Now he knows: A Canadian quarter can clog a vintage pinball machine. Joe Furth had been basking in the glow of his growing collection of classic arcade games for only a few days at his Eclipse Records store in St. Paul when the rogue coin "mucked up" the game.
He never found the coin-dropping culprit, but that problem aside, the vintage arcade long on Furth's mind is finally beginning to glitter in all its pixelated glory in a cavelike room inside the store on W. University Avenue. Furth has big plans -- 30 vintage games -- and the permit from St. Paul that he'll need, but he's a long way from his all-retro goal.
"There's something about dropping a quarter in instead of hitting the reset button. ... There's something about, if you're waiting to play the game, lining up the quarters on top," said Furth, who remembers seeing video games everywhere, including at the grocery store, when young. "It's this nostalgia thing you can't put a price on."
Nostalgia will make Tim Daly's job as general manager of Awe Vending and Amusements more difficult. The St. Paul company delivers games to Eclipse. Awe has some game cabinets and "boards" (the guts of the game) in its warehouse but also searches and buys parts before repairing, assembling and delivering the games.
"He wants retro," Daly said. "It's going to be a challenge, because there aren't really any new manufacturers making what he wants."
Only a few clients seek vintage games, Daly added.
Furth wants the most concentrated collection of vintage games in the Twin Cities.
"How often are you going to find a stand-up 'Millipede' game?" Furth asked, referring to the old Atari gem that he considers the best among the first 10 games installed in the past month. "It's not something you're going to find every day."