. Dancing In The Sheets, Shalamar
93. Undercover Of The Night, Rolling Stones
94. On The Dark Side, John Cafferty and The Beaver Brown Band
95. New Moon On Monday, Duran Duran
96. Major Tom (Coming Home), Peter Schilling
97. Magic, Cars
98. When You Close Your Eyes, Night Ranger
99. Rock Me Tonite, Billy Squier
100. Yah Mo B There, James Ingram and Michael McDonald |
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The Classics Are At 1984!
Innovator Of The Year!
Economic Impact Awards
1984 Arcade - Finalist Innovator of the Year
Springfield Business Journal honors major players, newcomers with Economic Impact Awards for 2007 Considering the compitition we would'nt have picked us either - But we were happy to be nominated!
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