Sometimes I get stupid email from readers. Sometimes I get nice email. And sometimes, I get email from people with questions. Reader Joel sent me one of those: A question.
This is a Puckman cabinet. Before Pac-Man was called Pac-Man, it was Puckman. āPaku pakuā (ććÆććÆ) is the sound in Japanese for people opening and closing their mouths, hence why the game was written as ćććÆćć³ in Japanese, or āPakkumanā.
But, that became āpuckā, and āpuckā sounds like āfuckā. As awesome as āFuckmanā sounds, the gameās U.S. publisher changed it to Pac-Man. Bastards.
Reader Joel has one of those Puckman cabinets. Itās a cocktail cabinet, and reader Joel says itās one of the rarest cabinets you can find in the U.S.
Reader Joel said he got it from a friend who worked at Namco and Atari several decades ago. Iād imagine if you got something like this from industry friends back in the day, youād conclude that this was real. Yet, Joel wanted to verify itās authenticity. He actually wanted Pac-Man creator Toru Iwataniās email, which isnāt mine to give out.
It looks like the Namco Cocktail table. And at the risk of turning this into the Antique Roadshow, it seems to match up with photos online. But this isnāt the Antique Roadshow, and Iām not Toru Iwatani. Iām Brian Ashcraft.
(Top photo: Joel)
You can contact Brian Ashcraft, the author of this post, at [emailĀ protected]. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.