Today, I am going to blather on about the NES! How original.
Ah, that electronic fun machine. How I loved it. My first experience with the NES was when I was about five or six. The game? Mario Bros., what else? I couldn’t play worth a damn at the time, but I was fascinated by it.
Later on, my parents made friends with this couple that had two kids, Michael and Ashley, and we would go to their house out in the country a lot. They had an NES, and the kids and I would play video games together (we also had lots of adventures outside). That was the place where I got my Nintendo fix until I received an NES Power Pack for my 7th birthday in 1990.
I didn’t have a lot of friends in the second grade (or any other grade, for that matter), and I don’t think I helped that situation any by being a little girl who liked video games. When I’d try to join my classmates’ heated discussions about whether or not Sega was better than Nintendo, all the boys would usually just look at me funny and go on talking amongst themselves. (By the way, I would trash talk Sega at every opportunity even though I never touched one until sometime in 1999 or so.)
Also, when playing Mario Bros. with Michael or any other kid, we could never agree who got to be player 1 or player 2, so eventually video games became a pretty solitary activity for me.
Well, now that I’ve bored everybody to death, I’ll move on to actually talking about some NES games.
There’s our little collection. And yes, we have a top-loading NES– a real one made by Nintendo. It’s great.
I didn’t own that many games when I was a kid; didn’t really need to because renting games was cheap and easy. Almost every week, we’d go to the mom-and-pop video store and I’d go look lovingly at the long wall of NES games.
One of the games I rented frequently was Mickey Mousecapade, which I recently bought a copy of. I rented it so much because hey, it was a Disney game, and because no matter how hard I tried, I could not get past the second level! Also, Minnie is retarded and always gets in the way, and that makes the game a lot more challenging. Eventually I got sick of it and started playing other games instead, but I always secretly liked it even when I was mad at it.
The first game I ever actually beat was the tie-in game for Disney’s The Little Mermaid. I was obsessed with that movie at the time, which is probably how I was able to beat the game– sheer obsession and determination. It certainly wasn’t because I was good at video games. Anyway, I’ll never forget how I felt when I finally made it all the way to Ursula and defeated her. I don’t think I ever beat another NES game, actually.

9 responses to “Nostalgiathon 2009 #2: I Was a Nintendo Kid”
aykon
July 14th, 2009 at 21:38
How dare you talk about the NES and not talk about the totally crazy Chinese knock off games like “Bible Adventures”. It was a lot of fun to play those despite their horrific grammar.
aykon
July 14th, 2009 at 21:40
Wait, did I say “Chinese” shows where my leanings are!
Based on what I know, Bible Adventures was actually made in America but it used pirated technology…almost seems hypocritical.
Annette
July 16th, 2009 at 11:24
I think I might have played one of those one time…I remember hating it. XD
Amy
December 26th, 2009 at 19:54
Okay, this is weird, but my ex-boyfriend’s older brother is the one that devised the way to bypass Nintendo’s lockout chip in order to make non Nintendo licensed cartridges work (look up Color Dreams). Bible Adventures and the like were all his fault!
Metal Misfit
July 15th, 2009 at 09:52
Mickey Mousecapade was pretty cool. Little Mermaid was one of the first NES games I remember beating as well. I actually liked that game…
I didn’t have a big collection either. Maybe 15 or so games. But I played most of them on a consistent basis and I was always learnin’ for the weekend so I can go pick up one or two games from the video store. I was rarely ever lucky enough to get a NES game from my parents “just because”. I always had to wait until my birthday and Christmas… My birthday is in November. So it was a long wait until I actually owned a new game.
Annette
July 16th, 2009 at 11:24
I liked that Little Mermaid game too. I actually thought it was pretty creative for a “movie” game. Usually those movie tie-in games are total shovelware, but there were a few good ones back in the day. The Aladdin game was pretty fun.
Cat the Vampire Slayer
July 16th, 2009 at 00:39
I’m so glad I’m not the only one that loved Mickey Mouscapades!
My parents were hardcore gamers, so I never really got to play the games until they were done with them. Because of this I know all the secrets to Zelda and Mario without actually realizing it…
Annette
July 16th, 2009 at 11:22
Your parents were gamers, huh? I imagine that would be kind of cool and kind of lame at the same time.
My mom never touched a video game, but my dad liked to play them sometimes. His favorite was Side Pocket.
The Pizza
July 16th, 2009 at 21:47
“Also, Minnie is retarded and always gets in the way, and that makes the game a lot more challenging. Eventually I got sick of it and started playing other games instead, but I always secretly liked it even when I was mad at it.”
Reading that sentence as like looking in a mirror. Minnie is retarded. I secretly like it though I am mad at it.