After 2 years of begging and pleading, Sega is finally bringing the acclaimed puzzle game Puyopuyo Tetris to the west!

The game was announced last week during the Nintendo Switch presentation where it was revealed that the game would be releasing for the Switch and PS4 here in America. The game includes brand new dubbed voices and the gameplay of Tetris and Puyopuyo. The main attraction mode is one where you face off against an opponent as the puzzle board constantly switches from Puyopuyo style to Tetris gameplay. No solid release date has been announced, but is expected in the coming weeks. Watch the trailer below and tell us what you think!

Our journey into the heart of Pasadena hit us hard with the nostalgia hammer where we explored the Neon Retro Arcade.

If anything can be said about this place, Neon Retro is indeed an arcade. It’s not a bar. It’s not lounge. It’s not an urban fusion hipster joint meant to be ironic for millennials who pretend to know what Joust is, but really don’t.

(There is no irony here. At Geekscape, our Joust game is strong.)
There is no irony here. At Geekscape, our Joust game is strong.

Neon Retro is an Arcade. Period. It never tries to be anything more or less than a single story, one room building crammed full of classic cabinets, and a handful of pinball machines. 

Neon Retro Rear INT

There’s also a couch in the back sitting in front of a pair of huge flat screens for some console gaming. That’s it. Despite it’s simplicity, a great deal of this place’s charm is tied to the location.

If you brave the ubiquitous traffic on a Saturday night headed for Neon Retro, prepare to do some light time-traveling. If you’re not already a part of it, you’ll notice a retro feel long before you even enter the arcade: having found yourself surrounded by the early 1920’s neo-art-deco buildings. It’s a part of the city that has recaptured that fictional golden age Americana vibe. As you walk over towards 28 South Raymond from any of the nearby parking garages, your mindset should already be well in tune with the past.

Neon Retro’s facade appears like any other store front window. Only the bright neon title suggests that the contents within are of a different era than any of the other shop on the street.

Then you enter.

Neon Retro INT front

80’s music is pumping through the air. Familiar theme songs play; Street Fighter II to your left, The Simpsons in front of you, Tetris somewhere in the distance. Before frolicking through the rows of cabinets with all your past favorites, you’ll need to line up for your sticker. What sticker you ask? After only a ten dollar entry fee, the employee will slap (or kindly hand you) a name tag with a time stamp.

For the next hour, you’ll be playing all the games you want for free. FREE.

Or until you get your ass handed to you in Street Fighter and walk away covered in the shame of your failure.
Or until you get your ass handed to you in Street Fighter and walk away covered in the shame of your failure.

Again, it doesn’t get much more simple than that. There’s games, games, and more games. After an hour, you can either go home or wait in line to buy more time. Be forewarned that if it’s a busy night, there can be a line. The few times this field report checked in on the property however, there wasn’t, but don’t say we didn’t warn you.

We'll let you put together the visual pun yourself, we've already been reprimanded for making it too obvious.
“For the last time, no, End of Line does not start here.”

One of the special touches that this place has can actually be found on its website: the High Score chart. It’s an invitation not just to return to the property, but to consider yourself part of the Neon Retro community: “Here’s my score, come to my place and try to best me.” It draws you in, and invites others to come down to see what you’re made of. OR, you can simply use it to brag about how you’re hot shit. Either way, there’s an overwhelming sense that the management who cares for this arcade, cares about the community they’ve cultivated around gaming.

The space is clean, there’s a restroom on sight, and the front desk has snacks. This place is definitely rated ‘E’ for everyone so bring the kids. If you really forgot to feed yourself, or need a drink, there are more than enough local pubs and coffee shops in the area to satisfy.

If there was any real criticism about the place, it could be argued that it is on the small side. It doesn’t boast the spacious rooms of Eighty Two, or the sheer quantity of games jammed into the hallway of the One Up. However, with a rotating selection of arcade cabinets, and a guarantee of an hour worth of FREE games, this place sits in the Goldilocks Zone of Arcades in the greater LA area.

It’s not too big, nor too small, Neon Retro is just right.

So, this is what we’ve come to.

Earlier today in an article with Deadline, more info on The Tetris Movie was revealed. According to the article, the unnecessary adaptation will have a budget of 80 MILLION DOLLARS!! Not only that, but it was also revealed that this film will only be part 1 of a 3 part trilogy of what the director Larry Kasanoff describes as a sci-fi thriller. Also in a surprising twist, the film will be a joint venture between Threshold Entertainment and China themselves. Majority locations, and actors will all be from China. This is utterly baffling considering this director and animation studios last attempt at a feature length movie. What was it called again? Oh yeah!

Oh no. OH NOOOOOOOOOOOOO! Well, this movie’s already screwed. What do you think? Do you think it can still be good? Tell us in the comments below!

One of the highlights of my trip was getting a hands on with the most unique Indie game at PAX Prime 2014, Tetropolis.

Now you may be asking yourself, “How on EARTH can NextGen Pants combine two drastically different games?”, well I’m about to tell you!

You play as a discarded Tetromino. You came out into the world destined to be a complete, four square piece. Aspirations of being a T or an L, but alas out of the machine you were missing your last cube. You are quickly discarded, some unseen force deems your garbage. You fall into a pit of other Tertrominos. This is when the cinematic ends and the player takes over.

I quickly got my bearings and moved forward, finding a lone cube piece sitting there. I rolled over and soon the main character was born. Born of two less main characters. This is where the demo and the journey began.

Tetropolis plays like your standard Metroidvania style game. Going through levels, finding power ups and items, and back tracking with said new power ups to get a little bit further. If you can’t figure it out by it’s name, think Metroid and Castlevania.

The levels themselves are actually giant Tetrominos that, if the player reaches a control room, can move and rotate them around in order to solve puzzles, get around obstacles, or reach the levels boss fight.

The controls are very easy to learn. Left stick rolls your Tetromino around like a ball, while the right control stick rotates you in place. A button makes you jump, X uses abilities, and Y transforms you to other shapes you acquire.

The version I played at PAX, you can play too yourself! Head on over to their Kickstarter Page and get the demo RIGHT NOW for free!

The atmosphere was really great, I had a strong Oddworld/dystopian vibe going while I played it. Ominous machinery and propaganda posters adorned the level. The Developers said that there is going to be a strong narrative throughout the game. They said they wanted it to specifically not be in any one language, that the narrative would move forward just on visuals alone. The one thing you can understand in ANY language is Tetris, and they wanted to have that ubiquitous appeal come through with Tetropolis.

I am personally going to back this game, the little that I got to play on the show floor sold me. It was cute and endearing. Balanced complexity and ease of use very well.

Fore more information on Tetropolis head on over to their website HERE.

Donate to their Kickstarter HERE!

You read the title, now believe. The crazy fun guys from San Diego (and friends of Geekscape) that brought us the famous Tetris Skit, Resident Evil 4 Skit, Assassin’s Creed and Fallout 3 Skit have just announced a new compilation DVD. Watch the trailer for ‘Time Travelers” below.

The third in the series (Mega64 Time, Mega64 Night Time), Time Travelers will be an up to date compilation of skits, commercials and “oddities”. Not much has been released yet, but the group have said a full list of content will be on their site shortly. What HAS been announced (tonight on their live stream) made me giggle like a school girl!

Not only do we get and updated collected works of skits and commercials, but we get eyes on new and unreleased videos (did you see that ACII costume? Cause I did!). Also included with the DVD will be a commentary from the Boyz and a brand new story line!

So check out their official website for more info  and be sure to get to their store come Black Friday to pick up the DVD!

These days some video games out there have budgets larger than some of the Hollywood blockbusters that hit the big screen. So why not give the games posters to match the budgets? Graphic designer Ron Guyatt who is based out of Toronto has gone and done that! Check out the posters below and more of his awesome work here.