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Now,
see, this is nice. People dressing up to go buy video games, just
like the old days!
Why
don't people do that anymore? I remember when my whole family used
to get all gussied up in our Sunday best just to make the trip into
town to trade our otter pelts and homemade butter for the latest
Atari cartridge. I think it made us appreciate what we had back
then, unlike these no-good kids today, what with their internets and
loud music and what not.
Silke
here is from Germany, and even though we already have a lot of
pictures of German fans
up, I have to add her photo because she took the time to put on the
traditional "Spieleinkaufenkostüm"
or "Game-shopping costume" of her people.
Dressing
up to buy video games is much more commonplace in Germany because
buying a game there is more of a special occasion. Imported games
easily cost the equivalent of what a typical German earns in five
years. Usually an entire village will chip in to buy a game that
will be shared by the whole community. Town hall meetings are held
for months before that year's game purchase is decided upon.
Meanwhile, all of the elderly women of the town get together to spin
the fabric for the Spieleinkaufenkostüm.
Then, through a week-long competition of both skill and character, a
Game Maiden ("Spielmaid") is selected, cleaned, dressed,
and set off on the six-month journey to town to make the critical
purchase.
Congratulations
and Glückwünsche to you, Silke! Both for being chosen to represent
your community at the Spieleinkaufenfest, and also for buying
Psychonauts instead of FarCry, the game your village asked you to
get. I know they're threatening to stone you to death now, but once
they get to the level where we make fun of Napoleon, they'll love
it.
(Hey,
is that why no French people are sending in pictures? The Napoleon
jokes? The guy died in 1821! It can't still be "too
soon," can it?)
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