Weāve seen some great gaming set-ups on Kotaku in the past: Brian Crecenteās High-Def Game Room, galleries of game developerās game rooms, and even pictures submitted by you guys (to Kotaku Australia), which included some of the most awesomely bad set-ups Iāve ever seen. Almost as bad as when my friend Drew made his own entertainment center out of four cinderblocks and a piece of rotted plywood. I surround myself with classy people.
http://lastchance.cc/164093/designing-a-highdef-game-room%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
However big or small, every gamer has a collection, and every gamer has a set-up.
But say you had to take your entire collection and move it to a new location. What would you change about your set-up? What would stay the same? What would you get rid of? Time to reassess the situation!
Thatās exactly what Iām going through. I just moved from my favorite city of Portland, Oregon to sunny (read: hot as hell) Los Angeles, and I have some time to think about a brand new arrangement. As I explained in the video, I wasnāt able to transport my entire game collection to California the first trip. Now Iām surviving with just a well-loved DS Lite (that means Iāve dropped it a lot) and an original Xbox 360, which currently sounds like a malfunctioning hovercraft.
Thank Thor I donāt have to get rid of my games and systems; Iāll eventually transport them down to SoCal to enjoy the smog with me ā but not without trimming some fat. The games and memorabilia Iāve collected are a reflection of my personality, and the move gives me a chance to reevaluate what I should ditch and what should take center stage.
Iāll be keeping my āTower of Powerā just the same because there is something beautiful about having my Wii, 360, and PS3 all stacked on top of one another, each on its own private shelf. But what about the hundreds of posters Iāve collected, my Zelda cardboard cutout that I may or may not kiss before I sleep each night, and the fact that Iāve somehow acquired three PS2s? Where will it all go?!
(On a side note, does anyone need a PS2?)
Lisaās Gaming Room: Portland
My game room in Portland is about five more pieces of expo swag away from being an episode of Hoarders. Iām a collector, sure, but Iāve turned into a lazy collector. Iāll keep just about anything game-related ā even the roll of No More Heroes 2 toilet paper I stole from a bathroom at PAX 2009. (Donāt tell.) Getting rid of random posters and cheap figurines will thankfully help make my place look less like a toddler-run GameStop, but the real challenge will be narrowing down the games themselves.
Last I counted, I had around 550 total games, but a chunk turned out to be either shovelware or duplicates. I blame some of this on my grandma who has given me Cooking Mama three Christmases in a row because she thinks itās an instructional video. Stop trying to domesticate me, grandma!
Lisaās 5 Games On The Brink
⦠should she keep these non-classics?
⢠Donkey Konga with DK Bongos ā I want to call this a collectorās item, but the game sucks too much.
⢠Linkās Crossbow Training ā Otherwise known as āFun-For-An-Hour.ā
⢠Devil May Cry 2 ā Like Indiana Jones 4, this game never happened.
⢠The Orange Box (360) ā Heresy! I should be playing those games on Steam.
⢠Rock Band/Guitar Hero Drums -No more banging wooden sticks against plastic at my birthday parties!
⢠BONUS: Original Steel Battalion Controller ā I donāt own it, but if I did, I would get rid of it.
The inevitable is fast approaching: which games to keep, which games to sell, trash, or re-gift to unknowing relatives. In time, my nephew will learn to appreciate Aquaman.
Out of my 550 titles, I only brought six to LA. A little Fable, a little Saints Row ā games to keep me runninā around. Whatever I decide about the rest still has to wait until I can fly back to Portland and commandeer a moving van in 99-degree weather, paying five bucks a gallon for gas, with one of my friends who will likely make me listen to Bruce Springsteen. (I canāt handle it; heās just so average.)
Though Iām currently separated from most of my games and shiny consoles, I meant what I said in the video. Iāve still found ways to keep up my gaming habits, because Iām a gamer and thatās what we do. The other day, I played Solitaire. With a real deck of cards. Who does that?
Lisaās Gaming Room: Los Angeles
Iāve also become a master at online Pictionary and my extra free time has been spent helping my mom curb her adult A.D.D. by getting her interested in different DS titles. See? Being away from my multitude of games has made me a little less selfish.
If anyone has any suggestions for my new game set-up, or would like to invite me to any secret underground Los Angeles gamer clubs that may exist, please find me on Twitter before I get redefined as a ācasual gamer.ā Iām starting to think I can actually win a game of Windows Hearts.
Kotaku columnist Lisa Foiles is best known as the former star of Nickelodeonās award-winning comedy show, All That. She currently works as a graphic designer and writes for her game site, Save Point. For more info, visit Lisaās official website