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NEC PC-Engine/SuperGrafx => PC Engine/SuperGrafx Discussion => Topic started by: lukester on February 23, 2016, 04:35:59 AM

Title: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: lukester on February 23, 2016, 04:35:59 AM
What was the scene like back then? Was pce mildly popular? Which games did you guys own, or your friends? Any stories to tell?

I remember hearing once that Cyber Core was infamous as a bundled game, so things like that pique my curiosity.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on February 23, 2016, 05:10:37 AM
What was the scene like back then? Was pce mildly popular? Which games did you guys own, or your friends? Any stories to tell?

This is my favourite subject of all. I'll post later when I'm on my desktop PC.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on February 23, 2016, 07:18:50 AM
Scene was good.

It was the pc engine that opened up grey importing market which was soon followed by Sega Megadrive and Super Famicom.

I actually remember seeing the japanese famicom disk drive and games being sold in chinatown but unfortunately I had little information about them.

The master system was basically the most popular game console system in the UK at that time and it was marketed by Virgin.  Nintendo had also been around for a while but their popularity didn't get off until they bundled their NES with Turtles.

(http://martianoddity.files.wordpress.com/2012/05/teenage-mutant-ninja-turtles-palcom-nintendo-nes-bundle.jpg?w=604p)

I think one of the early companies to begin importing was iirc pc engine supplies which ran a mail order business.  I don't think there was any walk in shop.

There was also CEX, Raven Games, Advance Console Entertainment, Shekhana, console concepts,  Consoles came with either RGB'd or PAL modded and a UK power supply.

I think the pc engine did well but it was losing steam to the megadrive.  The monitors back then were great especially the small white phillips monitor which had an RGB euro scart input.  At that time there was no RGB amps so although the image on the pc engine was very sharp they were quite dark.

I ended up buying a PAL modified pc engine because I had no idea at that time about NTSC etc..

It was also a time where Japanese animation was exploding into the UK with the help from a movie called AKIRA and soon we had Manga Entertainment bringing out lots of the adult stuff all dubbed into english with that american Ninja turtles accents.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: esteban on February 23, 2016, 08:39:38 AM
There was some fanzine action:

The Complete PCE Guidebook
http://archives.tg-16.com/magazine_database.htm?col=main&val=complete
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: shubibiman on February 24, 2016, 06:08:20 PM
In France, the PCE was first imported by a shop in Paris called Shoot Again. It was in 1988. The owner was at the time already into import games. Unfortunately I didn't live in Paris back then and I only owned an Amstrad CPC 464 and was too young to even think of such systems as the Atari ST, the Amiga and, of course, the PCE.

I once met a guy who lived in Paris back then and knew Shoot Again. He told me that on the first day the PCE was sold there, there was a line of customers queuing up to buy the PCE.

The owner of the shop imported PCE systems and games via a company based in Hong Kong and at first, there was the RFU issue. One of his customers was an electronician and he offered to modding the systems.

Then came sodipeng, which is a subsidiary company of Guillemot (ie Ubisoft). They imported the PCE via the same Hong-Kong company but at a larger scale.

From this moment on, the PCE was distributed in Supermarkets, Hifi stores (such as la FNAC for those who know this French Chain) and even, later, in catalogues.

French magazines had a rather exhaustive coverage of PCE games. The PCE was first mentionned in MSX News (which later became Micro News) in 1988.

From 1990 to 1993, the most popular game magazines reviewed PCE games (Joystick, Joypad, Generation 4, Tilt, Consoles + and Player One). You could even see reviews of PCE games on French gaming TV programs from 1990 to 1992.

When Sodipeng stopped its activity in 1993/1994, it was then more difficult to find PCE games as only import shops would get new releases.

Still, it was not that easy to get PCE games when you were in the countryside but most of those who'd read magazines back then knew about the PCE. In my small town, there were only 3 persons I know of who owned a PCE (including me).

Some journalists and reviewers who workd for gaming magazines were PCE crazy (JM Destroy, who also worked as a salesman at Shoot Again, Greg) and that helped a lot in turning the PCE into a "cult" system.

As for the comunity itself, as I said I was not living in Paris back then but most of the guies I met in Paris and were into the PCE community tell me that they would meet in front of Shoot Again to exchange PCE games.

There also has been 2 (or 3, can't remember well) PCE dedicated fanzines : Eden, made by Kaminari and friends, and PC Engine Power Fan, made by a guy who lived in Lyon.

Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: geise on February 25, 2016, 05:52:27 AM
That's awesome info Shubi!  I like hearing stories like these.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: esteban on February 25, 2016, 08:50:04 AM

That's awesome info Shubi!  I like hearing stories like these.

Le Ditto. :)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on February 25, 2016, 10:35:44 AM
When it comes to video games, as said above this my favorite subject.

That's why I love old fanzines, it's like a window portal back into that time. The one Esteban linked to above is a perfect example.

Through the 16 bit era the PC Engine and the grey import scene was massive in the UK, but for some reason I don't know, there seems to be a lack of any community that wants to reminisce about those days. I'm jealous of Shubibiman who has the French Necstasy forum. I would love a UK equivalent.

Here's a couple of threads about the UK scene. It has links to other threads which had loads of magazine & fanzine scans which unfortunately mostly appear to have now gone from where they were hosted.

"CVG pics and Scans - Collecting PC-Engine in the early 90s in the UK part 2"
http://www.pcenginefx.com/forums/index.php?topic=19762

"Collecting PC-Engine in the early 90s in the UK"
http://www.pcenginefx.com/forums/index.php?topic=6644

Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on February 25, 2016, 11:05:38 AM

"CVG pics and Scans - Collecting PC-Engine in the early 90s in the UK part 2"
http://www.pcenginefx.com/forums/index.php?topic=19762

"Collecting PC-Engine in the early 90s in the UK"
http://www.pcenginefx.com/forums/index.php?topic=6644




Wow those old threads.  Apart from the early reports on the pc engine any news died down about a year later in those UK computer video game mags.  I actually did called up C&VG and asked them why they didn't do many pc engine reviews and one of the guys that worked there said that no one there had a pc engine console and that all their reviews were done when someone could loan them the console and games.  That's why I was so greatful for finding japanese shops importing computer mags.  There was a fairly large japanese store that used to be be 2 mins away from St Pauls Cathederal and soon after we had Japan centre that had a main store near picadilly circus and then a 2nd one somewhere new Soho. which imported month issues of pc gekkan and pc engine fan plus famitsu.... and they were also selling brand new and second hand pc engine games.  Ah man those days were amazing.

Also there used to be a outdoor store in Covent Garden where a guy with a goatee and pony tail was selling imported pc engine, megadrive and superfamicom games.

I can remember one of his friends was saying how crap the pc engine was and all the japanese megadrive mags that had ads or screenshots of phelios destroyed anything on the pc engine at that time..
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on February 25, 2016, 11:25:04 AM
That's why I was so greatful for finding japanese shops importing computer mags.  There was a fairly large japanese store that used to be be 2 mins away from St Pauls Cathederal
Yeah that was Books Nippon, I used to go there all the time to get Japanese magazines, mainly for PC Engine and later Super Famicom. Oh and Newtype for Anime.

I also bought books from there to learn Japanese. A still have the Kanji dictionary I bought from there.

and soon after we had Japan centre that had a main store near picadilly circus and then a 2nd one somewhere new Soho. which imported month issues of pc gekkan and pc engine fan plus famitsu.... and they were also selling brand new and second hand pc engine games.
Maybe you can clear something up for me once and for all that I've always wondered.
I always used to go up to Japan Centre (Picadilly Circus) but I never found where the games were. It was quite big, had multiple floors and none of the staff spoke a word of English. I was the only gaijin I ever saw in there, so I don't think they were used to non Japanese customers. Anyways at the time a friend every now and then would show me import games he said he had bought from there, and as said I could never find them. Is it because it was this second store in Soho you mentioned? I don't know anything about that one.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on February 25, 2016, 11:32:03 AM
That's why I was so greatful for finding japanese shops importing computer mags.  There was a fairly large japanese store that used to be be 2 mins away from St Pauls Cathederal
Yeah that was Books Nippon, I used to go there all the time to get Japanese magazines, mainly for PC Engine and later Super Famicom. Oh and Newtype for Anime.

I also bought books from there to learn Japanese. A still have the Kanji dictionary I bought from there.

and soon after we had Japan centre that had a main store near picadilly circus and then a 2nd one somewhere new Soho. which imported month issues of pc gekkan and pc engine fan plus famitsu.... and they were also selling brand new and second hand pc engine games.
Maybe you can clear something up for me once and for all that I've always wondered.
I always used to go up to Japan Centre (Picadilly Circus) but I never found where the games were. It was quite big, had multiple floors and none of the staff spoke a word of English. I was the only gaijin I ever saw in there, so I don't think they were used to non Japanese customers. Anyways at the time a friend every now and then would show me import games he said he had bought from there, and as said I could never find them. Is it because it was this second store in Soho you mentioned? I don't know anything about that one.

The Main one in piccadilly circus there was an area that I think sold japanese music CDs.  They had some pc engine games that fitted right in those CD racks but there wasn't much I saw new copies of Legend of Hero Tomna there but again small selection  of games.


EDIT:

the second store was like 10 mins away from the soho sex shops,  much smaller but there were 2 gaijin working in there so it was much more english friendly.  After a few months of opening they had about 50+ pc engine games 2nd hand for sale there.  They began to stock imported Super Famicom too and I remember one day I went in there those gaijin were arguing because they had put out on display a super famicom console and when their backs were turned someone had taken the console and it was missing.  I think the super famicom was selling for like £400 which was  almost around 600 USD at that time.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: esteban on February 25, 2016, 11:33:00 AM
<I continue to enjoy this thread>
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on February 25, 2016, 11:50:18 AM
That's why I was so greatful for finding japanese shops importing computer mags.  There was a fairly large japanese store that used to be be 2 mins away from St Pauls Cathederal
Yeah that was Books Nippon, I used to go there all the time to get Japanese magazines, mainly for PC Engine and later Super Famicom. Oh and Newtype for Anime.

I also bought books from there to learn Japanese. A still have the Kanji dictionary I bought from there.

and soon after we had Japan centre that had a main store near picadilly circus and then a 2nd one somewhere new Soho. which imported month issues of pc gekkan and pc engine fan plus famitsu.... and they were also selling brand new and second hand pc engine games.
Maybe you can clear something up for me once and for all that I've always wondered.
I always used to go up to Japan Centre (Picadilly Circus) but I never found where the games were. It was quite big, had multiple floors and none of the staff spoke a word of English. I was the only gaijin I ever saw in there, so I don't think they were used to non Japanese customers. Anyways at the time a friend every now and then would show me import games he said he had bought from there, and as said I could never find them. Is it because it was this second store in Soho you mentioned? I don't know anything about that one.

The Main one in piccadilly circus there was an area that I think sold japanese music CDs.  They had some pc engine games that fitted right in those CD racks but there wasn't much I saw new copies of Legend of Hero Tomna there but again small selection  of games.


EDIT:

the second store was like 10 mins away from the soho sex shops,  much smaller but there were 2 gaijin working in there so it was much more english friendly.  After a few months of opening they had about 50+ pc engine games 2nd hand for sale there.  They began to stock imported Super Famicom too and I remember one day I went in there those gaijin were arguing because they had put out on display a super famicom console and when their backs were turned someone had taken the console and it was missing.  I think the super famicom was selling for like £400 which was  almost around 600 USD at that time.

Aha! that clears it up. I was going to Piccadilly and my mate was going to this Soho one I didn't know about. I remember it started when he had these brand new copies of PC Engine Gradius and Salamander and he said he'd bought them from Japan Centre, I can't recall the price but I remember it was cheap for the time. Then a little bit later he had these brand new Super Famicom games and again he said he'd bought them from there.


Did you ever go to Yaohan Plaza? I heard that was a great place, I never went as it was on the opposite side of London from where I lived.
I went once years later when it became Oriental City https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oriental_City
and went to the Sega arcade there.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on February 25, 2016, 11:57:33 AM


Did you ever go to Yaohan Plaza? I heard that was a great place, I never went as it was on the opposite side of London from where I lived.
I went once years later when it became Oriental City https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oriental_City
and went to the Sega arcade there.


Yea I went there it was mini japanese shopping center at Edgware north of london.  Had to take the northern line I think and the ride took ages.  But there they had indoor oriental food court, you could buy freshly made sushi and then they had SEGA world arcade area and then smaller shops selling videogames and of course japanese book shop selling japanese mags.  But I didn't find out about that store until I was well into Sega Saturn and Dreamcast.

There was also a few independent video game stores around peckham, lewisham area selling imported video games too but I can't remember any of the names.  I do remember Raven games in Beckenham junction area even before they had the store the guy Tony was running a small store in one of the rented office spaces.

that used to be my weekend.  I would travel to Victoria train station and get the rail to beckenham junction to visit Raven Games.  Come back to Victoria Station and then get the underground or bus to Tottenham Court Road area to visit the CEX stores and then Japan Centers to pick up the mags.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on February 25, 2016, 12:15:39 PM
sigh*  trying to finish off this Sorcerian guide and starting Fallout 4 plus I am trying to find old video game mags to see if I can find anything on pce life here....

EDIT some pretty big scans.  I think some of these companies have sold pc engine stuff
(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/pc engine screenshots/ad2.jpeg)

(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/pc engine screenshots/ad1.jpeg)

(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/pc engine screenshots/ad3.jpeg)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on February 25, 2016, 12:36:46 PM
Yea I went there it was mini japanese shopping center at Edgware north of london.  Had to take the northern line I think and the ride took ages. 
Yeah I always find it's hard to get across to people how big a city (Greater) London was/is, it's just stupidly massive. For me to have gone to Yoahan Plaza I would literally have been sat on the tube for hours.

There was also a few independent video game stores around peckham, lewisham area selling imported video games too but I can't remember any of the names.  I do remember Raven games in Beckenham junction area even before they had the store the guy Tony was running a small store in one of the rented office spaces.
I think all the different areas of London had little game stores with imports back then, loads of video rental stores I remember had them as well, I used to rent them a lot.

I never quite clicked with Raven Games, something about the staff, those two blokes that worked there. The women who worked there was alright though.

There was tons of different shops I went to, mainly in central London, but one of my favorites was Machine Shack out in Streatham, did you ever go there? they always had all the latest stuff imported, they even had the latest US imports as well, all the Turbo Grafx/Turbo Duo stuff, I remember buying the US versions of Dungeon Explorer II, Exile I & II, Dragon Slayer, Dynastic Hero, Lords of Thunder etc.. all brand new when they were released.

that used to be my weekend.  I would travel to Victoria train station and get the rail to beckenham junction to visit Raven Games.  Come back to Victoria Station and then get the underground or bus to Tottenham Court Road area to visit the CEX stores and then Japan Centers to pick up the mags.
Yeah same here I did a similar kind of a circuit every weekend. I also went to Forbidden Planet and got  the translated Manga comics from the likes of Dark Horse and Viz. And magazines like Anime UK and Animerica.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on February 25, 2016, 12:42:32 PM
Machine Shack sounds very familiar....


HMV store next to Tottenham Court Road started selling imported pc engine stuff around 1988 for a short while.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: shubibiman on February 25, 2016, 06:06:54 PM

that used to be my weekend.  I would travel to Victoria train station and get the rail to beckenham junction to visit Raven Games.  Come back to Victoria Station and then get the underground or bus to Tottenham Court Road area to visit the CEX stores and then Japan Centers to pick up the mags.

Aaah ! CEX ! I have fond memories of this shop ! Back in 1998, I spent 2 months in London for a summer job in order to improve my english. I stumbled on that shop by chance and spent most of my spare time after work there. That's were I bought my first copies of Legend of Xanadu, Granzort and Gulliver Boy.

The guy was really cool, he loved the PC Engine and enjoyed to show me games that I had only heard of but had never seen. I could stay for hours talking with him. I even once stayed until the end of day and he offered me a beer.

The last time I went to London (in 2003), the shop had moved a few meters away and the retro section was downstairs. Does the shop still exist ?

Oh, and by the way : in 2001, there were 3 french PCE forums, that eventually all merged into Necstasy.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: brizio on February 26, 2016, 02:51:12 AM
Living in Italy the scene was smaller than France and UK but still incredible.
PCE hardware coming from Japan reached us, thanks to a few great import stores (I can recall ComputerLand as being one of the first and Console Generation as being my favorite one later on). Popularity of the system was highly increased thanks to all game reviews appearing on the biggest Italian videogame magazines of the time: I assume the first few import stores pushed some units to these magazines to help them create a market for them.
Prices at the beginning were terribly high but with more stores importing hardware and more people buying them, they became at least reasonable (and by saying them I mean not cheap) if compared to officially imported products from Nintendo and Sega.
The scene and the market really exploded only when the RGB/Scart modification became the standard for all systems sold locally. A few stores were able to provide really nice mods that gave more people the opportunity to use their PCEngines with standard PAL TV sets: previously only people with multi-standard TV sets or monitors were able to buy and enjoy the system.
By the time there were several stores selling hardware and software all over Italy: even if the number of stores was never that high, they were covering most part of Italy and a few stores covered the rest with some very good mail order operations.
A couple of years after the US release of the TG16 Italy got also systems from the USA. Distribution of US hardware and games was a niche market inside the PCE niche market but was helpful to enable more people to access great games with less language barrier concerns.
The grey PAL Turbografx system (the one the NEC decided not to officially market) never reached Italy: not sure why but there was no interest by anyone importing it. Most units were distributed in Spain and Germany and I got mine from there.
Besides all the hours I spent playing games, what I vividly remember were the small meetings of PCE users I joined for a few years: at least in my area was not easy to find other users so a few of us were meeting at least one Sunday per month to play games, chat about the console and plan group orders directly from Hong Kong (a good way to save money).
During those meetings I saw a huge number of PCEngine games, all different type of hardware and a huge amount of goodies. And also some incredible stuff that the luckiest guys were able to get from Japan: the FM-Towns Marty and his great games is a good example.
One of us knew a Japanese girl living nearby (she married an Italian guy and moved over here): from time to time she was joining us during the meetings in order to translate articles from Japanese PCEngine magazines or helping us with RPG games. Thanks to her I was able to complete the last puzzle in Dragon Knight II and complete the game!
To thank her we were usually asking our Hong Kong contact to send us Japanese magazines and books (not videogame related) for her.
The last great year for the local PCEngine scene was 1995 thanks to the arrival of the ArcadeCard and the first games using it. By 1996 the system was not sold nor supported anymore by most of the stores and the market was flooded by a huge amount of discounted items and used stuff. Only a couple of stores continued to import systems and games even if most of their PCEngine support was limited to used stuff and new stuff was ordered only under specific requests.
By the end of 1996 we also stopped having our meetings: most of the guys were moving to Sega Saturn or Sony Playstation consoles and our meetings began to be boring for all of us: we had a common passion for the PCEngine before but not anymore at the time.
Anyway I still remember getting an email from one of them that was alerting me when he saw Dead of the brain in local store in 1999...
I am not in touch with those guys anymore but I will forever consider them friends.
And by the way, I still have my old PCEngine hardware and games and I never stopped buying games (for example all new homebrew releases) and by still playing the games!
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on February 26, 2016, 03:23:17 AM

that used to be my weekend.  I would travel to Victoria train station and get the rail to beckenham junction to visit Raven Games.  Come back to Victoria Station and then get the underground or bus to Tottenham Court Road area to visit the CEX stores and then Japan Centers to pick up the mags.


Aaah ! CEX ! I have fond memories of this shop ! Back in 1998, I spent 2 months in London for a summer job in order to improve my english. I stumbled on that shop by chance and spent most of my spare time after work there. That's were I bought my first copies of Legend of Xanadu, Granzort and Gulliver Boy.

The guy was really cool, he loved the PC Engine and enjoyed to show me games that I had only heard of but had never seen. I could stay for hours talking with him. I even once stayed until the end of day and he offered me a beer.

The last time I went to London (in 2003), the shop had moved a few meters away and the retro section was downstairs. Does the shop still exist ?


CEX is now a massive chain with stores in most towns across the UK.

I went there all the time from when they first started around 92, their first store was called the Tottenham Court Road Computer Exchange. They then began to expand and opened up more shops around that area.
For a couple of years around (95-97) they stopped selling PC Engine games and some other systems, but they were buying them in. I asked what that was about and they said they're buying in and building up stock to curate a museum. Then at the end of the 90s they unveiled their museum which was basically a large retro shop (which was on Whitfield st.). Amongst loads of other games they had a wall of 1000s of PC Engine games which they had amassed over the previous years, it was very impressive. In the retro shop you couldn't actually pick anything up though, all the games and systems where on shelves behind walls of glass, you had to ask a member of staff if you wanted to look at or buy anything. At this time I applied for a job there and went for an (informal) interview and spoke to someone there and at first it looked like I had got the job, they asked me loads of random questions about PCE, SFC, MD, Neo etc.. and I got the all answers right, they basically said I had the job. They then took me to meet the guy in charge of the museum/retro shop (I think his name was Ash) and he said actually they didn't want someone else who was only an expert on retro imports but someone who knew about native retro computer games as they wanted to expand into that area, like Sinclair Spectrum, Commodore 64, Amiga, Atari ST etc..

I think when you went there in 2003 it was a much smaller selection of games than before and had been moved to one of their different store locations (Rathbone Place).
(https://uk.webuy.com/store_images/2/rathbone_01.jpg)

I was just looking for images and found this about the history of the store:
https://uk.webuy.com/about/history.php


Machine Shack sounds very familiar....

One of the things I liked best about it is they had all the game systems set up so you could try out games before you bought them, I didn't know of any other stores that did this.

HMV store next to Tottenham Court Road started selling imported pc engine stuff around 1988 for a short while.

cool, I never saw this. I recall them being on sale in Virgin Megastore Oxford St.
Pretty sure they sold ones the same as the one in this thread.
http://www.pcenginefx.com/forums/index.php?topic=20360

pictures http://imgur.com/a/UF5YO
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: shubibiman on February 26, 2016, 04:41:22 AM

CEX is now a massive chain with stores in most towns across the UK.

Wow !

Quote
Then at the end of the 90s they unveiled their museum which was basically a large retro shop (which was on Whitfield st.)
.

That's the shop I was talking about !  :P

Quote
Amongst loads of other games they had a wall of 1000s of PC Engine games which they had amassed over the previous years, it was very impressive. In the retro shop you couldn't actually pick anything up though, all the games and systems where on shelves behind walls of glass, you had to ask a member of staff if you wanted to look at or buy anything.


Yeah, I remember that clearly. It was the first time I saw so many PCE games at the same time. We had lots of shops selling PCE games in Paris, but none of them would equal CEX as for the number and the condition of games.

You could always ask to try a game before purchasing it. When I saw Gulliver Boy, I asked the guy if I could try it as I was curious of how the HuVideos would look like. We then went on talking about intros and he told me one of his favourites was the intro of Legend of Xanadu's. I ended up buying both games !

Quote
(I think his name was Ash)

OMG ! He's the guy I was refering to ! He's the one who ran the shop back then and offered me a beer (Carlsberg I remember). I couldn't remember his name until now !

Quote
I think when you went there in 2003 it was a much smaller selection of games than before and had been moved to one of their different store locations (Rathbone Place).
(https://uk.webuy.com/store_images/2/rathbone_01.jpg)

That's the shop with the downstairs retro section. Rathbone Place was not far from Whitfield Street.

Quote
I was just looking for images and found this about the history of the store:
https://uk.webuy.com/about/history.php

Thanks for the link  :D

Quote
One of the things I liked best about it is they had all the game systems set up so you could try out games before you bought them, I didn't know of any other stores that did this.

That was great.

Ash was a big Strider fan. He told me he even owned the PCB back then. I was stunned as back then, there were only few guies who collected PCBs.

This thread is definitely epic !
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on February 26, 2016, 10:50:04 AM
This was the basement to that shop.  Unfortunately all the retro stuff is no more and instead a den for selling blu rays and DVDs exist.  Plus an old CEX advert.

Scan taken from EDGE RETRO mag
(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/pc engine screenshots/Scan 13.jpg)

(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/pc engine screenshots/Scan 18.jpg)

I just remembered there was another shop I think they were a chain based and called the same name in Notting Hill Exchange.  They also ran a small videogame shop selling and trading retro games too.  But I hated the way they stuck the prices on the packaging with that really tough to remove glue that would just rip off the packaging if it was cardboard.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: gojira1954 on February 27, 2016, 08:32:40 PM
I worked in the CEX basement for a bit in 2000, Ash had left by then and started up his own shop near Shepards Bush...
CEX got into legal trouble for imported goods starting with R1 DVDs in 1999 then all import games got stopped a couple of years after - the death knell for the retro dungeon :/
I used to do a similar geek tour around London - forbidden planet on oxford st, virgin megastore, console concepts on carnaby street, record exchanges in notting hill ;)
CEX, the notting hill exchanges and the X electrical second hand chains were all owned by different people but they knew each other from working in a second hand shop together some years before then set up their own chains
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: esteban on February 27, 2016, 10:32:38 PM
UPDATE: Still a great read.

In 1996/1997, I was in London and went to some touristy outdoor (flea?) market. I found bins of old Dr. Who magazines and bootleg Backstreet Boys CDs, but I didn't find any Famicom/Sega/PCE stuff :(

It might have been Camden, but my memory is hazy.

I did enjoy looking at some old British sci-fi  magazines, though. Musty and damp, but fun to read. I didn't even know what I was looking at. It was a different world.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: gojira1954 on February 28, 2016, 04:13:30 AM
Camden market used to be good back then, especially the indoor section. Few other interesting shops close by too - psychotronic video, dragon discs...
Finding PC Engine stuff in a shop was always difficult... I clearly remember handing over 60 notes for coryoon at the Whitfield St CEX when it was retro stuff only, they had a large & nice selection back then
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on February 28, 2016, 09:54:59 AM
I just remembered there was another shop I think they were a chain based and called the same name in Notting Hill Exchange.


Yeah Notting Hill Computer Exchange was the first place I saw PC engine games for sale, at the end of the 80s and was probably my most visited games shop of all of them through the era. I'm not sure what their overall company name was. They had loads of separate stores in that Notting Hill Gate area all selling different second hand stuff. Like a shop for VHS tapes, a shop for books and comics, a shop for clothes etc... actually I'll google image search

(http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3284/2727312907_eb8157f2b4.jpg)

(http://lh6.ggpht.com/_JhKawIPlpus1Y8-meDUoakHPj4ZYB6TPucgO5Yygx-iI4AWOg2m2-xXWA9DmJKi0lEDanZLh8VdfDYnmB5MDR7t2ZU=s433)

(http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-gBeThNL-iik/TjlgHjHUOOI/AAAAAAAAB5k/DXdgG2iY7QI/s1600/BookComicExchange.JPG)

(https://c2.staticflickr.com/4/3136/3451240644_de1a156a34_b.jpg)

They would always move and swap the different stores around to all their different Notting Hill premises. So the Notting Hill Computer Exchange swapped premises loads of times through that period.

But I hated the way they stuck the prices on the packaging with that really tough to remove glue that would just rip off the packaging if it was cardboard.

Although I love video games TBH an even bigger passion of mine was music and buying vinyl records and the Exchange's unremovable price stickers were legendary for damaging record sleeves. I spent many, many years travelling all around london trawling through records, I loved it.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: ccovell on February 28, 2016, 09:58:41 AM
I also went to the Tottenham CEX shop (since I saw their crazy ads in Super Play magazine from way back) when I went on holiday to England in Dec. 2000.  The "Dungeon" was cool, but too much stuff was locked in a cage, and the prices were a little too high for a lot of retro stuff (PCE, namely.)

I did, however, buy several JP Megadrive and UK Master System games which were selling at decent prices.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on February 28, 2016, 10:18:12 AM
the notting hill exchanges and the X electrical second hand chains were all owned by different people but they knew each other from working in a second hand shop together some years before then set up their own chains
I used to go to the Hammersmith X Electrical sometimes, I distinctly remember picking up 1941 on the Super Grafx from there.

It might have been Camden, but my memory is hazy.
Camden market used to be good back then, especially the indoor section.
Camden is a very special place, I'm not aware of anywhere else like it in the UK. On Saturday nights I used to DJ in a bar there through out my twenties (2001-2007). The whole area was like a constant Festival or something, every weekend thousands and thousands of young people flooded the area, 90% in their late teens and twenties.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: wildfruit on February 28, 2016, 10:20:42 AM
Scene was good.


(http://martianoddity.files.wordpress.com/2012/05/teenage-mutant-ninja-turtles-palcom-nintendo-nes-bundle.jpg?w=604p)


 I remember opening that on either my birthday or Christmas and nearly wetting myself.
The PCE scene passed me by totally. I would buy magazines every week but never noticed it.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on February 28, 2016, 10:43:51 AM
I also went to the Tottenham CEX shop (since I saw their crazy ads in Super Play magazine from way back) when I went on holiday to England in Dec. 2000.  The "Dungeon" was cool, but too much stuff was locked in a cage, and the prices were a little too high for a lot of retro stuff (PCE, namely.)
When you say "Dungeon" it reminds me, the place smelt really bad, like unwashed nerd B.O.
I remember my girlfriends would wait outside they would never go in there with me as they said it smelt "gross".
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Ergot_Cholera on March 05, 2016, 06:56:05 AM
I remeber the ads featuring the Toby cartoon strip in the back of CVG and gamesmaster magazines when I was a kid, and I vaguely remember seeing PC Engines advertised and wondering what they were exactly (I only had a Master System at the time). The prices were way out of my league coming from a working class family from the north of England.
I wish the CEX stores that you see today were anything like the store that you describe here, but they don't sell any import games at all now.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: kosko99 on March 06, 2016, 10:13:03 PM
Here is Spain it was almost non existent.... I don't remember seeing any, even on import games shops which had the Atari Jaguar.
Only 1-2 magazzines did talk about it from time to time for games like Dragon Ball, Street Fighter 2, Castelvania, PC Kid and Jackie Chan.

Even now with all this retro boom I only found 2-3 PCE users, and when there is any retro event with shops selling imports... PCE presence is close to zero.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on March 06, 2016, 11:50:47 PM
Here is Spain it was almost non existent.... I don't remember seeing any, even on import games shops which had the Atari Jaguar.
Only 1-2 magazzines did talk about it from time to time for games like Dragon Ball, Street Fighter 2, Castelvania, PC Kid and Jackie Chan.

Even now with all this retro boom I only found 2-3 PCE users, and when there is any retro event with shops selling imports... PCE presence is close to zero.


Apart from the UK magazines doing their small but occasional pc engine reviews.  Fortunately I was able to pick up US mags in the newsagents particularly around Whitechapel and Bethnal Green which sold imported EGM and I think the other mag was Games Radar  or was it Gamers Republic ?  I think I started collecting them around the time Ys Book I & II and Ninja Spirit received perfect scores.


I also remember doing trades with a few fellows around London which I think were from personal ads in the LOOT newspaper. 

(http://loot.com/var/upload/images/Loot-Mancheseter.png)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on March 07, 2016, 02:22:19 AM
I was obsessed with LOOT newspaper through that period, I used to buy and sell stuff through it constantly, mainly PC Engine and Neo Geo stuff. Met loads of cool people through doing that, was introduced to a kind of network of hardcore gamers throughout the UK at the time.
Also through the buy and sell sections of magazines such as Super Play.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: gojira1954 on March 07, 2016, 04:25:55 AM
I remeber the ads featuring the Toby cartoon strip in the back of CVG and gamesmaster magazines when I was a kid, and I vaguely remember seeing PC Engines advertised and wondering what they were exactly (I only had a Master System at the time). The prices were way out of my league coming from a working class family from the north of England.
I wish the CEX stores that you see today were anything like the store that you describe here, but they don't sell any import games at all now.


The toby cartoons were drawn by Charlie Brooker, love his TV shows!
He did a comic, think it was only one issue though ;)

(http://i68.tinypic.com/2ln7hup.jpg)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Alienjesus on March 08, 2016, 02:15:56 AM
Reading about all these independent shops you used to be able buy games at in London is super interesting. I didn't grow up around these parts, but I live in London now, and it's really sad how all the old haunts and arcades have basically all shut up shop.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on March 08, 2016, 04:42:23 AM
Reading about all these independent shops you used to be able buy games at in London is super interesting. I didn't grow up around these parts, but I live in London now, and it's really sad how all the old haunts and arcades have basically all shut up shop.

Admittedly in London back then there was tons, but also most big towns and cities across the UK had at least one games shop that carried imports. What part of the UK were you in back then?
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Alienjesus on March 08, 2016, 06:40:35 AM
I lived in a small town in Northamptonshire called Corby. Our options for buying games were Woolworths or Dixons
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on March 08, 2016, 08:53:23 AM
I lived in a small town in Northamptonshire called Corby. Our options for buying games were Woolworths or Dixons

You would have been able to do mail order back then provided you were able to get hold of video game mags back then.


In those days it was a quick call up to a shop and then  pop a cheque or postal order in the post and you would have received the item in a week or two.  Videogame imports and console passion are still going today as they were in those days although may have been trading in different guises back then.

Other great thing about london was the comic shops and arcades.  There were great arcade places around central london.  My faves at that time were the one at tottenham court road next to the KFC and even a CEX opened quite near to it.  There as also LAS VEGAS in soho plust a few more I can't quite remember the names, where I got to play arcade versions of Dragon Saber, Parodius Da! Detana Twin Bee which was Bells & Whistles here in UK..
There was also an arcade just at the corner to the start of China Town I think it's Gerrard Street where after I'd have dim sum on Sunday would go there and have a few rounds of Gradius, R-Type and Ghouls n' Ghosts, Bubble Bobble and Mr Do!
But my fave was the Trocadero where they opened a massive arcade area back then..  Plus I think it turned into SEGA World or something like that.. plus somewhere just off Picadilly Circus and heading towards the Strand/China Town one the old cinemas that used to show XXX movies was later converted into Namco World..loved it!  But I think this was getting towards the 32bit era..


Advance Console Entertainment were amazing too.  I think they were two main middle eastern guys who were at first selling pc engine and megadrive imported games and consoles and provided RGB Modifications.  They originally rented out a room in one of those posh and expensive Georgian houses just near Regents Park and I think the closest subway train to them was Great Portland Street.
 They later on opened their own shop in Carnaby Street and they continued with RGB mods and repairs for all consoles, PC engine, Genesis and Super Famicom.  they somehow faded and shut shop during the 32bit era.   They were great and I miss those guys.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: dave_van_damn on March 08, 2016, 11:18:33 AM
This was the basement to that shop.  Unfortunately all the retro stuff is no more and instead a den for selling blu rays and DVDs exist.  Plus an old CEX advert.

Scan taken from EDGE RETRO mag
(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/pc engine screenshots/Scan 13.jpg)

(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/pc engine screenshots/Scan 18.jpg)

I just remembered there was another shop I think they were a chain based and called the same name in Notting Hill Exchange.  They also ran a small videogame shop selling and trading retro games too.  But I hated the way they stuck the prices on the packaging with that really tough to remove glue that would just rip off the packaging if it was cardboard.


Yes! I remember this place. I had heard about CEX in magazines, but we had nothing similar (to my knowledge) in Newcastle. I was about 12 when I visited that basement and I thought I'd died and went to heaven. I remember seeing a NEO-GEO MVS home converted system and feeling like I was in a museum. I didn't have a lot of cash but I saw a copy of Lethal Enforcers for the Mega CD complete with gun for 11 quid. I was just about ready to buy it but I decided not to at the last minute for some reason. The guy in the shop probably thought I was a right spaz.

Great thread :)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on March 08, 2016, 11:38:19 AM
I lived in a small town in Northamptonshire called Corby. Our options for buying games were Woolworths or Dixons
Would Northampton have been your biggest local town?

Around 1991/92 time I went to visit my cousin who lived in a village just outside Northampton. We took the bus into Northampton town and he took me to a game shop that I'm pretty sure had imports, memory of it is very foggy. Also remember going to Games Workshop and a model shop and looking at the Tamiya RC cars, they were big back then.

Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on March 08, 2016, 12:58:06 PM
ah did anyone go to those Computer Entertainment Shows that were held at Olympia in Kensington/Earls Court?
The times I went it was mostly for Commodore 64 stuff and then later on Amiga software but the Genesis/Megadrive was getting serious business there.
I remember one time we went there and saw a really small booth tucked away in some corner where they had on display the uk version of turbografx and cd-rom attachment and they had Wonderboy III monster lair on display.  I grabbed the controller but some european guy in a black suit told me not to touch it... so we left.  I thought how the hell are you going to sell a system with that attitude!

I also have memories back around 93 where I brought a few college buddies to my parents house and Dracula X had arrived in the post.  I remember the first bit where Richter was fighting death on the horse cart and my fellow students were commenting on how it looks like Bram Stoker's Dracula movie.  I am sure upto that point I had traded the pc engine briefcase system for Megadrives, Supergrafx, Superfamicoms and back to a DUO-R system with RGB mod. 

EDGE January 1995
(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/1184E4EF-1C04-40DD-90AC-9F477B1CE02D.jpg)

Anime V mag
(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/C36C0577-930F-46F7-B95B-FC3E41D6866B.jpg)

Anime UK
(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/576F25FB-C013-4576-9790-DEF8A41028AE.jpg)

(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/480FFE1A-F304-4A2C-A1C1-7795E53AD60D.jpg)

Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: gojira1954 on March 08, 2016, 06:01:59 PM
I'd forgotten the name of the place on carnaby st - that was probably the best shop in London! They didn't have masses of stuff but were friendly and it was great to have a place for repairs & mods ;)
Nice to see the Anime UK mags too - it was a fantastic at the time. They had their office by oxford st tube stn, bopped in there a couple of times!
I used to go to the ATEI computer/arcade trade shows in earls court with bs registration details, was great ;)

(http://i66.tinypic.com/24oao0i.jpg)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Alienjesus on March 08, 2016, 11:00:41 PM
I lived in a small town in Northamptonshire called Corby. Our options for buying games were Woolworths or Dixons
Would Northampton have been your biggest local town?

Around 1991/92 time I went to visit my cousin who lived in a village just outside Northampton. We took the bus into Northampton town and he took me to a game shop that I'm pretty sure had imports, memory of it is very foggy. Also remember going to Games Workshop and a model shop and looking at the Tamiya RC cars, they were big back then.

Depending which way I went on the bus, either Northampton, Milton Keynes or Peterborough. They were all a bit of a trek though, and seeing as I was just a kid then I doubt I couldve convinced my parents to take me  :-({|=
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on March 09, 2016, 04:11:18 AM
ah did anyone go to those Computer Entertainment Shows that were held at Olympia in Kensington/Earls Court?
I used to go to the ATEI computer/arcade trade shows in earls court with bs registration details, was great ;)
These exhibition centres were near where I lived. Throughout most of the nineties (as a teenager 13-18 years old) on the weekends I worked in a toy and model shop just down the road from Earls Court exhibition centre. All the staff would get passes each year to a big industry only toy fair that was there, there would be lots of new video games there. One year I remember playing Star Fox on a Nintendo stand before it was released and it just blew my mind.

Also I went to the first Future Entertainment show at Earls Court, it was absolutely packed.
I remember I had Street Fighter II fever (playing on my sfc) and I went into the trade hall there and picked up Hiryu no Ken S: Golden Fighter and also the shooter D-Force both on the Super Famicom, I took a punt on them just going on the boxes, both games turned out were absolutely shit, I was gutted.
Video of Bad influence at the Future Entertainment Show https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rpX-qOJo7Ss

More the latter part of the nineties each year I used to go to the video games industry show ECTS at Olympia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Computer_Trade_Show
I somehow blagged a load of industry passes for me and a load of friends, I can't remember how. We looked really out of place, it was mostly dudes in smart suits. One memory that sticks out was SunSoft had a stand showing off Waku Waku 7 on a Neo Geo AES and nobody cared, was just tumble weeds, everyone was all about PS1 and N64.

Speaking of the Earls Court area, I remember Sega had their European headquarters there, was a massive building. After we left secondary school a friend got a full time job there as a games tester, he got the job through our local job centre, which in this day and age just seems crazy. He went to the job center, they asked what he was interested in, he said video games and then he got a job playing games all day for Sega, wtf  lol. Things like that just wouldn't happen these days

Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on March 09, 2016, 10:55:09 AM
Advance Console Entertainment were amazing too.  I think they were two main middle eastern guys who were at first selling pc engine and megadrive imported games and consoles and provided RGB Modifications.  They originally rented out a room in one of those posh and expensive Georgian houses just near Regents Park and I think the closest subway train to them was Great Portland Street.
 They later on opened their own shop in Carnaby Street and they continued with RGB mods and repairs for all consoles, PC engine, Genesis and Super Famicom.  they somehow faded and shut shop during the 32bit era.   They were great and I miss those guys.

I worked in the CEX basement for a bit in 2000, Ash had left by then and started up his own shop near Shepards Bush...
CEX got into legal trouble for imported goods starting with R1 DVDs in 1999 then all import games got stopped a couple of years after - the death knell for the retro dungeon :/

I think ACE were going till at least 2000 that's when I last went in there. In 2000 I picked up a broken Super CD Rom system in the CEX dungeon, maybe when gojira1954 was working there. I was in there buying some games and saw it in a box of broken junk on the floor by the counter.
ACE and Raven Games were the only places I knew of at that time that fixed old consoles. I decided to take it to ACE and it was the last time I went there. When I arrived outside ACE the first thing that struck me was they had a single Neo Geo AES in the window, I remember thinking the shop is called Advanced Console Entertainment, I love the Neo but it's ancient now and hardly cutting edge, where's the PS2 and Dreamcast? I went inside and it must have been near their end as there was like hardly any games on the shelves, and this bit sticks in my head they had loads of copies of Beyond Shadowgate Turbo Duo CD on display, I thought what a random game to choose. They did have a large selection of imported US game magazines though.
He couldn't fix the Super CD Rom system yet still charged me £25 which I was pissed about at the time.

Also I think the CEX dungeon were doing imports till at least 2003, because I remember I sold them my then Japanese Sega Saturn collection. I remember the staff spazzed out over me selling Radiant Silvergun.




I also remember doing trades with a few fellows around London which I think were from personal ads in the LOOT newspaper. 
I also have memories back around 93 where I brought a few college buddies to my parents house and Dracula X had arrived in the post.  I remember the first bit where Richter was fighting death on the horse cart and my fellow students were commenting on how it looks like Bram Stoker's Dracula movie.

I remember in late 1993 some dude came round from my advert in LOOT to buy some PC Engine games I was selling. He was looking through my PC Engine game collection, then he whipped out from from his pocket his copies of Dracula X and Magical Chase and offered we do a temporary swap. He said he wanted to borrow my Gradius II and I think it was Rainbow Islands.
I'd never seen Dracula X before as it had just been released. I was taken aback by his offer as it seemed out of nowhere and quite random, but couldn't see why not, so went for it.
We were chatting and he said he was from Hong Kong (originally) and he'd asked some family to send him the games, but family he had in Japan, explaining how he'd got a copy of Dracula X so quick. When he came back to pick up his games he brought and gave me copied VHS tapes of the full set of Bubblegum Crisis (subtitled) which wasn't out in the UK yet. Again totally random, but very cool.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on March 09, 2016, 11:43:49 AM
I remember in late 1993 some dude came round from my advert in LOOT to buy some PC Engine games I was selling. He was looking through my PC Engine game collection, then he whipped out from from his pocket his copies of Dracula X and Magical Chase and offered we do a temporary swap. He said he wanted to borrow my Gradius II and I think it was Rainbow Islands.
I'd never seen Dracula X before as it had just been released. I was taken aback by his offer as it seemed out of nowhere and quite random, but couldn't see why not, so went for it.
We were chatting and he said he was from Hong Kong (originally) and he'd asked some family to send him the games, but family he had in Japan, explaining how he'd got a copy of Dracula X so quick. When he came back to pick up his games he brought and gave me copied VHS tapes of the full set of Bubblegum Crisis (subtitled) which wasn't out in the UK yet. Again totally random, but very cool.


I went to hong kong back around Summer 1990 the pc engine scene was amazing then. In kowloon city there used to be these indoor shopping markets where the street level was surrounded by shops, restaurants and newpaper vendors and you'd go up these stairs and there was another level of shops which were like just sitting under residential apartments.  There was like stacks of brand new unopened games and  just grabbed fresh copies of Devil Crash and Jigoku Meguri and a couple of more games I can't remember.  I do remember watching the intro opening of pce's Urusei Yatsura - Stay with me which was also airing on TV too.

Regarding ACE - Advance Console Entertainment I am sure one of those guys that did the modding and repairs original worked at Shekhana computers which was based around tottenham court road area.  The whole store was run by middle eastern folk and they were selling all computer parts and at the back was a section that originally sold commodore 64 games and if you brought in the advert you would get like 10% of the retail price.  They were also one of the first to import the pc engine and offered both PAL and NTSC rgb consoles at that time.  They also later opened another branch somewhere in Wood Green area but later on they kind of disbanded and that's when ACE was formed...
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: LMS on March 13, 2016, 07:30:39 AM
Epic thread gentlemen.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: wildfruit on March 13, 2016, 09:33:21 AM
I went to Sega world at trocadero once. Spent all my money on a travel card so didn't have any for the arcades.
Fun times.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Sarumaru on March 18, 2016, 04:39:57 AM
The whole Sodipeng thing fascinates me. I think it's so cool that these people took it upon themselves to box these systems and go as far as manufacture their own controllers and taps. Thanks for the informative thread, fellas.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: exodus on March 25, 2016, 10:35:26 AM
My only addition to this thread is I've never met a french game journalist over the age of 28 who doesn't love the PC engine.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on April 28, 2016, 09:01:35 AM
managed to dig up this ol' mag.  October 1991 and wow I can't believe how cheap mags were back then.. thats roughly about 3.80 USD

(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/90952B4F-38B0-4B26-A122-5BD47617A7AB.jpg)


(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/Scan 18.jpeg)
(http://s102.photobucket.com/user/secretsociety1/media/Scan 18.jpeg.html)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on April 28, 2016, 09:45:20 AM




(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/Scan 21.jpeg)

Geez if only NEC or Hudson pushed 8-16mbit as a standard !
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on April 28, 2016, 10:05:56 AM
(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/9d8f3478-74fd-4dd8-b169-d81c92788183.jpg)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: johnnykonami on April 28, 2016, 03:17:57 PM
Conversely I'd love to get some British mags like Retro Gamer more often (or just a subscription) but the pricetag is too hefty to import.  It's like $15 an issue or something like that, I think!   A long time ago I had a pretty decent collection of Game Pro, EGM, Computer and Video Games, and probably some others and I traded them all for a collection of Shounen Jumps when I was more interested in those.  Kinda regret it as now I have neither but I did have the good sense to keep my TurboPlay/TurboForce/DuoWorlds/etc.  due to sentimental value.  Still have em'!  Along with a couple of PC Engine Fans.  I have a couple of issues of EGM, Dreamcast magazine, and some other oldies I have picked up since though.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on October 25, 2016, 11:23:04 AM
Necro bump for my favourite thread in this forum ever.

Any other Euro users in here?
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: elmer on October 26, 2016, 03:45:21 AM
Any other Euro users in here?

Well, as a Northern lad, my "local" PCE shop was in Nottingham.

That was one heck of a long distance shopping trip (by British standards) from Manchester.

Had my very first car accident on one of the trips (trying to take a semi-hidden sharp corner way too fast).  :oops:

I was going to pick up the SCART-modded SuperGrafx that I'd pre-ordered from the shop as soon as the SuperGrafx was announced.  :wink:

(https://c1.staticflickr.com/6/5536/30544267616_45f8d21671_o.jpg)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: shubibiman on October 26, 2016, 05:50:27 AM
Wow !
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Necromancer on October 26, 2016, 06:18:45 AM
'Tis cool you still have the receipt after all this time.

Is that supposed to be P-47 (the game) or is that something to do with the SCART mod?
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: wildfruit on October 26, 2016, 08:41:46 AM
£310 in 1990 was a lot of money.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Necromancer on October 26, 2016, 08:49:26 AM
£310 in 1990 was a lot of money.

Indeed.  Googlerins says that would've been about $550 US monies.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: esteban on October 26, 2016, 09:16:01 AM
£310 in 1990 was a lot of money.

Indeed.  Googlerins says that would've been about $550 US monies.

Elmer played BATTLE ACE for the next 6 months.

Best £310 ever spent.

:)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: elmer on October 26, 2016, 01:53:31 PM
Is that supposed to be P-47 (the game) or is that something to do with the SCART mod?

You're right, it's the P-47 game. It's just a typo by the guy at the shop.

IIRC, the SuperGrafx came with Battle Ace ... I can't think of any other reason that I have the game.


£310 in 1990 was a lot of money.

IIRC, the Genesis launch bundle was £129, or £149 at the time.


Elmer played BATTLE ACE for the next 6 months.

Best £310 ever spent.

Yes to the 1st part, but let's just politely say that I wouldn't quite agree with the 2nd part, at least not when it comes to Battle Ace!  :wink:

It is still (again, IMHO) the most powerful of the 4th-generation consoles, only beaten by the X68000 Home Computer (I don't count the Neo Geo there, because it was an Arcade Machine, and not a real Home Console theoretically aimed at the mass market).

But power isn't the same as well-marketed, or well-targeted, and definitely not well-supported.

Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: imparanoic on October 26, 2016, 02:33:48 PM
does anyone remember microbytes in the old bull ring in birmingham, first time i have ever seen a pc engine, super star soldier was the game being played during 1990, my eyes dropped on the arcade quality visuals and awesome gameplay, it was expensive but an awesome machine ( until super famicom came out)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: elmer on October 26, 2016, 03:17:06 PM
does anyone remember microbytes in the old bull ring in birmingham, first time i have ever seen a pc engine, super star soldier was the game being played during 1990, my eyes dropped on the arcade quality visuals and awesome gameplay, it was expensive but an awesome machine ( until super famicom came out)

I used to shop in the Bull Ring nearly every weekend ... but that was in the early 1980s.

My memory of the time was more influenced by the RPG/minatures store in the Birmingham New Street shopping center (original D&D, RuneQuest and Traveller), wonderful concerts (Supertramp, Jethro Tull, Judie Tzuke), and getting searched whenever I went into a pub for a pint of Banks' Mild because of the IRA bombings ...

http://alphahistory.com/northernireland/ira-mainland-campaign/
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: imparanoic on October 26, 2016, 07:58:44 PM
does anyone remember microbytes in the old bull ring in birmingham, first time i have ever seen a pc engine, super star soldier was the game being played during 1990, my eyes dropped on the arcade quality visuals and awesome gameplay, it was expensive but an awesome machine ( until super famicom came out)

I used to shop in the Bull Ring nearly every weekend ... but that was in the early 1980s.

My memory of the time was more influenced by the RPG/minatures store in the Birmingham New Street shopping center (original D&D, RuneQuest and Traveller), wonderful concerts (Supertramp, Jethro Tull, Judie Tzuke), and getting searched whenever I went into a pub for a pint of Banks' Mild because of the IRA bombings ...

http://alphahistory.com/northernireland/ira-mainland-campaign/



small world

i noted that occasionally, Mr Disk also had a few imported consoles as well
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Ex_Mosquito on October 28, 2016, 07:25:30 AM
Wow this is a great thread! Interesting read!

I have been aware of the PC Engine since it was first featured in an old C&VG, and later the famous picture of the IFU with a packet of skips resting on it to give the scale of the unit :) Unfortunately my local import shops didn't carry PCE stuff back in the day, we only had SFC and Japanese MD stuff, I went that route. I grew up in Newport - South Wales, so Cardiff was only 20mins down the road from me and there was a killer import shop there. They mainly focuses on American import like NEO AES / TG16 and the usual other suspects,  but they did have a handful of the more popular Japanese imports. I was always avidly reading the CVG and the legendary 'Complete Guide To Consoles' mags back in the day following the PCE, the 'scanlined RGB'd off the screen screenshots' blew my mind back then! They looked SO good. It wasn't until Christmas 93' that I finally got my first PCE. I mainly got my games from KT Konsoles (Keith and Bob were great at recommending games) in Thurso by mail order and the usual famous UK imports like Raven, Console Concepts and Dream Machines 2.

Looking through this thread I saw some mention the PCE guide book, I actually had this back in the day, great book! Like the loser I was I even laminated the book to prevent damage :/ I also highlighted the games I had in the cheats section and wrote down the games that I wanted/own in the notes section :)

(http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p604/exmosquito/Mobile Uploads/2014-01/5E2EA5B2-4132-4DA1-B3FF-B93F41360B78_zps1oxklkjv.jpg) (http://s1158.photobucket.com/user/exmosquito/media/Mobile Uploads/2014-01/5E2EA5B2-4132-4DA1-B3FF-B93F41360B78_zps1oxklkjv.jpg.html)

(http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p604/exmosquito/Mobile Uploads/2014-01/16974FAA-65FB-408E-BC11-EE532412D445_zps931jg9i2.jpg) (http://s1158.photobucket.com/user/exmosquito/media/Mobile Uploads/2014-01/16974FAA-65FB-408E-BC11-EE532412D445_zps931jg9i2.jpg.html)

(http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p604/exmosquito/Mobile Uploads/2014-01/8BBA4658-284F-449E-8B8E-400800989BE1_zpsozwxlyro.jpg) (http://s1158.photobucket.com/user/exmosquito/media/Mobile Uploads/2014-01/8BBA4658-284F-449E-8B8E-400800989BE1_zpsozwxlyro.jpg.html)

Ah Classic CEX, when it was good! In their smaller shop down the end in the early 90's. I used to frequent London's TCR import shops in the early 90's like Shekahna etc, it was such an exciting and magical time for gaming back then. Ah Advanced console entertainment.... My mate bought a PCE Briefcase in CEX in the late 90's and we went there before our bus home back to Wales to get it RGB modded. We went back in 2hours, which to be fair was a pretty quick turnaround, but when we arrived home the RGB amped and he wired the sound from the PCE bus and not the RCA jacks resulting in no CD music. Shoddy.

Here are a few bargains I got from CEX in 2002. It was pretty much dead on its arse back then unfortunately.

(http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p604/exmosquito/343234DD-5B76-49D4-A649-DC7C2ACEB6CA_zpszeiul63f.jpg) (http://s1158.photobucket.com/user/exmosquito/media/343234DD-5B76-49D4-A649-DC7C2ACEB6CA_zpszeiul63f.jpg.html)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: esteban on October 28, 2016, 12:42:05 PM
^ Hany in the Sky!
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: shubibiman on October 28, 2016, 01:03:33 PM
Man ! Back in 1998, CEX would sell Shubibinman at a bargain price of... 30 quids !
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on October 29, 2016, 12:33:45 AM
Great story Ex_Mosquito.
Those CEX PC Engine prices seem pretty good for a retail store, but as you say was near the end so they were just clearing the retro stick.
BTW in the past I've watched on YouTube a few of your arcade play through and 1CCs, enjoyed them, good stuff.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Ex_Mosquito on October 29, 2016, 06:12:07 AM
Cheers. I've since sold all my Engine stuff in 2003 to fund my arcade cab :/ I recently got back into in with a briefcase unit + Everdrive, I regret selling all my originals now! I went to Tokyo in 09' and I'm kicking myself for not getting a shedload of cheap Engine games back then when I had the chance, but at the time I wasn't really playing that many videogames aside from a bit of Super SF2 Turbo (X) online.

Btw. Are you the author of Hyper Play? I listened to an interview on RGDS podcast about that fanzine.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on October 29, 2016, 10:45:04 AM
I've since sold all my Engine stuff in 2003 to fund my arcade cab :/ I recently got back into in with a briefcase unit + Everdrive, I regret selling all my originals now!
Yeah know the feeling, I sold most of my games collection a few years back and regret it now, mine was from pressure from my wife due to the limited space in our house.


I went to Tokyo in 09' and I'm kicking myself for not getting a shedload of cheap Engine games back then when I had the chance
I went to Japan a few times years back and it was like going to Mecca, it was mind blowing, unlimited games all dirt cheap and all mint. Apparently those days a now long, long gone and most of Japan's retro game stocks have been bled dry and left the country via gaijin and resellers.

Btw. Are you the author of Hyper Play? I listened to an interview on RGDS podcast about that fanzine.
It's not my zine. I've always been a massive fan of printed fanzines and a massive fan of Super Play, the magazine that inspired this fanzine. So when I first heard about Hyper Play it was right up my street and hoped it would be a success, which it looks like it has been.
I'm hoping it would lead the way and be the start of a revival of printed fanzines in general, be awesome to see ones about shoot 'm ups or fighting games etc.. or platform specific like Neo Geo or PC Engine etc..

Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: brightmidnight on November 19, 2016, 08:13:33 PM
Any other Euro users in here?

Well, as a Northern lad, my "local" PCE shop was in Nottingham.

That was one heck of a long distance shopping trip (by British standards) from Manchester.

Had my very first car accident on one of the trips (trying to take a semi-hidden sharp corner way too fast).  :oops:

I was going to pick up the SCART-modded SuperGrafx that I'd pre-ordered from the shop as soon as the SuperGrafx was announced.  :wink:

(https://c1.staticflickr.com/6/5536/30544267616_45f8d21671_o.jpg)


I bought a white PAL modded PC Engine from the SUPERVISION guys back in 1990 at the September ECES (European Computer Entertainment Show) at Earls Court. Those guys were great, they definitely offered the best PAL modded systems at the time that actually output a decent picture and didn't require one of those god awful great big ugly colour boosters. I actually still have mine and I even still had the hand written receipt until recently, but it seems to have vanished. I believe they also had a sister company called SUPERGRAPHICS. They were from Hong Kong as I recall and were definitely one of the better import dealers on the scene in those early days. I mostly used PC Engine Supplies though, but I don't think they had a booth at that show. Or if they did, I couldn't find it. I don't remember seeing Raven Games there either, but I'm sure they must have had a booth. The show was massive and quite overwhelming. My head was spinning by the time I left!

Did anybody else go to those ECES shows back then? They were beyond amazing, literally stuffed with booths representing most of the grey import mail order companies in the UK of the era, selling all of the latest Japanese consoles and games. There were lots of live entertainment events going on, but I skipped all of that stuff and headed straight to the vendor area. I was 14 at the time, so it was a golden age for me gaming wise and I was already an absolutely hardcore Japanese import gamer by that point. My brother and I went there with my dad and our tiny minds were utterly blown by what was on display. Everywhere you looked there were Mega Drives, Neo Geos and PC Engines running the best new games that were available. It was an audio visual overload. I remember it was the first time I ever saw a SuperGrafx or Neo Geo in person and also the first time I laid eyes on a Game Boy (also Japanese import) right before they got released in the UK. I clearly recall agonising over whether to buy a SuperGrafx or an original white Engine, but the SuperGrafx was quite a bit more expensive. I bought a copy of Splatterhouse with my PC Engine and the total was around £250 - £275, so definitely not cheap. Import gaming was definitely not for the faint hearted or gamers on a budget. I remember Splatterhouse had just been released and was a red hot title. I was so excited to get home and fire it up and it certainly didn't disappoint. :D

Great memories of an absolutely golden bygone era!
Title: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: esteban on November 19, 2016, 11:15:34 PM
...
Everywhere you looked there were Mega Drives, Neo Geos and PC Engines running the best new games that were available. It was an audio visual overload. I remember it was the first time I ever saw a SuperGrafx or Neo Geo in person and also the first time I laid eyes on a Game Boy (also Japanese import) right before they got released in the UK. I clearly recall agonising over whether to buy a SuperGrafx or an original white Engine, but the SuperGrafx was quite a bit more expensive. I bought a copy of Splatterhouse with my PC Engine and the total was around £250 - £275, so definitely not cheap. Import gaming was definitely not for the faint hearted or gamers on a budget. I remember Splatterhouse had just been released and was a red hot title. I was so excited to get home and fire it up and it certainly didn't disappoint. :D

Great memories of an absolutely golden bygone era!


Amazing. To my knowledge, we had no equivalent in the States. No import "scene" per se, just a few scattered shops that might carry some import games.

As stated earlier in the thread, even folks outside of England/UK love reading about this piece of PCE history because *we don't know about it*.

I just want to REQUEST... if you folks have *any* zines, ads, documents, flyers from any of these shops, I would love to include them here:

http://archives.tg-16.com/magazine_database.htm?col=region&val=uk

It is shameful that there are only two entries for U.K. 

I NEED TO FIX THAT.

:)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: imparanoic on November 20, 2016, 01:04:19 PM
Wow this is a great thread! Interesting read!

I have been aware of the PC Engine since it was first featured in an old C&VG, and later the famous picture of the IFU with a packet of skips resting on it to give the scale of the unit :) Unfortunately my local import shops didn't carry PCE stuff back in the day, we only had SFC and Japanese MD stuff, I went that route. I grew up in Newport - South Wales, so Cardiff was only 20mins down the road from me and there was a killer import shop there. They mainly focuses on American import like NEO AES / TG16 and the usual other suspects,  but they did have a handful of the more popular Japanese imports. I was always avidly reading the CVG and the legendary 'Complete Guide To Consoles' mags back in the day following the PCE, the 'scanlined RGB'd off the screen screenshots' blew my mind back then! They looked SO good. It wasn't until Christmas 93' that I finally got my first PCE. I mainly got my games from KT Konsoles (Keith and Bob were great at recommending games) in Thurso by mail order and the usual famous UK imports like Raven, Console Concepts and Dream Machines 2.

Looking through this thread I saw some mention the PCE guide book, I actually had this back in the day, great book! Like the loser I was I even laminated the book to prevent damage :/ I also highlighted the games I had in the cheats section and wrote down the games that I wanted/own in the notes section :)

(http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p604/exmosquito/Mobile Uploads/2014-01/5E2EA5B2-4132-4DA1-B3FF-B93F41360B78_zps1oxklkjv.jpg) (http://s1158.photobucket.com/user/exmosquito/media/Mobile Uploads/2014-01/5E2EA5B2-4132-4DA1-B3FF-B93F41360B78_zps1oxklkjv.jpg.html)

(http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p604/exmosquito/Mobile Uploads/2014-01/16974FAA-65FB-408E-BC11-EE532412D445_zps931jg9i2.jpg) (http://s1158.photobucket.com/user/exmosquito/media/Mobile Uploads/2014-01/16974FAA-65FB-408E-BC11-EE532412D445_zps931jg9i2.jpg.html)

(http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p604/exmosquito/Mobile Uploads/2014-01/8BBA4658-284F-449E-8B8E-400800989BE1_zpsozwxlyro.jpg) (http://s1158.photobucket.com/user/exmosquito/media/Mobile Uploads/2014-01/8BBA4658-284F-449E-8B8E-400800989BE1_zpsozwxlyro.jpg.html)

Ah Classic CEX, when it was good! In their smaller shop down the end in the early 90's. I used to frequent London's TCR import shops in the early 90's like Shekahna etc, it was such an exciting and magical time for gaming back then. Ah Advanced console entertainment.... My mate bought a PCE Briefcase in CEX in the late 90's and we went there before our bus home back to Wales to get it RGB modded. We went back in 2hours, which to be fair was a pretty quick turnaround, but when we arrived home the RGB amped and he wired the sound from the PCE bus and not the RCA jacks resulting in no CD music. Shoddy.

Here are a few bargains I got from CEX in 2002. It was pretty much dead on its arse back then unfortunately.

(http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p604/exmosquito/343234DD-5B76-49D4-A649-DC7C2ACEB6CA_zpszeiul63f.jpg) (http://s1158.photobucket.com/user/exmosquito/media/343234DD-5B76-49D4-A649-DC7C2ACEB6CA_zpszeiul63f.jpg.html)


i had that home made magazine as well
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: brightmidnight on November 20, 2016, 10:31:44 PM
...
Everywhere you looked there were Mega Drives, Neo Geos and PC Engines running the best new games that were available. It was an audio visual overload. I remember it was the first time I ever saw a SuperGrafx or Neo Geo in person and also the first time I laid eyes on a Game Boy (also Japanese import) right before they got released in the UK. I clearly recall agonising over whether to buy a SuperGrafx or an original white Engine, but the SuperGrafx was quite a bit more expensive. I bought a copy of Splatterhouse with my PC Engine and the total was around £250 - £275, so definitely not cheap. Import gaming was definitely not for the faint hearted or gamers on a budget. I remember Splatterhouse had just been released and was a red hot title. I was so excited to get home and fire it up and it certainly didn't disappoint. :D

Great memories of an absolutely golden bygone era!


Amazing. To my knowledge, we had no equivalent in the States. No import "scene" per se, just a few scattered shops that might carry some import games.

As stated earlier in the thread, even folks outside of England/UK love reading about this piece of PCE history because *we don't know about it*.

I just want to REQUEST... if you folks have *any* zines, ads, documents, flyers from any of these shops, I would love to include them here:

http://archives.tg-16.com/magazine_database.htm?col=region&val=uk

It is shameful that there are only two entries for U.K. 

I NEED TO FIX THAT.

:)


Those shows only ran for a handful of years from the late 80's to the early 90's. The ECES event was superseded by the Live '9X event each September, which was more of a general consumer electronics/technology show, but also had vendor areas where import dealers sold their wares if memory serves.  There's few videos from the Live '95 event here, which I'm sure I went to:

http://www.itnsource.com/en/shotlist/RTV/1995/09/19/605230725

They were consumer shows for the general public, as opposed to the ECTS (European Computer Trade Show) which was a bit like the UK E3, albeit on a smaller and less significant scale. That trade show ended in the mid 2000's.

It would be great to get some of those Electric Brain fanzines scanned and uploaded anyway, as it was a prolific publication with at least 40 or so issues published, featuring some fantastic content. With the arrival of HyperPlay RPG and a seemingly renewed interest in old school 90's style fanzines, it would be amazing to see another PC Engine 'zine on the scene along the lines of the brilliant but abortive PCP. I'm sure there would be plenty of interest. The PC Engine was a sorely neglected console back then and there was precious little in the way of fanzine support, which is such a shame.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: SuperPlay on November 21, 2016, 02:34:45 AM

Looking through this thread I saw some mention the PCE guide book, I actually had this back in the day, great book! Like the loser I was I even laminated the book to prevent damage :/ I also highlighted the games I had in the cheats section and wrote down the games that I wanted/own in the notes section :)

(http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p604/exmosquito/Mobile Uploads/2014-01/5E2EA5B2-4132-4DA1-B3FF-B93F41360B78_zps1oxklkjv.jpg) (http://s1158.photobucket.com/user/exmosquito/media/Mobile Uploads/2014-01/5E2EA5B2-4132-4DA1-B3FF-B93F41360B78_zps1oxklkjv.jpg.html)




i had that home made magazine as well


You can grab a scanned copy of this from:

PC Engine Guide 1993 (UK - Fanzine Style Publication): http://www.mediafire.com/?ogyzdjhltid

EDIT:

Whoops just noticed that esteban already posted a link to this earlier in this tread, sorry!

http://archives.tg-16.com/magazine_database.htm?col=main&val=complete

Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: SuperPlay on November 21, 2016, 06:42:49 AM
OldGameMags have put up a scan of Electric Brain issue 35 (1993-06)  :D

http://www.oldgamemags.com/electric-brain/

Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on March 27, 2017, 07:49:23 AM
OldGameMags have put up a scan of Electric Brain issue 35 (1993-06)  :D

http://www.oldgamemags.com/electric-brain/




Missed this before, thanks for the link.

One day when I get a better scanner I'll have to scan in all my Electric Brain issues, I think I have all of them.
I unfortunately don't have Onn Lee's precursor fanzines Console Ma'zine or PC Engine Fanatics.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Artabasdos on March 27, 2017, 07:59:04 AM
When it comes to video games, as said above this my favorite subject.

That's why I love old fanzines, it's like a window portal back into that time. The one Esteban linked to above is a perfect example.

Through the 16 bit era the PC Engine and the grey import scene was massive in the UK, but for some reason I don't know, there seems to be a lack of any community that wants to reminisce about those days. I'm jealous of Shubibiman who has the French Necstasy forum. I would love a UK equivalent.

Here's a couple of threads about the UK scene. It has links to other threads which had loads of magazine & fanzine scans which unfortunately mostly appear to have now gone from where they were hosted.

"CVG pics and Scans - Collecting PC-Engine in the early 90s in the UK part 2"
http://www.pcenginefx.com/forums/index.php?topic=19762

"Collecting PC-Engine in the early 90s in the UK"
http://www.pcenginefx.com/forums/index.php?topic=6644


Probably because most kids owned a Megadrive, Amiga 500, Master System, C64, or some Speccy variant in the U.K. back then.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: esteban on March 27, 2017, 11:39:29 AM
OldGameMags have put up a scan of Electric Brain issue 35 (1993-06)  :D

http://www.oldgamemags.com/electric-brain/




Missed this before, thanks for the link.

One day when I get a better scanner I'll have to scan in all my Electric Brain issues, I think I have all of them.
I unfortunately don't have Onn Lee's precursor fanzines Console Ma'zine or PC Engine Fanatics.


Goddamn! Get the better scanner, comrade! :)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: LMS on March 29, 2017, 02:42:01 AM
One for all my UK based old timer Comrades...

(https://image.ibb.co/mD2Bva/console_concepts_front.jpg)

(https://image.ibb.co/hTVyaa/console_concepts_back.jpg)

My memory is pretty blurry, perhaps Hardcore Otaking can better recall the details. From what I remember... Console Concepts started out as a mail order only grey importer of the PC Engine (hence the original name PC Engine Supplies) who went on to rebrand themselves as their wares expanded to include the likes of the Mega Drive, Neo Geo and SFC as each system was released. I never visited the physical shop but from what I remember it was a late addition to the business. I was a pretty regular custom back when this card was issued (92-94 I think) but the only 'Priviledge' it ever bought me was the ability to give them my customer number instead of my full address when placing an order over the phone.

Like I say, this is all a long time ago and my memory is pretty shit but I feel like these guys disappeared just prior to the 32bit systems arriving (or maybe just after). It feels as though there was one 'scene' of importers here in the UK throughout the 16bit era (Shekana, the original CEX, VGC, KT Consoles, Dream Machines, etc), then a whole other one after. I guess the PS1 really shook things up on that front. It blew up way bigger than any previous system here in terms of hype and a bunch of new importers jumped on the opportunity. I'm sure some of the existing guys who got on board benefited too but it certainly changed the landscape and as the niche factor started to evaporate, I think a lot of the more obscure stock (pc engine & Neo in particular) was pushed to the back.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on March 29, 2017, 04:14:04 AM
I've ordered from them in the past I wonder if they became these guys

http://www.consolepassion.co.uk/

also these guys too

http://www.videogameimports.com/
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on March 29, 2017, 04:16:36 AM
(https://image.ibb.co/mD2Bva/console_concepts_front.jpg)

(https://image.ibb.co/hTVyaa/console_concepts_back.jpg)

Awesome scan, as you know I love stuff like this.


My memory is pretty blurry, perhaps Hardcore Otaking can better recall the details. From what I remember... Console Concepts started out as a mail order only grey importer of the PC Engine (hence the original name PC Engine Supplies) who went on to rebrand themselves as their wares expanded to include the likes of the Mega Drive, Neo Geo and SFC as each system was released. I never visited the physical shop but from what I remember it was a late addition to the business. I was a pretty regular custom back when this card was issued (92-94 I think) but the only 'Priviledge' it ever bought me was the ability to give them my customer number instead of my full address when placing an order over the phone.

Like I say, this is all a long time ago and my memory is pretty shit but I feel like these guys disappeared just prior to the 32bit systems arriving (or maybe just after). It feels as though there was one 'scene' of importers here in the UK throughout the 16bit era (Shekana, the original CEX, VGC, KT Consoles, Dream Machines, etc), then a whole other one after. I guess the PS1 really shook things up on that front. It blew up way bigger than any previous system here in terms of hype and a bunch of new importers jumped on the opportunity. I'm sure some of the existing guys who got on board benefited too but it certainly changed the landscape and as the niche factor started to evaporate, I think a lot of the more obscure stock (pc engine & Neo in particular) was pushed to the back.
Yeah as far as I'm aware you're correct about the history of Console Concepts. At the end of 80s they were one of the first major video game "grey importers" under the name PC Engine Supplies. And as you said, as other consoles arrived they changed their name.

Thinking about it my experience of using them was limited. Back all through that era I used to game with 2 other friends, and after I got my Japanese Duo one friend wanted one too and asked me to help him get it, I ordered his one from Console Concepts. I can't remember exactly how but they messed up the order some how (I think maybe sent the console without a game pad), and then after sent me/him a free copy of Final Soldier to compensate. My other experiance with them is buying PC Engine Street Fighter II from them when it was released.

I used Video Game Centre in Bournemouth a few times and also Telegames, but thinking about it my use of mail order was limited.
By far the main way I bought and traded games was through three ways.
1. Loot newspaper. ( basically a printed newspaper version of Gumtree(UK) or Craigslist(US))
2. Through a network of hardcore gamers in the UK at the time, used to speak on the phone and trade games via post. Some from London I'd meet up with and trade.
3. Bricks and mortar stores in the Greater London area, as in all the ones discussed throughout this thread.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on March 29, 2017, 06:33:35 AM
I've ordered from them in the past I wonder if they became these guys

http://www.consolepassion.co.uk/

also these guys too

http://www.videogameimports.com/



Videogame Imports is a guy called Lee who used to trade under Dream Machines back in the day.
He has a loyal customer base from more midlands and north of England.
http://www.videogameimports.com/aboutus.htm
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: LMS on March 29, 2017, 07:07:54 AM
Big grey import systems of the late 80s, early 90s era...

PC Engine, Gameboy, Atari Lynx!, Mega Drive, Neo Geo, Super Famicom, FM Towns Marty

...with a bonus mention for the supergun as a lot of these same guys were supplying jamma pcbs

What am I missing?  :-k
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on March 29, 2017, 11:10:51 AM
Big grey import systems of the late 80s, early 90s era...

PC Engine, Gameboy, Atari Lynx!, Mega Drive, Neo Geo, Super Famicom, FM Towns Marty

...with a bonus mention for the supergun as a lot of these same guys were supplying jamma pcbs

What am I missing?  :-k


I think the big ones were PC Engine, Mega Drive, Super Famicom/SNES and Neo Geo.

With the Super Famicom I think an equal amount if not more SNES games were imported from the US, particularly the RPGs we didn't get here. I think this was due to Super Play being the best selling video games magazine for a period and they heavily pushed RPGs.

Neo Geo surprises me because of the price, but most of the grey importers stocked it. I don't think they actually sold many, just had token selection in stock.

With Gameboy it was definitely crazy popular, but can't remember whether it was imported or pal releases. I know you had those knock off multi carts from Hong Kong that were a thing for a bit.


Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: LMS on March 29, 2017, 11:45:36 AM
There was a lot of import Gameboy stuff at the start for sure, I guess primarily due to release dates being so far ahead in Japan back then. The magazines would review stuff like Rockman as soon as it was out on import and we didn't see a pal release for a long time after.

You're right about US imports for SNES RPG's but back then the US release dates on all SNES titles were a good while after Japan too. so when it came to the games that didn't require you to read the text, most places would stock Japanese carts until the US release was available at which point they'd switch to that.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: SignOfZeta on March 29, 2017, 02:21:07 PM
In the US "importing" Neo games was usually pointless. With most games being released in all territories In every language on the same day for virtuality the same price there was no need to deal with actually importing it.  Of course, eventually the carts became so hard to get that the only places carrying them were...import shops. NCS would just ask you what language you wanted because they carried both US and JP.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: esteban on March 30, 2017, 12:03:41 AM
As always, I love that these threads have grown and eclipsed over the years.

I really think that all of the info/scans/photos here is invaluable since you old bastards will soon be routinely forgetting what you had for lunch yesterday.

What I am most curious about: how, exactly, did U.K./US importers source the consoles/games? I have always been curious about that aspect of the business.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Artabasdos on March 30, 2017, 03:53:44 AM
As always, I love that these threads have grown and eclipsed over the years.

I really think that all of the info/scans/photos here is invaluable since you old bastards will soon be routinely forgetting what you had for lunch yesterday.

What I am most curious about: how, exactly, did U.K./US importers source the consoles/games? I have always been curious about that aspect of the business.

I'm only 28 you saucy git.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Ex_Mosquito on March 30, 2017, 04:03:26 AM
As always, I love that these threads have grown and eclipsed over the years.

I really think that all of the info/scans/photos here is invaluable since you old bastards will soon be routinely forgetting what you had for lunch yesterday.

What I am most curious about: how, exactly, did U.K./US importers source the consoles/games? I have always been curious about that aspect of the business.

Hey I'm not old, I'm only 38 ....No wait. I often wondered that. Apparently Leigh from Dream Machines used to supply PC Engine Supplies with their games.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on March 30, 2017, 04:16:53 AM
If there was enough of us I would start a dedicated forum (and website maybe) about the "grey import" UK retro games scene.
Its just it seems there's not enough of us about though, so feel it would probably be completely dead.  :(
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on March 30, 2017, 04:58:26 AM
In the US "importing" Neo games was usually pointless. With most games being released in all territories In every language on the same day for virtuality the same price there was no need to deal with actually importing it.  Of course, eventually the carts became so hard to get that the only places carrying them were...import shops. NCS would just ask you what language you wanted because they carried both US and JP.

Yeah here in the UK with regards Neo Geo AES I'm not sure how much of it was imported from outside Europe. There was a mix up of Euro, US and Japanese games and when it was sold I don't recall the region being defined so much with it. For example with the SNES it was very clear whether it was US, Japanese or PAL.

I suspect alot of the mailorder companies who sold "grey imports" for all the other platforms (MD, SFC, PCE etc.) but when it came to the Neo Geo AES it was mostly the Euro region they stocked.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Ex_Mosquito on March 30, 2017, 05:01:01 AM
Heh yeah that would be great. I'd love a website with a comprehensive list of UK indie import shops from late 80's early 90's complete with pictures of the insides and display shelves :)

I'm not sure if I've posted this before but there is a cool thread on the Jamma+ forum about PC Engine importing.

http://www.jammaplus.co.uk/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=46461&title=the-pc-engine-appreciation-thread
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Artabasdos on March 30, 2017, 05:07:08 AM
Heh yeah that would be great. I'd love a website with a comprehensive list of UK indie import shops from late 80's early 90's complete with pictures of the insides and display shelves :)

I'm not sure if I've posted this before but there is a cool thread on the Jamma+ forum about PC Engine importing.

http://www.jammaplus.co.uk/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=46461&title=the-pc-engine-appreciation-thread


Well, why don't you start one?
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: LMS on March 30, 2017, 06:09:58 AM
I think a lot of the UK based importers of that early era didn't really have a storefront of any kind aside from the adverts they placed in C&VG, Mean Machines, etc.

I read the other day that PC Engine supplies was run out of Steve's front room prior to partnering up with Colin Diamond to become Console Concepts. When I used to visit Shekana on Tottenham Court Road it was essentially a small glass cabinet of games hidden at the back of an electronics shop full of hifi equipment.

On that last note, did anyone else find themselves really drawn to the small form factor of the mini disc  format when it first arrived? Like an extension of an existing fetish for hucards :D

...notable exceptions to this were Video Game Centre in Bournemouth and the early incarnations of the Tottenham Court Exchange that went on to later become CEX, both of which where crazy places to walk into at the time. Raven Games always sticks in my mind as being the most impressive though, especially once the arcade cab was present (R-Type Leo anyone?).
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: esteban on March 30, 2017, 08:58:26 AM
^ I was in high school/college and couldn't afford mini-disc (my money was focused on music and rent). I wanted DAT, too. I've never owned any hardware for these formats, though.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Artabasdos on March 30, 2017, 09:42:59 AM
^ I was in high school/college and couldn't afford mini-disc (my money was focused on music and rent). I wanted DAT, too. I've never owned any hardware for these formats, though.

Wow, mini-disk. There's a thing I haven't seen mentioned in years. That shit was huge in the U.K in the late 90s and early 00s.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: esteban on March 30, 2017, 09:57:26 AM
^ I was in high school/college and couldn't afford mini-disc (my money was focused on music and rent). I wanted DAT, too. I've never owned any hardware for these formats, though.

Wow, mini-disk. There's a thing I haven't seen mentioned in years. That shit was huge in the U.K in the late 90s and early 00s.

It was niche over here, but It was fun reading about "the future"...
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on March 30, 2017, 02:02:45 PM
Heh yeah that would be great. I'd love a website with a comprehensive list of UK indie import shops from late 80's early 90's complete with pictures of the insides and display shelves :)

Yeah I would like to see pics from back then.

http://www.jammaplus.co.uk/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=46461&title=the-pc-engine-appreciation-thread

Nice I'll check it out.



When I used to visit Shekana on Tottenham Court Road it was essentially a small glass cabinet of games hidden at the back of an electronics shop full of hifi equipment.

Yeah.
The space in the shop they got for games did seem to get larger as the years went by, but still  relativity a small part of the shop.

On that last note, did anyone else find themselves really drawn to the small form factor of the mini disc  format when it first arrived? Like an extension of an existing fetish for hucards :D

I never got into mini disc myself but a lot of my friends had them. Were popular for recording DJ sets from your decks.

...notable exceptions to this were Video Game Centre in Bournemouth and the early incarnations of the Tottenham Court Exchange that went on to later become CEX, both of which where crazy places to walk into at the time. Raven Games always sticks in my mind as being the most impressive though, especially once the arcade cab was present (R-Type Leo anyone?).


The most impressive stores I remember were Machine Shack in Streatham and Computer Exchange in Notting Hill Gate in the early days.

But probably the no.1 as you said and we discussed earlier was when CEX first unveiled their "retro museum", with that wall of thousands of PC Engine games and thousands of other platform games too, that was just mental.

I wasn't keen on those 2 guys who ran Raven Games, so kind of spoilt the experience for me there.


I wanted DAT, too.

I didn't realise consumers bought DAT machines?? I thought they were only for studios to record music. I had a DAT machine as I used have a hardware studio. It cost me an absolute fortune at the time (like all the other gear did)
I had this model:
(http://medias.audiofanzine.com/images/normal/tascam-da-20-mkii-141972.jpg)

Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on March 30, 2017, 10:46:37 PM
I think a lot of the UK based importers of that early era didn't really have a storefront of any kind aside from the adverts they placed in C&VG, Mean Machines, etc.

I read the other day that PC Engine supplies was run out of Steve's front room prior to partnering up with Colin Diamond to become Console Concepts. When I used to visit Shekana on Tottenham Court Road it was essentially a small glass cabinet of games hidden at the back of an electronics shop full of hifi equipment.

On that last note, did anyone else find themselves really drawn to the small form factor of the mini disc  format when it first arrived? Like an extension of an existing fetish for hucards :D

...notable exceptions to this were Video Game Centre in Bournemouth and the early incarnations of the Tottenham Court Exchange that went on to later become CEX, both of which where crazy places to walk into at the time. Raven Games always sticks in my mind as being the most impressive though, especially once the arcade cab was present (R-Type Leo anyone?).


I picked up a mini disc player much later certainly around 2000 but they kept breaking, but certainly around the time of the pc engine I never went out without a walkman mostly AIWA models busting around with my 90 minute tape of pce hucard and CD-rom track recordings.

I still got those tapes! NERD!!!!!!
(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/33B70AD7-2F1A-49C5-866F-00E92B3209B4.jpg)


not forgetting that life after Shekana... and I remember taking their advert (which was advertised in like C&VG mag) to get 10% discount on C64 games there.  Although I really liked Shekana as I got my first pce there they were a little shady as I remember the middle eastern lady that worked there and iirc she had a mole on her chin area she was happy to sell UK NES carts to USA visitors and not say anything about incompatibility between the regions...

But one of those guys left Shekana and partnered up with a few more fellas to form ACE - Advance console entertainment just tucked away in Carnaby Street.  Shekana also had another store somewhere I think it was up near Wood Green. 

But those guys in ACE were cool and I would find them in the NAMCO world after hours.

There was also a small video rental shop in Barking that started importing pce stuff and also later imported supergrafx
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: esteban on March 31, 2017, 12:11:48 AM
I picked up a mini disc player much later certainly around 2000 but they kept breaking, but certainly around the time of the pc engine I never went out without a walkman mostly AIWA models busting around with my 90 minute tape of pce hucard and CD-rom track recordings.

I still got those tapes! NERD!!!!!!
(http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m113/secretsociety1/33B70AD7-2F1A-49C5-866F-00E92B3209B4.jpg)


I made cassettes, too, but I never made any video game art—I would just take a silly advert for a foot cream or ________ and repurpose it as cover art.

The Dungeon Explorer and Legendary Axe tape was a favorite of mine, ha! I still remember biking certain stretches of road to certain songs.

I went everywhere with my "Walkman" (I mostly had Aiwa, but also some "no brand" stuff).

I eventually got a portable CD player, so I would bring BOTH tapes+CD everywhere (backpack + bike = transportation).

Anyway, the Walkman was the beast that handled the worst abuse.




Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Otaking on March 31, 2017, 01:18:27 AM
Pic of Video Game Centre in Bournemouth from 2002
(http://www.nekofever.com/wp-content/uploads/vgc.jpg)

From here
http://www.nekofever.com/archives/2008/05/rip-video-game-centre/
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Necromancer on March 31, 2017, 02:22:45 AM
Digi.K - sweet tape art!
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: soop on March 31, 2017, 03:10:12 AM
Wow, memories.  Well I'm in the UK, and the first I really heard of the PC Engine was the GT.  One of the popular gaming magazines over here, C+VG, used to have a pull-out supplement covering portables, and the GT was clearly streets ahead of anything else, including the previously well hyped Lynx.  I remember seeing a review of Air Zonk and being blown away.

For me, the PC Engine was pretty much in the realm of things like the Super Famicom (until it was released over here) and the Neo Geo.  As an aside, I remember when Street Fighter II was released, and import companies were advertising import copies for... over £100 I'm pretty sure.

So all of these consoles, until the eventual (and overwhelmingly well recieved) launch of the Super Nintendo.  I don't remember the gap, but I want to say it was a year if not longer.

Then one day, I was with my dad, browsing the second hand type stores, when I saw, in a glass display case, a boxed PC Engine GT and 7 games for £70.  My jaw literally hit the floor, and I managed to persuade him to buy it for me as an early birthday gift.  I still think it's the best present I ever got.  I'm hazy on the date, but it would have been the 90's after the Megadrive had been going for a while.

My first bundle of games was:

PC Genjin 2
Sonson II
Shinobi
AfterBurner
Cyber Core
Altered Beast
And Bari Bari Densetsu.  Someone clearly knew what they were doing, these are fantastic games.  I later managed to pick up Hani on the Road, Street Fighter II, and The Kung Fu, for I think about £10 each from an import company.  At the time, I had no access to reviews, so I was literally judging by the cover at first.  Then when I got a job, Internet access and an ebay account, I got a few more, Puzznic, shubibin man 2 and Super Star Soldier, along with a Boxed Core Grafx.  After that I could read reviews and download ROMs, so I was in a better position to choose what games I wanted to get, and I really ramped up my collection in the late 2000's .

It's almost a shame now the mystery is gone a little, but back then, any snippet of PC Engine information I could get, I'd happily buy an entire magazine for.  Even one review.  I still have all my old magazines, in varying conditions, and I'm fairly certain I can identify what PC Engine is in each of them just from the cover.  I think I probably still have the old photocopy of the advert I purchased my first games from somewhere, with various games circled.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Artabasdos on March 31, 2017, 03:21:38 AM
Wow, memories.  Well I'm in the UK, and the first I really heard of the PC Engine was the GT.  One of the popular gaming magazines over here, C+VG, used to have a pull-out supplement covering portables, and the GT was clearly streets ahead of anything else, including the previously well hyped Lynx.  I remember seeing a review of Air Zonk and being blown away.

For me, the PC Engine was pretty much in the realm of things like the Super Famicom (until it was released over here) and the Neo Geo.  As an aside, I remember when Street Fighter II was released, and import companies were advertising import copies for... over £100 I'm pretty sure.

So all of these consoles, until the eventual (and overwhelmingly well recieved) launch of the Super Nintendo.  I don't remember the gap, but I want to say it was a year if not longer.

Then one day, I was with my dad, browsing the second hand type stores, when I saw, in a glass display case, a boxed PC Engine GT and 7 games for £70.  My jaw literally hit the floor, and I managed to persuade him to buy it for me as an early birthday gift.  I still think it's the best present I ever got.  I'm hazy on the date, but it would have been the 90's after the Megadrive had been going for a while.

My first bundle of games was:

PC Genjin 2
Sonson II
Shinobi
AfterBurner
Cyber Core
Altered Beast
And Bari Bari Densetsu.  Someone clearly knew what they were doing, these are fantastic games.  I later managed to pick up Hani on the Road, Street Fighter II, and The Kung Fu, for I think about £10 each from an import company.  At the time, I had no access to reviews, so I was literally judging by the cover at first.  Then when I got a job, Internet access and an ebay account, I got a few more, Puzznic, shubibin man 2 and Super Star Soldier, along with a Boxed Core Grafx.  After that I could read reviews and download ROMs, so I was in a better position to choose what games I wanted to get, and I really ramped up my collection in the late 2000's .

It's almost a shame now the mystery is gone a little, but back then, any snippet of PC Engine information I could get, I'd happily buy an entire magazine for.  Even one review.  I still have all my old magazines, in varying conditions, and I'm fairly certain I can identify what PC Engine is in each of them just from the cover.  I think I probably still have the old photocopy of the advert I purchased my first games from somewhere, with various games circled.

I've only known one person who owned a SNES as a kid in the UK. Almost everyone had a Megadrive or Amiga 500.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: soop on March 31, 2017, 03:32:34 AM
Yeah, I was totally an Amiga owner.  I started with an Acorn Electron, went to Spectrum, and then briefly owned a C64 alongside it (which apart from Wonderboy I didn't really rate as much).  Then I sold both with all my games (a fair few) for £180, and my parents chipped in to get me an Amiga 500.  I was a lucky kid.

I only really got into consoles when they started to get stupid cheap.  Actually I had a Megadrive around the time the Playstation came out, and some games were still pretty pricey, but I used to travel all over the place via bus, and call all manner of stores trying to find cheap games.  Oh, and Trade-It, which was basically Craigslist in print format.

I got tonnes of NES games for around a quid BitD, and one memorable day, picked up 20 loose Megadrive games for £40 at which point they kindly chucked in Secret of Mana and Megaman X for the SNES I didn't yet own.  Still have them all, aside from a lot of the NES games and three NESs, but I've just been on a bit of a bender rebuilding my collection, and I'm actually pretty happy.  It was always one of my regrets that I lost those NES games.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Artabasdos on March 31, 2017, 03:36:42 AM
Yeah, I was totally an Amiga owner.  I started with an Acorn Electron, went to Spectrum, and then briefly owned a C64 alongside it (which apart from Wonderboy I didn't really rate as much).  Then I sold both with all my games (a fair few) for £180, and my parents chipped in to get me an Amiga 500.  I was a lucky kid.

I only really got into consoles when they started to get stupid cheap.  Actually I had a Megadrive around the time the Playstation came out, and some games were still pretty pricey, but I used to travel all over the place via bus, and call all manner of stores trying to find cheap games.  Oh, and Trade-It, which was basically Craigslist in print format.

I got tonnes of NES games for around a quid BitD, and one memorable day, picked up 20 loose Megadrive games for £40 at which point they kindly chucked in Secret of Mana and Megaman X for the SNES I didn't yet own.  Still have them all, aside from a lot of the NES games and three NESs, but I've just been on a bit of a bender rebuilding my collection, and I'm actually pretty happy.  It was always one of my regrets that I lost those NES games.

NES was before my time. Megadrive & Sonic was the popular thing around here along with SFII & Mortal Kombat. The Amiga version of SFII sucked hard.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: soop on March 31, 2017, 03:47:35 AM
Eh, at least we had stuff like Cannon Fodder and Lemmings.  The Amiga was at its best when it did its own thing!
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Artabasdos on March 31, 2017, 03:55:06 AM
Eh, at least we had stuff like Cannon Fodder and Lemmings.  The Amiga was at its best when it did its own thing!

Yeah. Apart from the limited amount of sound channels it is a pretty powerful system. I'd love to see how the Amiga 500 could pull off SFII if handled by Capcom, not US gold.

Oh, and preferably with the 2 button joysticks. That always hurt the Amiga.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Ex_Mosquito on March 31, 2017, 04:38:53 AM
Videogame centre also has a Facebook page with a few old pics. It's a pitty people didn't take more pics of things like this. It's the same for old UK arcades, the pics are few and far between. If only digital cameras were around back then :(
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: roflmao on April 03, 2017, 05:59:54 AM
That cassette tape artwork is awesome! I included video game music (and music/scenes ripped off anime vhs tapes) in mix tapes but never really did hand drawn art for the cases. I preferred to use digital software, and I bet it all looked super cheesy. :)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: SuperPlay on April 08, 2017, 01:15:49 PM

...........PC Engine supplies was run out of Steve's front room prior to partnering up with Colin Diamond to become Console Concepts.

Correct :-) As well as the shop they had in Newcastle under Lyme, a second store opened later in Hanley Stoke-on-Trent.


@Digi.k Love your home made inlays

@LMS  Thanks for sharing your Console Concepts Membership card, I have not seen one of these in years

@Otaking Computer/Games shops in the 90's were the best, nice find with the Video Game Centre pics

Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Ex_Mosquito on April 23, 2017, 11:52:19 AM
I massively regret not getting sh*tloads of PCE games when I had disposable income and they were dirt cheap....those days are gone :/

I was mesmerised  by the PCE ever since I first saw it in the back of C+VG and following reviews in later issues, and also in the 'Complete Guide to Consoles' mags, specifically the yellow one. It really blew my mind how great the games looked compared to my Spectrum 48k and SMS. C+VG used to take some gorgeous RGB scanlined screenshots back then!

I got my first PC Engine in 93' (late I know.. :(..) from KT Konsoles, specifically a Turbo Express with the purple converter to play HuCards. The next few years I amassed a fair amount of games, my good bulk coming from a random encounter when I was visiting an indie import shop in Swindon. I asked the guy behind the counter if they had any TG16/PCE games, he said no but he had a load at home he was willing to sell. Anyway later than night (I was visiting and staying at a friends house) he brought over a bag of about 15games, including: Ordyne, Parasol Stars, Soldier Blade, Dead Moon, Splatterhouse, Bomberman... all for £50! Later in 94' I picked up a white PCE and in 95' I got my Duo. It was never my main console back then for some reason (I was an idiot back then..) I have always been heavily 2D arcade style games but in 94/95 was the times when I got a cab and a RavenGames Supergun and started getting into arcade PCBs and pestering arcade operators in the local seaside (Barry) and the yellow pages for old PCBs from their storage units. Anyway, I sold off 99% of my gaming stuff in 2002ish (D'oh) along with it all my PCE stuff. Currently I have a briefcase setup + Everdrive and about 40 games and it's pretty much all I play on these days. My arcade cab has been neglected lately with it being in the corner of the living room and making me feel anti-social whenever I play on it, so I now have a CRT located underneath the main livingroom LED TV (hacked Ikea unit) for easy access. Besides, the PCE with its library of games being tough, short arcade style games is a great alternative to getting my arcade fix. I just wish I'd gotten a bigger collection when I had the chance and not neglected it :( Ah well. Here's my current PCE set-up.

(http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p604/exmosquito/6C66C560-F62B-429D-B670-3DFBA7C5635B_zpszdju9odq.jpg)

DB15 converted Sega VSHG stick plugged into a padhack via the IC chip. The pad can still be used as normal. I can't play PCE shooters with the stock pad :/

(http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p604/exmosquito/48AA3DB2-A176-48E9-A832-EB6FB854FA87_zpsulhspvu1.jpg)

My PC Engine Fanzine. This Fanzine is amazing! 95pages of reviews, cheats and detailed hardware info. Got this from KT Konsoles for the bargain price of 3 queen quids.

(http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p604/exmosquito/8C732832-4041-494B-87C5-DFCA4F89E678_zpsuwgh8rpd.jpg)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on June 30, 2017, 04:55:17 AM
(http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p604/exmosquito/48AA3DB2-A176-48E9-A832-EB6FB854FA87_zpsulhspvu1.jpg)



I think I used to have that sony CRT tv back in the day I had 14", then a 21" and a 30-ish before selling them all.  Used to love the design before going all Panasonic widescreen.

this is basically my setup at the moment

(http://i.imgur.com/08MVbSx.jpg)
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: esteban on June 30, 2017, 08:44:22 AM
Criminiminal individual.
Criminiminal minimal. 

Godspeed to you and your minimalism.

I pretend to be minimalist, but 98% is hidden from view.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: JAPJAC on November 02, 2017, 06:04:41 AM
JAPJAC`s TFP Fanitsu Capcom Power System CHANGER Definitive Resource is the first extensive and only competent expose in English on-line is here!:

(Under the TFP Features section):

http://www.japjac.proboards.com/
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: shubibiman on November 03, 2017, 06:33:10 AM
What was the scene like back then? Was pce mildly popular? Which games did you guys own, or your friends? Any stories to tell?

It was very exciting times.  More people had JPN white PC Engines in my year and in the year above than anyone had UK PAL Sega Master Systems and Nintendo Entertainment Systems, and that's honestly true.  And it didn't seem that expensive either especially compared to the price of an Atari ST computer and its games.  Every schoolboy around my age in my town with half an interest in 'computer games' knew what one was thanks mainly due to word of mouth coupled with the really good magazines we had. 

R-Type pt.1 definitely was the game that made people really really care about the console.  However, R-Type pt.2 was bloody difficult to find for a long time right into the early 90s for some odd reason. 

At my school, Splatterhouse (also initially very expensive and difficult to get) was the game that everyone wanted, or at least wanted to play.  I remember when my best mate whipped out his GT and started playing this game in registration, even the girls (not being sexist) where crowded around watching him play it.  Also older kids from the neighbouring form came in to see what all the fuss was about.  Then came over our form tutor, wanting to confiscate the lot but then didn't as my mate told him how much it all cost (nearly 300 quid's worth Sir), and he wouldn't 'let' him, so he crumbled and didn't!  It was like a small, rare victory.   :D

I just wished I had taken photographs of the PC Engine gear in Shekhana's 221 TCR shop in their earliest PC Engine days.  Everything was running on RGB Philips CM8833 monitors, and the hardware and software was displayed behind glass counter top cabinets.  It was more akin to a a branch of Tiffany & Co..  And they were literally selling like hot cakes in front of ones eyes.  Harrods and Hamley's also had PC Engines in stock a while later I remember seeing.  But I'm sure that Shekhana was the first high-street shop to sell PC Engine in the British Isles?  They were already selling US NES games so the PC Engine seemed like a natural progression from that.  And Rhine Games (long forgotten) quite a while later up the road had stock of the PC Engine LT when it first game out.  It was 550 quid.  I was tempted, but the screen was utter shite even then.

I bought my PC Engine for Son Son II as I was a huge Monkey Magic fan and it just looked like the dog's bollock's in TGM's review.  And it was.  And it is. 

And the best thing was, the PC Engine was obviously never released in the UK really, and even then we knew, as children, that this made the whole experience even radder. 

Has it really been nearly 30 years? 

Cheers/乾杯/Santé! PC Engine!!:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QXL4UX2G5fs



Post of the year. I really like the way it all went the same in France and in England in the first months of the PCE. The big difference was when Sodipeng (a Guillemot / Ubisoft company) started distributing the PCE in France.

Bu the way, I was pleased to meet the founder of Sodipeng at our 30 year anniversary party last saturday.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: JAPJAC on November 04, 2017, 01:05:23 AM
JAPJAC`s TFP Fanitsu Capcom Power System CHANGER Definitive Resource is the first extensive and only competent expose in English on-line is here!:

(Under the TFP Features section):

http://www.japjac.proboards.com/
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: shubibiman on November 04, 2017, 03:46:14 AM
Yeah, that was pretty amazing.
Title: Re: For those who grew up with imported pce in Europe
Post by: Digi.k on November 04, 2017, 08:33:56 AM
What was the scene like back then? Was pce mildly popular? Which games did you guys own, or your friends? Any stories to tell?

It was very exciting times.  More people had JPN white PC Engines in my year and in the year above than anyone had UK PAL Sega Master Systems and Nintendo Entertainment Systems, and that's honestly true.  And it didn't seem that expensive either especially compared to the price of an Atari ST computer and its games.  Every schoolboy around my age in my town with half an interest in 'computer games' knew what one was thanks mainly due to word of mouth coupled with the really good magazines we had. 

R-Type pt.1 definitely was the game that made people really really care about the console.  However, R-Type pt.2 was bloody difficult to find for a long time right into the early 90s for some odd reason. 

At my school, Splatterhouse (also initially very expensive and difficult to get) was the game that everyone wanted, or at least wanted to play.  I remember when my best mate whipped out his GT and started playing this game in registration, even the girls (not being sexist) where crowded around watching him play it.  Also older kids from the neighbouring form came in to see what all the fuss was about.  Then came over our form tutor, wanting to confiscate the lot but then didn't as my mate told him how much it all cost (nearly 300 quid's worth Sir), and he wouldn't 'let' him, so he crumbled and didn't!  It was like a small, rare victory.   :D

I just wished I had taken photographs of the PC Engine gear in Shekhana's 221 TCR shop in their earliest PC Engine days.  Everything was running on RGB Philips CM8833 monitors, and the hardware and software was displayed behind glass counter top cabinets.  It was more akin to a a branch of Tiffany & Co..  And they were literally selling like hot cakes in front of ones eyes.  Harrods and Hamley's also had PC Engines in stock a while later I remember seeing.  But I'm sure that Shekhana was the first high-street shop to sell PC Engine in the British Isles?  They were already selling US NES games so the PC Engine seemed like a natural progression from that.  And Rhine Games (long forgotten) quite a while later up the road had stock of the PC Engine LT when it first game out.  It was 550 quid.  I was tempted, but the screen was utter shite even then.

I bought my PC Engine for Son Son II as I was a huge Monkey Magic fan and it just looked like the dog's bollock's in TGM's review.  And it was.  And it is. 

And the best thing was, the PC Engine was obviously never released in the UK really, and even then we knew, as children, that this made the whole experience even radder. 


Just reminded me but there was also a games store in Walhamstow high Street that sold pc engine imports too.  They only had the very early namco games but I can't recall them getting new releases unlike Raven Games and Shekhana and CEX