Things We Saw At The Computerspielemuseum

A couple of weeks ago (it’s been that long?!) K, B and I visited a museum in Berlin dedicated to Computer Games. It was small, but it was very good, and perhaps even the best of the few I’ve visited over the years. Here’s a random selection of things we saw in the museum…

In the earliest part of the museum they had the landmarks of pre-computer gaming, such as (very) 1st edition Dungeons and Dragons:

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And the first gamebook every written, Sugarcane Island (written 1969, published 1976):

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They had holy grails of the Golden Age:

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Crazy game art from the 1980s:

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A small but good condition arcade:

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A well-done series of rooms decorated to resemble certain ages of gaming. Here’s Bernard in the 1980’s attic room (presumably a typical German household attic from that era):

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They also had Germany’s own homegrown console from the early 1980s. Only about 40 games were ever released:

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You could design your own sprites:

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You could post with Lara Croft(s):

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Or you could look ridiculous playing Atari Ms Pac-Man using a titanic joystick:

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And you could even risk your life playing the Painstation:

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This is a massive two-player Pong game where the players are penalized for mistake in the form of heat, electric shocks or whips to the hands (see details here). We watched two people play it and as the game progressed they certainly seemed to be feeling the pain. I would have played it, but my compatriots were hesitant 🙂

As I said, a small museum but a goodie. If it wasn’t hot and we weren’t already overcome by ruination, I would have liked to have spent hours there reading all the information. Recommended if you’re in Berlin.

A Mystery Finally Solved!

I like Mark Gatiss. While there’s no doubt he’s a bit of a genre gadfly, he’s certainly literature, accomplished, and seems to share a lot of my interests. A lifelong fan of horror and science fiction, he’s forged a career in writing and acting that includes such shows as (new) Doctor Who and Sherlock. I’ve liked most of his work, read a couple of his books, and watched (or listened to) quite a few of his documentaries. In short, this is a guy worth paying attention to. Plus, Jon Pertwee is His Doctor too.

Yesterday I watched his three-episode History of Horror series that he made for BBC some years back. It’s all on YouTube, but if you only watch one episode I recommend the second. As I watched it yesterday I felt a great sense of relief wash over me as a lifelong mystery was solved. 

 
Let’s cut back about 30-something years. It was a dark night, past our bedtime, and mum and dad had started watching a horror movie. Being a bit of a (nascent) buff, I wanted to watch as well, and sat down with them to enjoy it. I recall shots of fields and forests, and someone plowing a field, and then a terrifying and eerie shot of a skull with a living eye in it. This very shot, to be specific: 

 
It terrified me, and I’m sure you can see why. Mum quickly changed the channel and packed us off to bed, but I didn’t forget the image quickly. In fact I never forgot it, and have wondered for my entire life what the film was and why the farmer found this in his field and what happened next! I’d made attempts over the years to deduce the identity of the film, and have watched countless british horror films of the 1960s and 70s always wondering when – if! – I’d find the one with this unforgettable image.

Until yesterday the mystery was unsolved. But thanks to Gatiss’ documentary, I now know the identity of the film: 

 
The film is called Satan’s Skin or The Blood On Satan’s Claw and was made in England in 1970. It seems like an entirely disturbing and remarkable horror film about a rural village influenced to depravity and evil by The Devil. I think it’s quite right that my mum didn’t let me watch it 30+ years ago!

Of course now I know the identity of the film the next step is to actually watch it. This may prove difficult due to the DVD being out of print and the Blu-Ray being UK region only (and very expensive). It’s not available on Amazon prime either. But I’m a patient sort, and it’s now added to my list of other films that I intend to one day sit down and enjoy. I wonder if I’ll find it as creepy now as I did when I was a child?

Last Day

After a lovely breakfast, we left Wipperfeld mid-morning for the train to Frankfurt (via Köln): 

 
It was speedy and very comfortable, and it only took a little over an hour to arrive. It was now early afternoon and since our return flight is very early there wasn’t much to do aside from preparing for our return. 

 
We went into town for a bit of shopping but we were all very tired and it was an early night. 

 
Tomorrow we’ll say goodbye to Germany and return home to the U.S.

We’ve seen a great deal of Germany these past two weeks, and it’s always been exciting or historic or funny or beautiful. Best of all was seeing dads homeland and meeting the family I’ve known about forever for the first time! This is a trip that will stay with me for the rest of my life 🙂