Yes my gatekeeper!!
Last weekend, I was hanging out at a friendās board game night. There were some dice on one table, and a deck of cards on the other. Then, over in the corner, some people started fiddling with a VHS player.
āOh,ā I thought. āUm.ā
Before I knew what was happening, we had divided into teams and were playing a spirited, hilarious game of Nightmare, the classic 1991 board game originally called āAtmosfearā in Europe.
Where do I begin with this game? It is simultaneously exhilarating and funny, never scary but damned if I canāt think of any better way to spend 60 minutes with a group of friends. Preferably while drinking.
The only VHS game I played back in the 90ās was California Games, which was nowhere near as much fun as Nightmare
The setup is like this: You have a number, one to six. You press āplayā on the VCR. You roll the dice to move around the board. Sometimes, this guy.. this absurd, absurd guy, named āThe Gatekeeper,ā will pop up and yell at you. He is played by an actor named Wenanty Nosul, who is clearly having a lot of fun with the role.
It. Is. Amazing.
Sometimes he yells. Sometimes he snorts (See part 5 above.) He gets progressively more jacked-up looking as the game progresses. Heās never anything less than entirely entertaining. And the music. The music! Where do I begin. It sounds like Freddy Krueger music made on a Casio rapman keyboard.
Youāll draw cards that will prompt you to scream at people at a certain time; if you scare them, you get a reward. Other cards will make you go and worship the TV, or laugh maniacally until someone asks you what your problem is. Itās awesome.
The entire video plays out the exact same way every timeāeach game lasts 60 minutes, and you have that much time to get enough keys to win. Needless to say, thereās limited replay value. But man⦠you could probably play a version of this game just by using the YouTube videos (which Iāve collected in the gallery here) and recreating the board somehow.
Though I have to say, it wouldnāt really be the same without the actual VCR, with the spotty tracking lines at the corner of the screen.
For a more in-depth look back at VHS games, check out Wes Fenlon (one of our board game nightās hosts)ās great retrospective at Tested.com
I just might have to use this final AV connection Iāve got on my TV to plug in a VCR. Heading over to eBayā¦
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DvrbpG_-Vrk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DiYpsxlgia4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o49UzhmIAFA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9S_z8YTiBcY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FsDp32_kzfU