Retro Gamer Hoodies
Description: Contra is a run and gun video game developed as a coin-op arcade game in 1986 and released in 1987. The game was a commercial success worldwide, becoming one of the top four highest-grossing arcade games of 1987. Home ports were released in 1988 for computers and consoles, which were also a critical and commercial success. Contra is set in the distant future of the year 2633 A.D., when the evil Red Falcon Organization have set a base on the fictional Galuga Archipelago near New Zealand in a plot to wipe out humanity. Two commandos, Bill Rizer and Lance Bean of the Earth Marine Corp's Contra unit, are sent to the island to destroy the enemy forces and uncover the true nature of the alien entity controlling them.
Description: Design inspired by the best arcade videogames of 80s and 90s . Go back to your childhood with the best gaming era. Space invaders, tetris Sonic and many others.
Retro Gaming - Sega genesis 16 bit - Cartridge gamer Hoodie
by Typhoonic
$34 $42
Description: ColecoVision is a second-generation home video-game console developed by Coleco that launched in August 1982. Launching with an initial catalog of twelve games on ROM cartridge, the console offered a closer experience to more powerful arcade games than competitors. Approximately 136 games were published between 1982 and 1984. Coleco released a series of hardware add-ons and special controllers to expand the capabilities of the console. "Expansion Module #1" allowed the system to play competitor games, and a later module that converted ColecoVision into the Adam home computer. Ironically, the ColecoVision was discontinued in 1985 after the costly failure of the Adam, resulting in Coleco withdrawing from the video game market altogether.
Description: <b><i>"Zork</i></b>: Your greatest challenge lies ahead - and downwards" Inspired by the 1977 text adventure. This illustration contains every location from the game. Check out the detail in this <a href="http://laurencejenkins.com/post/46334579776/zork-your-greatest-challenge-lies-ahead-and">higher res version</a>.
Description: MoonPatrol is a Japanese arcade video game developed and released by Irem in 1982 and licensed to Williams for distribution in North America. The player controls a moon buggy which can jump over and shoot obstacles on a horizontally scrolling landscape as well as shoot aerial attackers. Designed by Takashi Nishiyama, MoonPatrol is often credited with the introduction of full parallax scrolling in side-scroller games. MoonPatrol was among the five top-grossing arcade games on North America’s monthly RePlay charts by January 1983 and received a Certificate of Merit in the category of “1984 Best Science Fiction/ Fantasy Video Game” at the 5th annual Arkie Awards.
Description: Streets of Rage is a beat 'em up video game developed and published for the 16-bit Genesis console in 1991. The trilogy which includes parts one, two, and three, were among the most popular titles of the '90s. Players control one of three former police officers turned vigilantes who battle a crime syndicate. The original release establishes many conventions of the Streets of Rage series, such as two-player cooperative play and an acclaimed techno soundtrack. Streets of Rage maintains a following to this day, with many retro gamers either playing the real deal on vintage consoles (both 8 and 16-bit versions) or playing via unauthorized online ports.
Description: On-Line Systems was renamed Sierra On-Line in 1982, and they moved to Oakhurst, California. The "Sierra" name was taken from the Sierra Nevada mountain range that Oakhurst was near, and its new logo incorporated the imagery of a mountain reflecting that. By early 1984, InfoWorld estimated that Sierra was the world's 12th-largest microcomputer-software company, with $12.5 million in 1983 sales. Sierra became a public company in 1989, trading on the NASDAQ under the stock ticker "SIER". Additional investment from public funding allowed the company to engage in further acquisitions over the next several years. In 1990, Sierra released King's Quest V, the first Sierra On-Line game ever to have more than 500,000 copies sold.
Description: Tempest is an arcade game released in 1981 that is notable for being the first video game with a selectable difficulty. The game is a Tube Shooter, where the environment is fixed, but is viewed from a 3D perspective. The object is to survive while shooting aliens as they attack from the player controlled spaceship along the near edge of the playfield. The game has 16 unique screens, some of which are tubes that allow the player to fly 360° while others are left to right open fields. When all 16 screens have been played, the sequence repeats with different colors and increased difficulty. Each sequence of levels adds faster and more deadly enemies. The numbered levels stop incrementing after level 99 and become random.
Description: Cool retro rainbow emblem with video game console controller silhouette makes a great Christmas or birthday gift for boys, girls, men and women gamers alike. Perfect for the gaming enthusiasts who eat sleep and play video games. Cool vintage vibe design for video game lovers, geeks, nerds and gamer girls while playing on pc, laptop computer or console.
Retro Rainbow Video Game Console Controller for Gamer Hoodie
by cottoncanvas
$34 $42
Description: Joust is an action game developed by Williams that released in arcades in 1982, and began porting to consoles and PC's the following year. While not the first two-player cooperative video game, Joust's success and polished implementation popularized the concept. Player 1 rides an ostrich, player 2 a stork. Repeatedly pressing the flap button gains altitude, while a two-directional joystick controls direction. In a collision with enemy knights riding buzzards—or the other player—the higher rider dismounts the other. The game was well-received by players and critics, and the mechanics influenced other games. Joust was ported to numerous home systems and was followed by a more complex and less popular arcade sequel in 1986.
Description: Funny slogan design for geeks, nerds, gamers and software developers everywhere. I went outside once but the graphics weren't that good. With a silhouette of a mountain range and the text in an tech style font.
I went outside once but the graphics weren't that good Hoodie
by pickledpossums
$34 $42
Description: Gauntlet is a fantasy-themed hack-and-slash arcade game developed and released in 1985 as one of the first multiplayer dungeon crawl games. The core design of Gauntlet comes from 1983 8-bit dungeon crawler, Dandy, and also bears striking resemblance to the action-adventure maze game Time Bandit. The arcade version of Gauntlet was released in November 1985 and was initially available only as a dedicated four-player cabinet and a two-player cabinet variant in June 1986, aimed at operators who didn’t have sufficient space for the four-player version. The game is set within a series of top-down, third-person, orthographic mazes where the object is to find and touch the designated exit in every level.
Description: Captain N: The Game Master is a series that aired on television from 1989 to 1991 as part of the Saturday morning cartoon lineup. The show incorporated elements from many of the most popular video games of the time, and also spawned a comic book version, though it was actually different from the show in many ways. At the outset of the first episode the hero of the series, Kevin Keene, a teenager from Los Angeles, California, and his dog Duke are sucked into a vortex called the Ultimate Warp Zone that formed in his television, taking them to another universe known as Videoland. To fulfill an ancient prophecy, Kevin is destined to become the hero "Captain N: The Game Master" and save Videoland from evil forces.
Description: Devil's Crush is a pinball video game developed by Compile for the TurboGrafx-16 and released in 1990. The second installment in the Crush Pinball series after Alien Crush, the game has an eerie occult theme with skulls, skeletons, and demons. It was later followed by Jaki Crush and Alien Crush Returns. The game was ported to the Mega Drive/Genesis as Dragon's Fury (Devil Crash MD in Japan) by Technosoft. Both North American versions, TurboGrafx-16 and Genesis, are censored—all hexagrams have been changed to generic stars, and coffins with crucifixes on them in one bonus stage have been changed to vases. The playfield of Devil's Crush consists of a free scrolling pinball table three screens high with three sets of flippers.
Description: A flavorful shirt for adventurers of any class, sold to you here by the image's original creator. (design seen and given a thumbs up by the great and charitable Guy Fieri himself)
Dungeons & Diners & Dragons & Drive-ins & Dives Hoodie
by OnionPowder
$34 $42