PCEngineFans.com - The PC Engine and TurboGrafx-16 Community Forum
NEC TG-16/TE/TurboDuo => TG-16/TE/TurboDuo Discussion => Topic started by: Colossus1574 on November 15, 2010, 06:51:42 AM
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Just read the "who still needs MC thread" and saw that many of them actually just wanna play the game!
which kinda dawned on me a good question....
Who was lucky enough to have TG16 rentals in your area?
One of the reasons i jumped to the PCE after 2 years was i had more friends to swap/borrow games off of then stores with TG16 rentals!!! Every game rental place in Vancouver only did NES and Genesis games back then! (obviously were talking early '90s) I'm sure it didn't help TG16s marketing and appeal.... Mind you, the stores aren't dumb they'll look for marketshare for each system...and research probably told them NES and Genesis were the safe bets :-({|=
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We had a neighborhood rental place that rented every active system of that era, including Turbografx. It was kind of awesome. Even more awesome was when they went out of business ten years later I was able to buy all their Turbo games for $4 a pop.
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Had a few places that rented em around town. Not much selection, and I owned a lot of what they rented already. Oh well
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We had a neighborhood rental place that rented every active system of that era, including Turbografx. It was kind of awesome. Even more awesome was when they went out of business ten years later I was able to buy all their Turbo games for $4 a pop.
hahaha same here
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Only had Blockbuster that rented them here. Several places that rented NES/Genesis games
pointed out the notice in the front of the manuals
Any duplication, copying or rental of this software is strictly prohibited
Lots of businesses took it very seriously.
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I don't know of any places that rented 'em, but I wasn't really into renting at the time, so I may have just overlooked the Turbobs.
Any duplication, copying or rental of this software is strictly prohibited
Lots of businesses took it very seriously.
Funny how times change; I recently bought a couple DS games for my nephews and they specifically allowed rentals.
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Rented turbo games near every weekend. Marios in Brooklyn Center, MN. RIP.....
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I didn't have a TG16 growing up, so I do not recall if they had those games...
But the one place did rent to me 3DO and Jaguar games, so I imagine they had them if anyone did.
I kick myself to this day, because when that place when out of business, I had Earthbound SNES CIB in my hand for $10. Instead of buying that, I bought Darkstalkers for the PS1.
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I had to drive to the next state in order to purchase anything TG16 back in the day. TG16 never came to my area. :cry:
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There was a Diehard Game Club in Auburn Hills (later moved to Waterford) that was half way between where I lived (Midland), and where my girlfriend went to school (Detroit) so I rented quite a few PC Engine and Super Famicom games during that period.
I never rented any US titles from them (most of which you could just buy for under $20 at TRU anyway) but it was great to be able to rent Macross 2036 any time I wanted since it was really hard to find/expensive back then. I would also rent stuff like Super Robot Wars EX and keep it for a month until it was beat. $25 in late fees wasn't such a bad deal, IMO, since new SFC games were sometimes over $120 each.
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There were places around Seattle that rented Turbo games, but then again Seattle was a major market for the Turbo during that period.
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Since Denver is the best city on the planet, OF COURSE we had places that rented Turbo games. 3 different chains of stores, in fact, all over the metro area. It was so awesome. I rented Cratermaze and it created a save file on my CD interface unit. That save file stayed there for many, many years. I felt like I stole it!
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Hmm, I didn't have TG16 in my country (Australia) let alone games in a rental store. :-({|=
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A place called VideoMaxx that also went "Laserdisc Only" to try and corner an exclusive market on the West side of town. That's the only place I remember, I rented Sidearms and Splatterhouse there.
When They went out of business I bought all of their mylar Laserdisc covers for my records.
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Every video store around rented Nintendo games and many carried Genesis games after a while, but never saw any TurboGrafx games for rent.
Would be cool if http://www.gamefly.com/ started carrying them. :)
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Cool, looks like there were different experiences for the TG16, i thought i was the only one who couldn't find a place to rent....
Since Denver is the best city on the planet, OF COURSE we had places that rented Turbo games. 3 different chains of stores, in fact, all over the metro area. It was so awesome. I rented Cratermaze and it created a save file on my CD interface unit. That save file stayed there for many, many years. I felt like I stole it!
Wow...looks like Denver was the lucky one, 3 different chains doing rentals is pretty damn impressive! Were they all Huey's or did they dare to rent the back then "HI-TECH" CD games as well!?!? Considering the price of the CD unit, i'm betting HuCards were the norm? 8-[
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I remember several of the video stores put stickers on all the NES cartridges. "Be Kind, Rewind"
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Mostly it was just HuCard rentals. I think Power Play Games did a few CD rentals, but since the system hadn't sold much back then they didn't feel it was worth it. I did borrow a few CD games from the used games case once with the manager's permission, games like "The Manhole".
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I had a Blockbuster that had about 8 or 9 TG16 games to rent. It looked so pathetic next to the rows of dozens of NES and Sega games. It was funny they actually rented the TG16 Console without the CD unit. They also rented sega and nes consoles...and a really strange looking plastic suitcase blue VCR for those people that didn't have a VCR yet.
I already owned a TG16 so I rented a few games. I think it was $2-$3 for 2 nights.
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Since Denver is the best city on the planet, OF COURSE we had places that rented Turbo games. 3 different chains of stores, in fact, all over the metro area. It was so awesome. I rented Cratermaze and it created a save file on my CD interface unit. That save file stayed there for many, many years. I felt like I stole it!
How come only like 3 people in Denver know how to drive?
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Only 3 people in any given city know how to drive.
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The video stores in the town I group up in in Jersey only had nintendo and genesis. They didn't know how to obey.
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The video stores in the town I group up in in Jersey only had nintendo and genesis. They didn't know how to obey.
:D
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had a little shop in town that rented 16 turbografx games. When they went out of business in 2000 I bought all 16!! :) they were around $5 each.
Of course they had beat up cases/ instructions and black marker with be kind rewinds stickers all over them ;)
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How do you rewind a HuCard? I haven't been doing this-- are my HuCards prone to failure as a result?
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How do you rewind a HuCard? I haven't been doing this-- are my HuCards prone to failure as a result?
Carefully.
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How do you rewind a HuCard? I haven't been doing this-- are my HuCards prone to failure as a result?
How do you rewind a HuCard? I haven't been doing this-- are my HuCards prone to failure as a result?
Carefully.
Carefully, save your game if neccessary, press SELECT + RUN, then turn off power switch on system = properly rewound HUCARD :D
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the local supermarket/drugstore/video store rented TG16 games! There was a toy store about 4 shops down from there that carried tg16 and so the rental store carried everything! i played most tg16 cards, and every tgcd game released up to about fall of 92 when the toy store shut down. they kept the games there till about 96 but never had a sell off so the owner must have kept them! after that there was no more tg16 available in the area, and had to go to a bigger mall way on the other side of the city.
side note i always HATED the stores that only sold "top 20 NES games" only!! it got a little better but still frustrating when it became nes/genesis only. now i just buy online so i can get what i want wooo
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I grew up in Southern Mississippi in a small town that did not have any chain video rental stores for many years. The only place I was ever able to find TG16 games was in a gas station that had a video rental section. Only had 5-6 games and they wanted 6 bucks a piece to rent for a week. Only ever convinced my mom to rent from them once and that was my first experience with Dungeon Explorer.
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There was a Hastings store that rented TurboGrafx games in my area. When they got out of the TG renting business I bought World Class Baseball and Psychosis from their old rental stock.
A more interesting place was a little "arcade" in the same shopping center. It was a small place with a small game sales business up front with a register and a place to sit, but the back 2/3 of the store was an "arcade" of sorts. All it was was about fifteen televisions with TurboGrafx-16's and Genesis' hooked to them. You would buy time, like an hour or something, and then go back and play whatever games they had running. I specifically remember playing Boxy Boy, China Warrior, Legendary Axe, and Ninja Spirit there.
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No TG-16 rentals in Northern NJ that I was aware of. I honestly don't think they would have had any demand for TG-16 games, since nearly everyone seemed to own a Nintendo/Sega console. I knew more people that played old Atari 2600 than TG-16.
Curry's Home Video (R.I.P.)
Of course, the best local video store did have a lot of SMS titles for rent. That was kool. They later expanded to all the big systems. No TG-16, of course.
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The first store in my home town of Prince Rupert to carry TurboGrafx-16 products was called East Wind and was owned by a wealthy family. They even brought in the Turbo-CD and Monster Lair and Fighting Street just about as early as they became available. After a trip to Japan, the family brought back 3 PC Engine CD games to sell in the store, Golden Ax, Side Arms Special and Super Darius. They opened up Golden Axe and the Turbo CD and ran them as a playable demo in the store. It blew away every kid who saw it. When I eventually got my Turbo-CD, I ordered it through Radio Shack since East Wind wouldn't budge much on it's asking price of something like $800. But I bought Golden Axe and Super Darius while waiting for the Turbo-CD to arrive and Side Arms Special and Monster Lair soon after.
East Wind was more of a small, but high end department store that specialized in TVs and stereos. The same family opened up a music and video store across town called Audio Vision. They let a creep who had somehow married into the family run it. His employees nicknamed him "Rip-Off Ray". The first game rentals in town were NES games at one of the only video rentals places at town: Mackenzie Furniture. Back then VHS and Beta was such a novelty and there was no such thing as a video rental store, so other types of stores just started renting them out of a corner of their regular business. After actual video rental stores began to open, Audio Vision started carrying and renting games. They brought in pretty much every SMS, NES and Genesis game that was released. They became the main store to buy and rent games from and even brought in a lot of import Famicom games. At one point, the RCMP raided them and confiscated a bunch of them. Although several were probably pirated games, I think that it had more to do with Nintendo than piracy, since some clearly non-bootleg carts were seized and several clearly bootleg carts remained. I remember that Robocop had cheat codes printed on a label on the backside of the cart. We played through Super Mario Bros 3 what seemed like years before The Wizard came out.
It wasn't until towards the end of the Turbo's lifespan and my time living there that Audio Vision kinda started renting most of the Turbo games that never sold at East Wind. I say kinda, because at first they weren't displayed and Ray would just ask me when I came in if I'd like to rent any of them. For a while before that, the games had just sat in the same box behind the counter to be sold to pretty much only me. But once they started renting them, Ray for some reason ordered some used Turbo games from one of his weird suppliers (ranging from Chips & Bits to the Sears Catalogue) and rented them as well. At that time I finally got to try Fighting Street and Sherlock Holmes.
During the peak of the TurboGrafx-16 lifespan, when there were far more Turbo games than Genesis, a major rental chain called Superior Video open up in town and rented, among other things, TG-16 games. They gave them to you in a plastic pocket sheet, a little larger than a 4 card binder page. The front side had a Turbochip sized pocket that the game rested in, which had a block-only Turbochip-sized TG-16 logo printed across it. The reverse size had a large pocket that carried the manual. What was cool about Superior Video, is that they not only carried the newest games at the time that East Wind/Audio Vision never had, but they also had some American games. At the very least, I'm sure that they had Parasol Stars, Cadash and Sinistron, because that was the only way I got to play them back in the day. I'm not sure if they had Tricky Kick, I might've just not bothered to try it. I'm sure they didn't have Side Arms, since I specifically requested my Mother to pick it up for me during a trip to Seattle. They also had a couple import Mega Drive games: Monster Lair and Chiki Chiki Boys and later 32X games (only place in town with Space Harrier and Afterburner II). It was at Superior Video that I rented most of the games that I never got to buy before moving away. Some memorable rentals (not yet mentioned) were Legendary Axe (this is what all the fuss was about?), Legendary Axe II (hated it), Champions Forever Boxing (loved the samples), Jacki Chan (didn't think much of it) and New Adventure Island (weird). The most import games I got to rent there were Aeroblasters and Ninja Spirit. Rarely had games had such an impact on me and I asked for and received them both as X-Mas and Birthday gifts at the end of the year.
Not long before I moved away, Superior Video's Turbo stock got picked up by a hole-in-the-wall rental store that opened up in the perpetually dead Pride of the North Mall. My friends and I always called it "Pree O He Nort", because as long as we remembered half the lights on the logo were burnt out and the mall had always been completely dead. Even though this forgettable (who knows what they were called?) rental store didn't last long, it was memorable to me, because I begged the employees there to sell me Bloody Wolf. I'd never found Bloody Wolf for sale anywhere, except for an overpriced PC Engine version at Metrotown mall in the Vancouver area during a sports trip (I had SFII', a converter and the Turbo BW by then anyway). Even though I explained that I was the sole Turbo market in town and that I was the only one actually renting their Turbo games and offered them the full price of a new TG-16 game, they still refused. So after they finally went under, it was Audio Vision that scooped up their old stock and that was what led to them starting to rent Turbo games. Needless to say, Rip-Off Ray was happy to sell me Bloody Wolf and I lived happily ever after.
What killed me all along, is that the next town down the highway (Prince Rupert is a port city), Terrace, which was our "Shelbyville", was Turbo-crazy and had so much stuff even early on. If I'd lived there, I could've rented and bought pretty much any Canadian release at any time. Of course it wouldn't have been worth it, because it was Terrace, but at least it was a major source of Turbo purchases for me. I saw Ys I & II there years before I was able to buy it and the image of the packaging in my hands has never faded. Terrace was where I first saw and briefly tried Raiden and where I got Dungeon Explorer II, John Madden Duo CD Football, Cotton & Magical Chase ($5 each), Duo Tap and Pads, TE TV Tuner and I believe my official Turbo to Duo cable adaptor.
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Random thoughts:
Black_Tiger, you reminded me that I was lucky enough to have a local mom-n-pop video store (Video Dynasty) that supported the TG-16 during the early years (they dropped the TG-16 eventually).
Anyway, they had a TG-CD demo (which we eventually purchased at discount) and Final Zone II was the first CD game ever got to see running on actual hardware. I still remember the opening cinema, with the bloody bodies floating in space. Very kool.
Of all the games I could have seen, it's funny that Final Zone II (which is crappy) is the one that was showcased. At least the opening cinemas were decent, and of course I liked the song that played on the title screen :)
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... where I got Dungeon Explorer II, John Madden Duo CD Football, Cotton & Magical Chase ($5 each)...
That almost brings tears to my eyes. 8)
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We hadn't even any turbo stuff officially. Nevertheless, the import scene was strong, so we all could put hands on our beloved system sooner or later :)
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I can't remember which places had TG-16 rentals when I was a kid, but Seattle was one of the "big" Turbo markets so they were around. I thought rentals were for pussies though, real men actually bought games. And since I was a real boy hoping to one day be a real man, I bought games. I'd go to the TG-16 section at EB, Toys 'r Us, Software Etc, etc (no pun intended) and look at the back of boxes until I found one that looked bad-ass enough to be worthy of a purchase. This is how I ended up picking up Dungeon Explorer (this was 1991), it was a total impulse buy, and one of the best impulse buys I ever made.
The only video game I ever rented, in my entire life, was Super Mario All-Stars on SNES.
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Allow me to necro this thread without even reading it and without really contributing. Buy Back Games in Colorado used to rent TG games, it was completely awesome! :D
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None whatsoever ... there was a flea market that would get stuff from time to time though ... matter of fact, found Psychosis there about a year ago for two dollars :-D
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There was a Hastings store that rented TurboGrafx games in my area. When they got out of the TG renting business I bought World Class Baseball and Psychosis from their old rental stock.
A more interesting place was a little "arcade" in the same shopping center. It was a small place with a small game sales business up front with a register and a place to sit, but the back 2/3 of the store was an "arcade" of sorts. All it was was about fifteen televisions with TurboGrafx-16's and Genesis' hooked to them. You would buy time, like an hour or something, and then go back and play whatever games they had running. I specifically remember playing Boxy Boy, China Warrior, Legendary Axe, and Ninja Spirit there.
Glad someone else heard of a Hastings. ^^ Used to work there in Kennewick Washington until some lame Gym bought the building and they closed shop. >< Interesting thing about Hastings, they were buying old school games (at least in my area) until about mid 2005 when they decided to only buy back current gen games. Unfortunately, I never got to see any Turbo games there, but they did have Jaguar and Dreamcast games up for rent.
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I was lucky enough to have a place a couple blocks from my house. I rented ones like Parasol Stars and Veigues a lot.
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I had a Blockbuster that had about 8 or 9 TG16 games to rent. It looked so pathetic next to the rows of dozens of NES and Sega games.
Must have been a regional thing, 'cuz the Blockbusters here did not carry turbob games. I would have noticed.
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I don't remember a single place near or far in NC where TG16 rentals were available. Even if there had been, they probably would have only been in the bigger cities like Greensboro or Charlotte.
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We did not have any rental places for PCE / TG16 however I was lucky enough to work in a computer store and then at a console importers (Console Concepts) here in the UK in the early 90's. As such I had access to pretty much every key system and game of the time :@) Guess where most of my wages went ;-) LOL.
There were some local stores later on that did rent games however these were generally for the SNES and Megadrive.
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Our Blockbusters never carried it, but a few mom & pop rental stores had 'em. I remember looking at them longingly while I was there to select a Genesis or NES game.
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One out of the way place had hucards. I rented Silent Debuggers. Still a game that I enjoy for short periods.
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I remember in Brooklyn seeing some very small video stores have TG-16 games for rent. Mostly were NES, SNES and Genesis games tho.
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Thought I would resurrect this thread and make a post.
I was thinking about this topic today as I came home from work after I drove past the where the local ‘Mom n’ Pop’ video rental store used to be in town. The thought popped in my head “I wonder if they ever rented out TurboGrafx-16 games?” back when they were open. I used to rent NES titles there all the time as a kid (and practically wore out their copies of Mega Man 3 and 4). I cannot recall ever seeing anything that would have resembled a TG-16 game (I didn’t even know the system existed at the time). They never really had a lot of 16-bit titles, I don’t remember seeing a lot of SNES or Genesis stuff there. They did NES titles on their shelves until around the time they closed in 1997 or 1998. I can remember renting games like Panic Restaurant, Little Samson, and Chip n’ Dale 2 and playing them over the weekend when my cousin already had a N64 and kept raving about 3d games. I would never imagine those NES games would command the values they do now.
It’s cool to read from forum members their stories from seeing stores that did carry Turbo stuff. It must have been neat to have rentals shops that carried that kind of variety!
My copy of Neutopia has a rental shop sticker on the manual and HuCard sleave from “Flagship Video” out of Oxford, PA. Though you’ll notice the item #s don’t match. It makes me wonder what other stuff they carried.
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As a kid, I had a "Ken's World of Video" and a mom/pop shop out in the suburbs of Chicago that rented TG-16 games. These were near my dad when I'd visit him on weekends, so I'd have the chance to rent something for the weekend and try to beat it before my time was up. :)
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I still have at least one TurboChip with "Superior Video" written on the back.
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I just read this thread and cried.
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My local mom and pop rented TG-16.
They rented systems, too. I wish I could go back in time and rent OBEY at least once instead of Genesis.
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We had a bunch of local mom & pop stores back in the heyday of video rentals, but only one of them (creatively named Video 1) ever carried Turbo stuff. I think I was one of the only people who rented the system and games more than once, because the owner actually contacted me when they decided to stop carrying it, to see if I wanted to buy any of it.
I ended up picking up the TG-16 system and all of the accessories they had, along with most of their games for about $70. He'd even kept the boxes and manuals separate, so that was a really good day for me. It's just too bad they didn't carry CD stuff too...
I still have that original system, even though I don't really use it anymore (region modded DUO-R for the win)... there are so many happy memories attached to it that I just can't bring myself to part with it. 8)
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TG-16 was nowhere to be seen in rental stores where I lived (Western, NY). I don't think many people knew or cared about it.
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There was a store called VideoMaxx in Madison, WI that was either renting Turbo or Duo games, and they went out of buisness when the LD got replaced by DVD's. I remember the owner in a rage as he was liquidating his inventory.
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I don't even remember seeing Laserdiscs in rental shops. Though I do remember some places having Beta tapes since we had a Beta player and recorder at home, but that was around 1988~89.
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My local place growing up was called Game Masters, and they did indeed have hucard rentals. I don't remember seeing cds other than Fighting Street. I kept hoping they would get a used system in at some point but they never did. Eventually they sold everything off, long before I got a system.
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I lived in Podunk, Arkansas; so the one time I saw a Turbografx was at a mall across the state when we were visiting friends of my parents. I had no idea it was worth a damn at the time because, although it was a demo unit, some wise guy had put Sherlock Holmes in... I have a vague memory of poking at it for a couple minutes and then walking away disinterested. I highly regret it now.
You'd think I would eventually happen upon one again, given that we'd later move to Hot Springs, where there was an extremely prolific collector / game store owner; but nope, I didn't rediscover the system until I moved to Japan for the 2nd time in 2009. I couldn't believe that I was still playing NES (and occasionally renting a SNES or Genesis) when I could have been playing games like Ys I&II. I'd kill to go back in time and be able to experience it when it was new.
I was the right age, just in the wrong geographic location.
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In NJ we had every system available for rental. I myself rented the VB when it came out. It was at Blockbuster.
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I still have at least one TurboChip with "Superior Video" written on the back.
We had a Superior Video way up in Northern Canada where I grew up and they carried TG-16 games. I never really saw any rented out, but they stocked them close to launch and had most of the early library. Up to that point they only carried NES games and must have really bought in big with NEC. After a couple years they liquidated all their games and I picked up the majority of them for $5 a pop. It was my gateway into the system, since I never had a TG back when they were renting the games. I ended up getting World Court Tennis, Deep Blue, Boxy Boy, Fantasy Zone, Ordyne, Davis Cup Tennis and Parasol Stars all from them. Here's a picture of the Superior Video sticker:
(http://images.tapatalk-cdn.com/15/10/18/fd5b2b77f5a2dcbe0ce18b5162ca2cd4.jpg)
Is yours similar?
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Never had any rental outlets around me that had Turbo games. Shame because it would have allowed me to try way more games that way.
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Turbo didn't even exist in my country lol.
Would have been nice to see those around...
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I didn't have my own TG-16 yet back than but I remember when I was a kid there was a couple of places in my town that had TG16 games for rental. Alligator Video and Syd's Video both on lancaster. I think the local Albertson's Grocery store in my area may have had some too for a short while at least. I vaguely remember looking at the back of the box for Bonk's Revenge inside an Albertson's. Could have been another grocery store but Im pretty sure it was Albertsons.
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I was fortunate enough to have a rental shop that sold all their TG-16 stuff for dirt cheap when they went out of business. I bought 2 TG16s for $10 each and 8 or 9 games for $5 each. Bloody Wolf, R-Type, Splatterhouse, Legendary Axe, Tiger Road, Vigilante, Double Dungeons, Alien Crush, maybe one or two more I can remember if I got then or later.
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Had a place downtown that rented turbo and NeoGeo, was pretty awesome...
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I believe Blockbuster over in Yakima WA had Turbo games for rent, but at the time I got my Duo in 94 those were long gone.
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Huh. I don't recall any store ever carrying NEC stuff around the NC/SC area. I remember one store having Sega Master system stuff when most others only had NES but that was it.
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There was a Phar-Mor in my town that rented TG-16 games.
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There was only one store that has TG-16 games and it was a 20 minutes drive. So if my parents were to go to Canton area Meijer, it was a rare opportunity to go for video rental. until they screwed me a year later claiming I broke a game for Genesis. They said it didn't work when I returned and they claimed I somehow cracked the board so I was out some $50. When I got home and did some cleaning, it worked fine. The crack was only on the ground plane. I guess the crack formed from too many kids slamming the cart in and I guess the store (which went out of business a few months later) were idiot for not considering dirty connector.
There was only 1 other store of interest, in north part of Flint off Corunna rd there was an used game seller but they closed a few years later. There wasn't any local source of TG-16 (rental or used sale) until Disc Replay came in west side near Toys R Us and Buffalo Wild Wings.
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I don't remember seeing any Turbo rentals growing up.
Come to think of it, I was the only kid who had one growing up.
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Turbo Rentals? Never even saw them. :(
I was happy to have ONE friend who had a Turbo Express. That was the entirety of my childhood turbo experience.
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I was happy to have ONE friend who had a Turbo Express. That was the entirety of my childhood turbo experience.
I owned a Turbo Express before some *person* stole it when I was a teenager.
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None of my friends had a turbo growing up. One of my friends did rent one and bloody wolf from a movie rental store. He told me how awesome bloody wolf was and I tried to rent it but none of the stores near us rented turbo games. Sucked so bad haha.
Sent from my SCH-I535 using Tapatalk
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There were no turbo rental stores that I knew of in the early 90s in the Dallas area. Sucked because no one I knew had a turbo so I was limited in what I could play. We did have an awesome import store that had a lot of the PC Engine CD games but they were so expensive at the time. I only ever got Dracula X for $99 lol.
Around the time the super cd and Lord of Thunder came out I had some friends that got a turbo duo and finally got to trade around and play more stuff.
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I was happy to have ONE friend who had a Turbo Express. That was the entirety of my childhood turbo experience.
I owned a Turbo Express before some *person* stole it when I was a teenager.
Same here. So sad.
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I didn't have TG16 rentals but I had my best friend that had one. Also he kind of was spoiled for a time and had tons of toys and video games. I remember going to his house all the time and watching Police Academy videos pausing to play TG16 games and playing Thundercats.
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Playing Thundercats? You mean on VCR or did I miss Thundercats game on TG16?
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I bet he meant just playing with the action figures, those were pretty popular for Thundercats as I recall. There was a Commodore 64 game, I think.
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I had a Thundercats sticker book.
The 80s really was the best decade.
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Ditto.
Voltron, Robotech (although I prefer original Macross nowday), G1 Transformers, many more shows, and so many toys that bought the government's wrath claiming the TV series were really 30 minutes commercial for toys. And the classic LEGO Space sets (the original blue and gray, like Benny's Spaceship)
Oh yeah movies like Dark Crystal, Labyrinth, 2 of the Star Wars, Wrath of Khan, Last Starfighter, Neverending Story (which sadly has ended after about 110 minutes) and too many others.
There's also the obilgatory Saturday morning cartoons, the only time in a week that was worth getting up before noon. :D (cable, satellite, and a number of 24-hours cartoon channels killed Saturday morning concept)
VCR was godsend when my family got it because it meant I can catch shows that aired before I could get off school bus.
My little brother and I RP'd Thundercats quite often.
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Answer: No.
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I lived in a small town in Atlantic Canada with a population of 1000 or so. There were two major convenience stores that rented games and movies. One of them had SNES/Genesis/TG16 games until about '98 or '99. The owner rented systems as well. A lifeline for a boy in a one horse town because I could buy junk food, magazines, comics, rent games and movies all in one place. The RadioShack half an hour away had the TG16 kiosk until '95 or '96.
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I lived in a small town in Atlantic Canada with a population of 1000 or so. There were two major convenience stores that rented games and movies. One of them had SNES/Genesis/TG16 games until about '98 or '99. The owner rented systems as well. A lifeline for a boy in a one horse town because I could buy junk food, magazines, comics, rent games and movies all in one place. The RadioShack half an hour away had the TG16 kiosk until '95 or '96.
Rad first post, welcome! :)
I wish I could've rented more TG games, we had NES and Genesis, then SNES, but never TG 16 :(
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Back in 1991, for about a 7 month period I lived relatively close to Ventura Blvd in the Woodland Hills area of Los Angeles.
I used to take the Bus to GamesExpress on Ventura Blvd and rent a PC Engine converter and PC Engine games. They had a deal where you could rent a converter and 3 games for 3 days for $15 or something like that. Of course, they had USA TG-16 games as well. I could rent those for a good deal as well, but I was mostly getting the PC Engine games just cause they seemed so exotic to me at the time.
Die Hard Game Club, the original store, was also located on Ventura Blvd, in the completely opposite direction as Games Express. I went to the Die Hard Game Club store one time, but unfortunately it was closed when I got there.. Never did end up going back during my 7 month stay.
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I lived in a small town in Atlantic Canada with a population of 1000 or so. There were two major convenience stores that rented games and movies. One of them had SNES/Genesis/TG16 games until about '98 or '99. The owner rented systems as well. A lifeline for a boy in a one horse town because I could buy junk food, magazines, comics, rent games and movies all in one place. The RadioShack half an hour away had the TG16 kiosk until '95 or '96.
Rad first post, welcome! :)
I wish I could've rented more TG games, we had NES and Genesis, then SNES, but never TG 16 :(
Agreed, that's an intriguing first post. :)
I know I would probably go crazy in a small, rural (?) area...but I love the thought of folks renting out TG-16 stuff in an "isolated" place.
It seems entirely appropriate, to be honest.
:)
Back in 1991, for about a 7 month period I lived relatively close to Ventura Blvd in the Woodland Hills area of Los Angeles.
I used to take the Bus to GamesExpress on Ventura Blvd and rent a PC Engine converter and PC Engine games. They had a deal where you could rent a converter and 3 games for 3 days for $15 or something like that. Of course, they had USA TG-16 games as well. I could rent those for a good deal as well, but I was mostly getting the PC Engine games just cause they seemed so exotic to me at the time.
Die Hard Game Club, the original store, was also located on Ventura Blvd, in the completely opposite direction as Games Express. I went to the Die Hard Game Club store one time, but unfortunately it was closed when I got there.. Never did end up going back during my 7 month stay.
Ha! I vaguely remember that area but never connected it to video game stores.
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I grew up in the Yukon Territory and there were two places that rented out TG games, a local video store and good ol' Radio Shack. Many a Friday afternoon spent in that radio shack choosing a game for the weekend or ordering something to buy. I still remember Bonk's Revenge coming in... I was so stoked that I'd brought my Express down so I didn't have to wait to bring it home to play it. I also remember the video store blowing out all there games in 96 or so, and buying Gunboat and Impossimole for $5. Whoops.
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Good stuff. I grew up in a typical small town, but we had 3-4 video stores close by that all carried a good selection of games to rent.
However, I never remember seeing Turbo games. When Blockbuster finally opened a store the Turbografx was dying.
One poster mentioned a sell off of games for cheap when the store closed. Gosh how I wished I could have taken advantage of those in my area.
I always wonder where Bubble Bath Babes, Hot Slots, Peek a Boo Poker ended up. All 3 were available to rent and I remember knowing they were "adult" themed games but not having a clue what each game really was. The video store had just a white box with the title of each game and tags to pull off to take to the counter.
The teenager in me kept trying to figure out how I could rent these to see some animated tits.
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Good stuff. I grew up in a typical small town, but we had 3-4 video stores close by that all carried a good selection of games to rent.
However, I never remember seeing Turbo games. When Blockbuster finally opened a store the Turbografx was dying.
One poster mentioned a sell off of games for cheap when the store closed. Gosh how I wished I could have taken advantage of those in my area.
I always wonder where Bubble Bath Babes, Hot Slots, Peek a Boo Poker ended up. All 3 were available to rent and I remember knowing they were "adult" themed games but not having a clue what each game really was. The video store had just a white box with the title of each game and tags to pull off to take to the counter.
The teenager in me kept trying to figure out how I could rent these to see some animated tits.
Had a local Video Master that had those adult NES games for rent. I only remember because as soon as I picked one up, my big brother would snatch it out of my hand and stare at it... Until whatever parental figure we were with found out and scolded us. lol Same thing with adult anime on VHS. haha
(http://i.imgur.com/2fisubR.jpg)
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To the original question, the local Blockbuster Video rented them in my little Georgia town for a number of years. It fed my TG love until the mid 90's.
On a different note, when the TG was beginning to head south, the local K&B toys placed a huge closeout bin outside its storefront in the mall. My best friend and I would go through the bin and pick out whatever games were cool, mainly the few TG games that were left. I had a copy of Might and Magic 3 and Beyond Shadowgate for many years that I paid about $20 a piece for. That bin also contained a boat load of SNES games that were poor sellers and at ridiculous prices. We bought a few and took them across the street to K-mart to return. Since K-mart at the time, like Wal-Mart, didn't require a receipt, we would buy games for $5-10 bucks and get back $30-50 because K-mart was still over pricing their stuff. We must have done this for an entire year until the K&B closed. Another game in that lot I picked? Earthbound. Wish I still had them all...
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Back in 1991, for about a 7 month period I lived relatively close to Ventura Blvd in the Woodland Hills area of Los Angeles.
I used to take the Bus to GamesExpress on Ventura Blvd and rent a PC Engine converter and PC Engine games. They had a deal where you could rent a converter and 3 games for 3 days for $15 or something like that. Of course, they had USA TG-16 games as well. I could rent those for a good deal as well, but I was mostly getting the PC Engine games just cause they seemed so exotic to me at the time.
Die Hard Game Club, the original store, was also located on Ventura Blvd, in the completely opposite direction as Games Express. I went to the Die Hard Game Club store one time, but unfortunately it was closed when I got there.. Never did end up going back during my 7 month stay.
Twice a year, my family & I would go to religious conventions at the old dome building(previously known as the Valley Music Center owned by Bob Hope) at 20600 Ventura Boulevard in Woodland Hills.
http://sanfernandovalleyblog.blogspot.com/2011/04/back-to-future-series-2-valley-music.html
So a few times, at the end of the day after the convention, I got my parents to take me there. I bought Browning there, of all things, as well as the PCE version of Terraforming. I recall seeing the Ys Anime on Jp VHS up on the shelves, & just, tons & tons of PCE games.