Category: Nostalgia
Watch Classic Episodes of The Twilight Zone Online
From Retroist:
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CBS has made available a great collection of episodes from the Twilight Zone for you to watch online. The episodes have commercials, but they are uncut and are really good quality. Its a great way to pass the time in a WiFi hotspot or just to entertain you during a sit at your desk lunch at work. So navigate over to The Twilight Zone on CBS, and revel in the splendor of this B&W classic.
MONDAY MEDIA: Street Fighter IV Thoughts

There are regularly video games that I look forward to for many months, sometimes years, and ultimately disappoint me. The hype rarely lives up to the result. However, once in a while, a game truly lives up to everything I hoped it would and today, that game is…
Street Fighter IV
I have been playing Street Fighter II regularly since I was in elementary school. The fun characters combined with simple fighting style have made it withstand the test of time. Many sequels and spin-offs followed, including Champion Edition, Turbo, Alpha, Marvel vs. Capcom, Street Fighter III and more. None were ever quite as good as Street Fighter II, which essentially defined what a great fighting game should be like.
When I first heard that Street Fighter IV was in development, I was concerned that it would be ruined by complication that switching from 2D to 3D has brought to so many fighting games. Side stepping, flying between levels… it’s all unnecessary. Just give me the classic left and right movement with the ability to jump and I’m happy.
Now that Street Fighter IV has been released, all my worries are gone. I played it for over 8 hours the day it came out and loved every minute of it. The game feels just like Street Fighter II, but with an amazing art style, some useful but simple additions in the way of power-up meters, and a fun array of new characters. All of the classic elements of Street Fighter II remain but with the addition of surround sound and high-definition graphics. The classic characters look better than they ever have and it feels like reuniting with old friends.
While I haven’t unlocked all of the new characters yet, most of the ones I’ve seen have been great new additions to the world of Street Fighter. I don’t want to include any potential spoilers here, so I won’t comment on any unlockables. C. Viper, Abel, and a few of the unlockable characters fit in wonderfully, as if they’d been with the group from the beginning. El Fuerte doesn’t quite work as well but is very amusing and fun to watch. So far, the only characters I dislike are Rufus (he fights cheap and his character design is kinda lame) and Seth, who really doesn’t seem to mesh with Street Fighter at all.
One bit that annoyed when I first played was that Chun Li spoke in English. More specifically, after winning a match, she exclaimed “I did it!” instead of her classic excited utterance of “Yatta!” That just didn’t feel right. Fortunately, it’s possible to unlock a mode where you can have certain characters speak Japanese instead of English, which enables Chun Li to return to giggling and saying, “Yatta!” Whew.
My only other gripe is having to hear the “Indestructible” song over and over, in the menus and even sometimes during fights. It’s not a great song and it just endlessly loops.
The biggest advice I can offer for those who are finding themselves having a hard time on the higher difficulties (Medium and up) is to run through the Challenge Trials for each character. It’s a great way to learn the special moves, unique basic punches and kicks, and even a few combos. Trying to complete the trials can be very frustrating, so if you encounter a combo that you simply can’t land, just give up and move on to the next character. Learning the basics is what’s most important and you can grow from there.
Overall, I look forward to Street Fighter IV eating many more hours of my life in the coming weeks/months/years and can’t imagine the world of Street Fighter getting any better than this.
If you are a Street Fighter fan and haven’t picked this game up yet, buy it NOW. You won’t regret it.
TweetFRIDAY FLASHBACK: QBasic Gorillas, Duck Hunt, and Other Classic Games Remade in Flash

Yes, yet another Friday Flashback posted after Friday. I’ll get back on schedule soon. But at least I don’t forget to post completely and this week I’d like to head back to the ’80s for some retro gaming in the form of…
QBasic Gorillas, Duck Hunt, and Other Classic Games Remade in Flash
My first experience with programming was on my old Intel 486 33mhz PS/2 machine, which came pre-loaded with MS-DOS, complete with a copy of QBasic. Since, at the time, I really didn’t know what I was doing with programming, I loaded up the Gorillas.bas file that came with the installation and immediately had access to the first game I’d ever been able to change around by messing with the code.
Now, many years later, I’m happy that I can return to the world of QBasic Gorillas in Flash form:
This and many other classic games (some PC, some Nintendo, some other systems) are all available to play for free in Flash form at online-games-zone.com.
Another great example is a remake of the Nintendo classic, Duck Hunt:
Have fun wasting time! :)
TweetReal Sugar-based “Pepsi Throwback” Poised to Hit US Shelves
From Retroist:
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Like any serious soda person, I prefer my pop to be sweetened with Sugar Cane rather than Corn Syrup. I do not have a health reason for this, I just think Sugar Cane based sodas taste better/crisper. Now I have always been more of a Coke drinker, but since Coke has made it very difficult for me to procure the sugar based Mexi-Coke I have started searching for alternatives. That search may have ended with the upcoming release of Pepsi Throwback.
Hot on the foreign release success of other Sugar Cane based projects, the geniuses at PepsiCo have finally decided the give the nation what it has been clamoring for, Real Pepsi (with a different name). I plan on supporting this project unconditionally in the hopes that it will spur Pepsi to make cane sugar a permanent part of their lineup or *gasp* bring it back into production on its flagship brand.
Coke fans should remember that if Pepsi Throwback is a success we will see some copying by the Atlanta bottler. Look for Pepsi Throwback and Mountain Dew Throwback on US shelves this April. Get in line behind me.
FRIDAY FLASHBACK: GI Joe – Then and Now

After seeing the Super Bowl ad a few weeks ago, I thought it’d be fun to post some clips of…
GI Joe -- Then and Now
A teaser/trailer for the upcoming live-action film GI Joe: Rise of the Cobra was premiered during the recent Super Bowl. I was never a HUGE GI Joe fan, but I definitely grew up watching it here and there and owned a few of the coolest action figures. Cobra Commander and Destro were always my favorite.
So, I was excited to see what the new GI Joe would look like:
Hm. Not quite what I had in mind. Other than the new Snake Eyes’ costume, is there anything in that entire trailer that even resembles GI Joe? The Baroness vaguely looks like her former self, but the rest seem to bear no resemblence. Moreover, I saw no shiny silver masks.
Now let’s take a trip back to the ’80s and enjoy the original animated GI Joe film’s amazing intro:
Unfortunately, Chris Latta passed away in 1994, so we won’t hear his amazing Cobra Commander voice in the new film. But how can it truly be GI Joe without that wonderfully awful shrieking voice?
While we’re at it, let’s enjoy the old GI Joe television series intro too:
And wouldn’t it make a great series of promos for the new film if they got the cast to record some live-action PSAs like this:
I don’t have any hope for the new GI Joe film to even remotely resemble the GI Joe of the past, but at least we can still enjoy these clips today.
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