The inventor of Pong and founder of Chuck E. Cheese is getting back into the restaurant game. Adults welcome.

Googer

Lifer
Nov 11, 2004
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<a target=_blank class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8017909/site/newsweek/">June 6 issue - There are plenty of ways to describe Nolan Bushnell. Technology visionary. Catalyst of the computer-game industry. Unrelenting entrepreneur with sparkling successes and catastrophic failures. A man who was actually able to create a successful restaurant franchise with the name Chuck E. Cheese. Even maybe a matchmaker. Bushnell, who started the early video firm Atari and imposed Pizza Time Theatre on the masses, credits another of his creations for minting a whole generation of marriages. The pioneering '70s videogame Pong, once ubiquitous in college-town watering holes, gave guys and gals an opening to challenge each other to digital duels on its tabletop black and white screens. As a result, he says, "literally thousands of people have told me over the years that they met their wife or husband playing Pong."


But Bushnell believes that somewhere along its journey toward 10 billion in worldwide sales, the videogame industry he kick-started with Pong has lost its way. Today's games isolate players in front of their computers or TVs, and the typically violent, complex gameplay alienates big swaths of the population, including pretty much all women. Even massively multiplayer online games like EverQuest are ultimately isolating, Bushnell says. "Games have historically been vehicles for socialization, not sitting alone in your underwear." Ever the dreamer, Bushnell, 62, now wants to get gamers out of the house. This week he will announce a new venture?by his count, the 24th in 33 years. The uWink Media Bistro restaurantchain (strike one: the name) will have screens at every table and bar stool, each piping videogames, media content and interactive menus to a young-adult dining crowd which will, he's convinced, use the shared-gaming experience as a chance to compete, relax and mingle.

Imagine a Chuck E. Cheese for grown-ups?with booze and Caesar salads instead of balloons and singing animatrons. Bushnell has built "party tables" where six customers can play each other in the same game, and tournaments where diners in any of the restaurants in the chain can compete against each other in a single contest such as Texas Hold 'Em. Bushnell says he will open the first restaurant this fall in Los Angeles.

The perpetual kid has been thinking about starting a Chuck E. Cheese for adults since the early '90s. But back then, the Internet wasn't sturdy enough to link the games together, and multiplayer videogames for adults didn't exist. In 2000, he founded a 40-employee L.A.-based start-up called uWink to develop the technology he would need. Today, 2,500 uWink interactive-videogame terminals are in bars and restaurants around the world. They run open-source Linux software and serve up games such as the Tetris-like Bloxx and Zillionaire, a trivia contest. Last year Bushnell finally pulled the trigger on his simmering restaurant idea. With backing from Mellon HBV bank, he tried to buy the ailing 15-restaurant GameWorks franchise, but lost the bidding war to Sega. So instead he will build the Media Bistros as he built all his other ventures: from the ground up.

Some restaurant analysts actually taste a chance for success. Even though Chuck E. Cheese went through bankruptcy in the '80s after Bushnell sold it, the chain is now successful, with 498 restaurants. Traditional arcade restaurants like Dave Buster's are solidly profitable as well, after seeing their fortunes wilt during the recession. Analyst Eric Wold of Merriman Curhan Ford Co. says that the trick is to distinguish yourself from the other chains serving up predictable dining fare. Bushnell "will bring something to consumers they can't get anywhere else," Wold says. He adds that the tabletop terminals can be remotely managed?unlike arcade games that break down?and that video meal-ordering will allow the company to save on labor costs for servers.

For the voluble and mischievous Bushnell, the Media Bistro is about more than just building another company. After some high-profile failures (like the robot firm Androbot) mixed with a few successes in the '80s and '90s, he wants to prove his essential vision: technology that nurtures social interaction instead of hampering it. Previous ventures like Pong and even Atari (early consoles supported four joysticks) were all about bringing people together, he says. In the Media Bistro restaurants, games are a way to get young people interacting. Diners will also have access to media content like cartoons, short movies and music, all designed to create "a more convivial environment for meeting strangers, without all the social risks associated with a bar," he says. It sounds like Nolan Bushnell is matchmaking again.
© 2005 Newsweek, Inc.</a>

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8017909/site/newsweek/
 

Schadenfroh

Elite Member
Mar 8, 2003
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hey the founder of Atari also, he caused the stalemate in gaming all the way from the 2600 to the NES ;)

but he did start it all
 

Rogue

Banned
Jan 28, 2000
5,774
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Sounds interesting enough. If the food is good and the environment is trendy enough, it just might work.
 

Rogue

Banned
Jan 28, 2000
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Oh, BTW, you have probably the best article linking skills I've ever seen on these forums. Let Googer set the example for everyone going forward! ;)
 

Googer

Lifer
Nov 11, 2004
12,576
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Originally posted by: Rogue
Oh, BTW, you have probably the best article linking skills I've ever seen on these forums. Let Googer set the example for everyone going forward! ;)

Haa Ha! my link skills are totaly L337;)
 

Googer

Lifer
Nov 11, 2004
12,576
7
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Originally posted by: MisterJackson
I've always said beer at Chuck E. Cheese's was a good idea.

Yeah, especialy for some of those over-hyperactive children. A few sips ought to cool their nerves.
 

Googer

Lifer
Nov 11, 2004
12,576
7
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Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
So he's basically copying Dave & Busters to an extent?

I would not know since I have never heard of them before.
 
May 31, 2001
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Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
hey the founder of Atari also, he caused the stalemate in gaming all the way from the 2600 to the NES ;)

but he did start it all


Actually I think Ralph Baer started it all.

Ralph Baer

"Ralph Baer has done an amazing job of explaining both the bolts and particularly the nuts of the origins of videogames. He blows away the popular myths and finally exposes the truth of where it really came from. No one has cut a wider swath through videogame history."

Howard Scott Warshaw
Creator of Yar's Revenge and E.T for the Atari 2600
 

RagingBITCH

Lifer
Sep 27, 2003
17,618
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Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
So he's basically copying Dave & Busters to an extent?

I would not know since I have never heard of them before.

It's basically a sports bar/adult Chuck E Cheese type place that kicks kids out after like 10pm. Doesn't quite have a video game screen at every seat (well now that I think about it, I'm not sure their bar area even has any) but why do you want to sit down and get drunk when you can wander around and play Daytona 500 drunk? (#2 is much funner from personal experience)
 

Googer

Lifer
Nov 11, 2004
12,576
7
81
Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
So he's basically copying Dave & Busters to an extent?

I would not know since I have never heard of them before.

It's basically a sports bar/adult Chuck E Cheese type place that kicks kids out after like 10pm. Doesn't quite have a video game screen at every seat (well now that I think about it, I'm not sure their bar area even has any) but why do you want to sit down and get drunk when you can wander around and play Daytona 500 drunk? (#2 is much funner from personal experience)

Sounds a lot like (Steven Speilberg had a hand in the creation of Game Works) Game Works with some sponsorship from Sega. We have one here in Tampa and you buy a $20 pass and play all day and get drunk. If you get hungry go over to the JAX grill and a waitress will serve you a good meal.
 

dderidex

Platinum Member
Mar 13, 2001
2,732
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Anyone else find it odd that he spends time panning all the modern video games - to include MMORPGs, then comes up with a solution whereby people...

play those vary same games, just in the same room?

Ummm....HELLOoooo?

If the game content is the problem (and I agree it is), just putting it in a different setting ain't gonna fix it.

I wonder if this guy has ever visited the South Korean gaming cafes. You know, with the PC at each seat. Where kids can drink caffeinated beverages and play shooters non-stop until they have a heart attack and DIE.