
Launch the photo gallery for a closer look at how our arcade table came together
Build a Classic Arcade Table
Cost: $672
Time: 50
Hours
Easy | | | | |
Hard
Dig Dug, Kung Fu, Ms. Pac-Man. As nostalgia-inducing as the smell of Mom"s cookies, the games that swallowed all your quarters as a kid are still out there, easily and cheaply played on any computer, thanks to a program known as Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator, or MAME. This application, which simulates the circuitry inside the old arcade games, lets your computer load just about any classic game file. A quick search will turn up hundreds of these ROMs, as they're called, on Web sites and in newsgroups, but since many are still copyrighted, downloading them from anyone other than their creator could be illegal. Fortunately, some companies now sell packs of legal ROMs, offering a dozen or more games for $20 and up. There are versions of MAME for any computer system (and even smartphones and PDAs), so you can simply play at your desk using your keyboard.
But for the real experience, you need a full-blown rig, complete with joysticks and buttons that can take a beating. It's easy to assemble and build one on your own. Get a head start at arcadeinabox.com, where you can buy kits, premade cabinets or just the basic plans. We used the plans as a guide for the PopSci gaming table, a perforated-steel work of alien-blasting art mounted on a set of 40-pound-bolt legs. Send us a picture of your creation at h20@time4.com, and we'll publish the best right here on popsci.com.
Parts
Plans (see image above); launch the photo gallery for a closer look at the assembly
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