Gaming Beyond the Iron Curtain: East Germany

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • Here's a brief tour of a retro game collection too rare to find this side of the Berlin wall.
    Fun fact: because of confusion with the German abbreviation of the GDR (the "DDR,") Konami's "Dance Dance Revolution" was re-named "Dancing Stage" in European markets.
    Music by the spirited Ace Waters: / acewatersthe3rd
    The Computerspiel museum in Berlin. Highly recommended: www.computerspi...
    Here's a link to an emulator where you can play the Poly Play: archive.org/de...
    Here's a link to Andrew Weissflog's site, with select choices of his KC85 games emulated: www.flohofwoe.n...
    Here's GameStar's article, main source for the video, but you have to buy and Google translate: www.gamestar.de...
    Here's a free article, shortened version of above, but still all in German: www.spiegel.de/...
    Wondering what was happening in Poland's PC gaming scene around the same time? • The Story of CD Projekt
    What about what games were like in the brand-new Russian Federation? • Проклятие серого слонёнка
    Last but not least, support the channel on Patreon! / superbunnyhop

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @RDY2PWNU
    @RDY2PWNU 7 лет назад +314

    After the GDR collapsed in 1989... the first thing my uncle did.... was driving 2 hours to the next bigger city in west germany. There he bought himself a NES. Never thought about that in the last 28Years... But that Video brought that memory up again. ^^ Great Work!
    BTW. He is now 67 years old and.... hell plays the shit out of his PS4. One cant be to old to be a gamer i guess.

    • @tristanwilke8808
      @tristanwilke8808 7 лет назад +9

      Schöne Grüße an deinen Onkel, er klingt ziemlich cool

    • @shaharavigdori8641
      @shaharavigdori8641 7 лет назад +6

      awesome uncle

    • @jacket2038
      @jacket2038 7 лет назад +1

      I wish my Uncle was half as cool as yours

    • @ihatecabbage7270
      @ihatecabbage7270 7 лет назад +7

      Gamer has no age limit, it's just a hobby. Enjoy life while you can. I got my ps2 by working as a magazine seller.

    • @poppers7317
      @poppers7317 7 лет назад +2

      First thing we did was buying a VCR. Should have got our priorities right.

  • @rabbidluigi
    @rabbidluigi 7 лет назад +241

    I wish there was more content on RUclips like this.

    • @samin90
      @samin90 7 лет назад +26

      Right? Too many people making list videos

    • @nobel11
      @nobel11 7 лет назад +7

      You might enjoy the channel RetroAhoy

    • @baconinvader
      @baconinvader 7 лет назад

      well look who it is.

    • @Meme_Lor
      @Meme_Lor 6 лет назад

      Rabbidluigi no way! Will what are you doing here?

    • @100billionsubscriberswithn4
      @100billionsubscriberswithn4 6 лет назад

      Unlike your content.

  • @PR0per6RAMmar
    @PR0per6RAMmar 7 лет назад +264

    I see your animation budget has gotten a substantial bump.

    • @carrion-fairy
      @carrion-fairy 7 лет назад +34

      Aeolian that's patreon money being put to use

    • @Octave_Rolland
      @Octave_Rolland 7 лет назад +1

      I lol'd.

    • @dsandoval9396
      @dsandoval9396 7 лет назад +4

      I loved the part where the stick man moved but it was the actually the entire white page being moved across the screen, LMAO on that one!

    • @VagueLuminary
      @VagueLuminary 7 лет назад +2

      Top quality Sakuga here.

  • @salokin3087
    @salokin3087 7 лет назад +232

    *Nuclear tension intensifies*

  • @JanPospisilArt
    @JanPospisilArt 7 лет назад +36

    Growing up in the Czech Republic, "videogames" meant something very different. Even in the late 90s it was a word used for any gaming console you hook up to the TV - "the video games". And the consoles were not the NES or SNES, they were almost exclusively knockoffs and bootlegs that played copied cartridges and casettes.
    Far more people played games on computers - we had (borrowed for a while) the Didaktik - a Czechoslovakian (and somewhat improved) clone of the ZX Spectrum. Then as the markets opened up we got a PC, eventually even bought a Pentium computer.
    But yeah, nobody I know from my generation owned a genuine Nintendo console and even years later, only some families could afford the PSX when it first came out.

    • @yarpen26
      @yarpen26 4 года назад +1

      In Poland, the term was "television game" (usually denoted the pirates of an NES bootleg) and when PCs became popular, suddenly _all_ games were "computer games", which persists in regards to even console exclusives, at least within the mainstream media.
      Between the passing of the 1994 bill which practically made it impossible to manufacture pirated hardware in the open, and the seventh generation of consoles, very few people could afford one. Most kids were able to talk their parents into buying them a PC around the age of eight when they attended their first communion (which is when Polish kids tend to receive the gift equivalence of three years worth of birthdays and Christmas) because "of course I will need a computer for school"-plus, not only were PC games _massively_ cheaper than their Sony, Sega or Microsoft counterparts (it still boggles my mind to see a current Steam release costing just as much as the PS4 or XOne version when I remember PC games being often three to freaking _four times_ cheaper when I was a kid, and that's taking inflation into account), they were also leagues easier to pirate, especially after CDs became widely available. Me, who grew up in an arguably a pretty well-off household for the '90s Poland, could only expect to get hold of an official new release (in the shining box, the manual still smelling of freshness and so on) once or twice a year and every other time it was a good ole bootleg for me. There was absolutely _no_ way my parents would throw so much money (at the time of release in 1996, PSX cost the equivalent of a whopping 183% of an average monthly salary around here, PS2 doing not much better at around 140% in 2002) at a gizmo that would serve solely my entertainment, all while expecting a string of ridiculously expensive games they would need to buy me because I wouldn't be able to pirate them.
      Personally, I got my first console, the PS3, in 2008 for my eighteenth birthday. I missed out on the next generation (and all the awesome exclusives that came with it) and even when PS5 finally comes out, I seriously doubt I will be able to afford it within the first year of its presence on the market. Those things are a *humongous* drain on one's wallet around here, considering that hardware is practically no cheaper in countries that earn like a quarter of an American or German salary.

  • @shouryuuken4147
    @shouryuuken4147 7 лет назад +151

    Western German here and I never knew or even really thought about the lack of video or computer games that people in East Germany had. Really interesting video and cool to see such a topic getting international coverage.
    If you ever need help translating something from German into English again and don't want to use GoogleTranslate maybe I could help. Or maybe someone else from the German audience might be willing to help out, too.

    • @HaaraaldEriksson
      @HaaraaldEriksson 7 лет назад +4

      Hier, hier, Freiwilliger!!!

    • @DiskusGames
      @DiskusGames 7 лет назад +3

      Immer gern

    • @tristanwilke8808
      @tristanwilke8808 7 лет назад +1

      I'll help. Just send me an email or somethin

    • @frostywasp1743
      @frostywasp1743 7 лет назад

      Hey so do you emulate Grand Theft Auto games or do you buy them over there in Germany ?

    • @no1DdC
      @no1DdC 7 лет назад +3

      Here's another volunteer.
      Oh, and another thing: There's a new translation website by the name of of DeepL, from a German company. Uses machine learning and so far, it's far, far better than Google Translate and other large competitors. It doesn't support as many languages yet and you have to copy and paste text by hand, but the results are extremely impressive and almost indistinguishable from human translated texts. Unsurprisingly, it's particularly good at translating German to English and vice versa, but support for other languages is decent as well.

  • @medionjulian
    @medionjulian 7 лет назад +29

    I grew up in the DDR and remember playing some of these games as a 6 year old :D

    • @humansvd3269
      @humansvd3269 3 года назад

      What was it like for you if you don't mind me asking?

    • @medionjulian
      @medionjulian 3 года назад

      @@humansvd3269 I think the games where pretty cool - I dindt know the other stuff. I played the one with the bucket and water drops a lot.

  • @TrueKaras
    @TrueKaras 7 лет назад +52

    We had those "game broadcasting radio stations" in commie Poland too. Was quite a trick to get a clear signal on those third hand radios tho and have absolutely clear game code recorded.

  • @BFBeast666
    @BFBeast666 7 лет назад +75

    Mind blown. I live in Germany and this was hands down the best-researched piece I've seen about gaming in the DDR. Keep the curveballs coming, George!

    • @nox5555
      @nox5555 7 лет назад +2

      It had some Problems, He didnt understood some of the inter german mechanics. sending stuff to eastern germany wasnt that hard and risk free as long as the person wasnt already under investigation.

    • @samuelrichter3417
      @samuelrichter3417 5 лет назад

      Wessies smh

    • @rippspeck
      @rippspeck 5 лет назад

      Uff, euer Schutzwall ist seit 30 Jahren wech und ihr habt in der Zeit anscheinend nur gelernt, noch neidischer zu sein. Moment, ich muss mal eben das Fenster schließen, da fliegen schon wieder so viele gebratene Tauben rein. RIP Adenauer, alter Goldesel.
      Geh kacken, Fred Hampton.

  • @haldir108
    @haldir108 7 лет назад +74

    I have endless respect for the increasingly in-depth and investigative videoes you make. Where the most profitable move you could make would be to be covering recent topics and talking about the games, these talks and investigations into the industry is clearly done with a lot of passion for the subject, and with a high density of primary sources.

  • @MrMoondown
    @MrMoondown 7 лет назад +535

    What is this? ACTUAL gaming journalism?

    • @CitrusZero
      @CitrusZero 7 лет назад +77

      Crimson Parrot "Is Cuphead too hard for East German Markets???!?!"

    • @TheSorrel
      @TheSorrel 7 лет назад +11

      You are new to this channel, aren't you?

    • @jebgalicia9141
      @jebgalicia9141 7 лет назад +23

      nah, actual ethical gaming journalism has to at some point either take a swing at someone with an unnatural hair color or bring up white genocide.

    • @kaziislam2785
      @kaziislam2785 7 лет назад

      CitrusZero Cuphead is too hard for every market.

    • @jebgalicia9141
      @jebgalicia9141 7 лет назад +7

      deus vult
      "it was 3 whole years ago, move on"
      jerks off to crusader memes
      irony has died

  • @3rdJan
    @3rdJan 7 лет назад +30

    I live in Berlin (The western side) and I loved that Hasselhoff joke.
    Great video over all, I absolutely didn't know the Easterners had any video games at all, they had to wait about 15 years for their cars and about 5-10 for a home telephone.
    That story of Andy is pretty amazing. Thanks for this interesting insight into the history of my favourite hobby in my own country!

  • @Ikcatcher
    @Ikcatcher 7 лет назад +57

    It’s always a good time when George uploads a new video

  • @Tille84
    @Tille84 7 лет назад +9

    Hi George, as a German and growing up in the GDR I just wanted to thank you for recaping that part of history for a broader audience.

  • @ThePuppyPrince
    @ThePuppyPrince 7 лет назад +819

    The noodles return.

  • @TheTyper
    @TheTyper 7 лет назад +14

    I love the animator you hired George. Great stick figure stuff.

  • @jackapplebaum5678
    @jackapplebaum5678 7 лет назад +98

    Your videos are always worth the wait, George.

  • @crypticcorvus2879
    @crypticcorvus2879 7 лет назад +448

    10:30 Those wanting to know what kind of weird secret police would invest time and money into anonymously authoring arcade games should look up the Stasi, especially their practice of 'decomposition' - those guys were fucking terrifying.
    East Germany in general was a fascinating, if miserable, time in history. Really cool surprise to see George do a video on that era.
    Luv u George.

    • @Petey0707
      @Petey0707 7 лет назад +51

      Plenty of folk from DDR here that seemed totally ok with East Germany. The notion that any and all socialist countries were miserable, poor hell holes is a misconception and propaganda at best. I find it especially ironic coming from America and seeing how my country is rotting from the inside out while fascists and white nationalists tell people to 'suck it up'. Wealth disparity, racism, sexism, a borderline police state and lack of civil rights leads to 'suck it up' from suburban basement dwellers.

    • @eduardsnijders7594
      @eduardsnijders7594 7 лет назад +22

      DDR stood for "Deutschland done right"

    • @Insulin_Ingo
      @Insulin_Ingo 7 лет назад +81

      eluxsus0195684
      "Not everything was wrong in East Germany". Nice Meme buddy. I suggest looking into the history of the Stasi more. If it was truly so great there, they wouldn't have to built a wall where they shot you on sight just to keep you in.
      And don't try to justify this dictatorship by saying that they treated the farmers better. It's the same thing as NatSocs justifying Hitler by saying "Well he build the Autobahn".

    • @MajkaSrajka
      @MajkaSrajka 7 лет назад +10

      East Germany was SU showoff, as pointed in video still influenced by the west.
      In the actual SU countries at the time money would be close to toilet paper, so even these grassroot movements mentioned in the video wouldn't happen.

    • @allancastellon4432
      @allancastellon4432 7 лет назад +23

      eluxsus0195684 'borderline' the police in the US can literally kidnap you and put you in a blacksite without trial if they define you as a terrorist or 'combatant'
      It is 100% a police state

  • @StopFear
    @StopFear 7 лет назад +3

    Eastern European countries actually were making imitations of zx spectrum (commodore) and we had them all over the USSR in the 80s. We had all the games on pirated cassette tapes sold all over the street markets.

  • @NosTeraFuTV
    @NosTeraFuTV 7 лет назад +307

    As an eastern german: waht is a "Videogame?" is it similar to bananas?

    • @purpleblah2
      @purpleblah2 7 лет назад +47

      It's like a turnip you can look at and touch but not eat, comrade.

    • @SaltedMallows
      @SaltedMallows 7 лет назад +6

      NosTeraFuTV
      Oh my god it's crazy when my subscriptions talk to my other subscriptions

    • @highimpactsexualviolence5512
      @highimpactsexualviolence5512 7 лет назад +2

      I see what you did there ;)

    • @Atypical-Abbie
      @Atypical-Abbie 7 лет назад

      NosTeraFuTV Oh hey, I watch your stuff.

    • @Nyarlathothep1994
      @Nyarlathothep1994 7 лет назад +15

      As a fellow eastern german: What is a banana?

  • @jp5394
    @jp5394 7 лет назад +31

    Still waiting on that MGS 4 retrospect. (Although keep up the great work. love this channel)

    • @itsgeegra
      @itsgeegra 7 лет назад

      Macaco Macabra I'm less gracious - SBH get on this or I'll smash ya.

    • @IBRHEEMGT9600
      @IBRHEEMGT9600 7 лет назад

      'retrospect'
      lol
      *checking the release date*
      *doing some calculations*
      9 fucking years , holy shit.

    • @jacket2038
      @jacket2038 7 лет назад +4

      I'm afraid it's been...
      9 years
      WOOOOOOOOOOOOHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

  • @ShinoSarna
    @ShinoSarna 7 лет назад +42

    I've seen suggestion that Polyplay's display logo font and name might've inspired the Polybius legend. The secret police connection would work, too.

    • @thestripedmenace
      @thestripedmenace 7 лет назад +4

      shinobody Right? The first thing that came to my mind when George mentioned the Secret Police connection was Polybius!

    • @MidlifeCrisisJoe
      @MidlifeCrisisJoe 7 лет назад +3

      That makes an enormous amount of sense.

    • @isaacargesmith8217
      @isaacargesmith8217 7 лет назад +12

      I think Ahoy was one of the ones saying that in his video.

    • @Internetzspacezshipz
      @Internetzspacezshipz 7 лет назад

      I noticed that as soon as I saw that logo...

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 7 лет назад

      Ahoy isn't the first to make that claim. In fact he didn't make any claims really in his video. It was mostly just a documentary. He mainly just got that claim from else where.

  • @TidusplZUO
    @TidusplZUO 7 лет назад +10

    Poland was in a very simillar situation. I still have a cheap copy of NES called a Pegasus in my attic somewhere.

  • @residentgrigo4701
    @residentgrigo4701 7 лет назад +20

    The German Gamestar did an in depth special on this topic, obviously in german:
    www.gamestar.de/artikel/computerspiele_in_der_ddr,3313887.html
    Mr. Bunny sources it too in the video, so someone on his side knows my language.

    • @Jammet
      @Jammet 7 лет назад +6

      I was 10 or so years old. My parents traveled to friends in the GDR once or twice a year, to that half of Berlin. And I always had a walkman knockoff with me, and my music audio tapes. The car was always searched thoroughly, but these were never taken. Not once. My dad was on a special watch-list as well, as he was as high ranking police officer at that time. Way above detective or anything like that. I was used to feeling watched, even as a kid, it was spooky, but I didn't understand the half of it back then. For me, that was an exciting ride into a totally different planet, each and every time. And oh-god did Berlin look run-down in many places. Shabby storefronts, and much of it was half ruins, half living space for people. I once found a hint book in a book store on adventures for the Schneider/Anstrad CPC. Back then I was amazed. How do people in the GDR play these games in the first place? Well, that's when I found out that they did, on a somewhat compatible computer system called the "KC Kompakt". This thing was basically a sort of re-branded Schneider CPC, and I think you had to assemble it with your own hands, and aquiring one would get you on some sort of watch-list as well.

  • @keikurono6571
    @keikurono6571 7 лет назад +5

    Boy, I love
    your Videos but this one was very special to me.
    I’m east german and I was born in the GDR but I have no memorys of this
    country. The thought: “How was gaming in the GDR” never came to me. This was
    really enlightened.

  • @StilesReviews
    @StilesReviews 7 лет назад +1

    I didn't even know I wanted this information until I saw the beginning of this video. Yet another amazing and incredibly informative video. Thank you very much!

  • @Philippoable
    @Philippoable 7 лет назад +106

    Good content to Hasselhoff ratio. Am of approvings.

  • @Majupm
    @Majupm 7 лет назад +17

    Wow, I visited that museum like 8 hours ago

  • @superpollo1303
    @superpollo1303 7 лет назад +21

    This is one of my favorite videos from you

  • @xisumavoid
    @xisumavoid 7 лет назад +6

    Fascinating stuff! Great video :-)

  • @nilshoffmann6283
    @nilshoffmann6283 7 лет назад +7

    Sehr gutes Video . Hätte nicht gedacht das so ein Thema hier angesprochen wird .

  • @nickymo
    @nickymo 7 лет назад

    Your content is so fantastic, George. Every time you post a video it's about a topic completely unique from any other video-game-essayists on RUclips that I've often never even thought about, but even so I'm always interested. I've never given a single thought as to what video games are like in East Germany but goddamn was I instantly excited to learn about it from you. You're the man, man!

  • @InnocuousRemark
    @InnocuousRemark 7 лет назад +100

    What an amazing piece. My wife was born in the GDR. Her father, my father in law, was a border guard. Believe it or not, they miss communism. They aren't interested in visiting the museums that have been made out of the former secret police prisons throughout the former country.

    • @ImperfectWeapons
      @ImperfectWeapons 7 лет назад +47

      I too would probably miss any kind of fundamentally awful government if my meal ticket was to just make sure it stayed as shitty as possible.

    • @sofija1996
      @sofija1996 7 лет назад +75

      When you're high up in the food chain and the wild wave of early 90s capitalism sweeps you away... yeah, you're going to be nostalgic about "the good old times".

    • @Kitakicchi
      @Kitakicchi 7 лет назад +23

      that is called "Ostalgie". A combination of the word for nostalgia(nostalgie) and east (ost)

    • @dotkiarika1026
      @dotkiarika1026 7 лет назад +34

      Communism was certainly no angel but it did have it's vantages. Ostalgy is pretty common and I think it's preposterous of you to assume they wouldn't miss It.

    • @Pay2pray
      @Pay2pray 7 лет назад +5

      dot Kiarika Shhhhhh, he thinks he is educated in politics and actually knows what it was like.

  • @Peringon
    @Peringon 7 лет назад

    It is said that you can give George the most eclectic and hard to sell themes and he'll somehow make them super interesting. I love this channel.

  • @TheIronArmenianakaGIHaigs
    @TheIronArmenianakaGIHaigs 7 лет назад +4

    Lovely documentary

  • @edumekation2931
    @edumekation2931 7 лет назад +1

    I had never thought of, or even thought to think of, gaming in the Eastern Bloc.
    Excellent topic choice, and as usual, excellent video.
    Thank you for this!

  • @smiles5168
    @smiles5168 7 лет назад +230

    I love you

    • @STANNco
      @STANNco 7 лет назад +11

      WE! love you.
      In east germany we share

  • @VeniVidiRici
    @VeniVidiRici 7 лет назад

    Born in the GDR in 1981, I am one of those people who "suffered" from the lack of video games in the early childhood. My first and only gaming experience before the fall of the iron curtain was a few minutes of River Raid (shown in this video). Even after the reunion it took me a little while (christmas 1991 to be exact) to get my first console (the SEGA Master System), because money was short for most former eastern germans and electronic was very expensive (an empty cassette tape for example costed 20 Mark which is around 40-50$ by today's standard) . For a whole year I had only Alex Kidd and Sonic to play, followed by Sonic 2 the next christmas. I'm not really sad about it because I learned to appreciate what I had instead of being jealous of what others had. It had a unique kind of fascination to try out a new game back then and that's what I'm missing today.
    After all I (and the former GDR in general) quickly caught up with the latest technology and by the time the fifth generation of video games (N64, Playstation, Saturn) came we were on the same level as the rest of the world, if not earlier.
    We may have missed some precious childhood experiences back then, but we also learned to respect video games in a way most people didn't :)

  • @deliciousdishes4531
    @deliciousdishes4531 7 лет назад +4

    A very good and surprisingly neutral video! As someone currently living in the east of germany (culturally the two sides are still somewhat different) I appreciated this video a lot.

  • @felipepalmacastro
    @felipepalmacastro 7 лет назад

    This story is a jewel. I have researched the history of computing in the Warsaw Pact countries and it is wonderful to see the quality of this work. I am grateful. Thank you very much.

  • @SovPlyushFilm
    @SovPlyushFilm 7 лет назад +24

    As a russian I'm very proud that you notice the Dendy and Kinamania's Documentary FIlm about that. Can you make a video about Soviet and Russian Gaming, please?

    • @Sean27007
      @Sean27007 6 лет назад +1

      cyka blyat rush B

  • @TheGreatEel
    @TheGreatEel 7 лет назад

    Those high quality animations of yours are why I am still subscribed George.

  • @Space_Reptile
    @Space_Reptile 7 лет назад +6

    "its not actually a joystick , but actually a stick mashing on 4 buttons" you know how 4 or 8 axis joys work right? EXACTLY like that , take apart a competition pro or any arcade joystick and you will see the same thing

  • @jesperolahansson
    @jesperolahansson 6 лет назад

    Most interesting piece of gaming journalism I've seen for months. Made me really appreciate the place I grew up!

  • @ShadowLady1
    @ShadowLady1 7 лет назад +5

    The Dendy is actually a Taiwanese clone console,its just sold in Russia.

  • @Cynic667
    @Cynic667 7 лет назад +1

    Incredible video! As a german and a kid from the 80ies/90ies it's incredibly interessting. I was on the western side ot the curtain and never had any contact with east german gaming in that time, only after-the-fact through museums (like the Computerspiele Museum in Berlin: Really worth a visit if you are around) or the random PolyPlay exihibited at GamesCom.
    George, if you are in or around Cologne anytime I would be all too glad to buy you a beer or twenty :-)

  • @plankalkulcompiler9468
    @plankalkulcompiler9468 5 лет назад +6

    12:48 Erich Honecker is a honest man who cared for German people's good since his young age, not a brutal dictator.

    • @yarpen26
      @yarpen26 4 года назад +1

      Go home, Stalin. You're drunk.

    • @jstevinik3261
      @jstevinik3261 3 года назад

      @@yarpen26 Honecker is not any where near close to Stalin at all. Also, interesting you never substantially addressed Laborer's claim.

  • @Zimpfnis
    @Zimpfnis 7 лет назад +1

    I love this video. I live in Berlin, have been to the museum but didn't get the full story until you told it.

  • @SolidSnake684
    @SolidSnake684 7 лет назад +6

    *looks at title*
    This is such a Super Bunnyhop video

  • @4587tish
    @4587tish 7 лет назад +1

    Thank you for making a video about this topic. I legitimately had no idea about this, and I find this utterly fascinating. I'm so glad that you still make amazing videos after all this time being subscribed to you. Cheers!

  • @alexonthefly5861
    @alexonthefly5861 7 лет назад +11

    Great video 👍 and by the way: Although I lived only a ten minutes walk away from the Computerspielemuseum I never visited it. Yeah, shame on me. 😅
    And guess what one of the first things was that my parents bought me after the wall came down? A NES. Thanks mom. 👍

  • @yannickvanhoutte4403
    @yannickvanhoutte4403 7 лет назад

    This was such an interesting subject I, as a Belgian, knew nothing about and shows just once more how crazy European history got with the wall. Amazing work as always George!

  • @ChoooooChoooTrain
    @ChoooooChoooTrain 7 лет назад +277

    Real video games hasn't been tried

  • @l--..--l-i3m
    @l--..--l-i3m 7 лет назад

    Immensely interesting and well made. Deserving of an entire documentary

  • @Jammet
    @Jammet 7 лет назад +4

    I was 10 or so years old. My parents traveled to friends in the GDR once or twice a year, to that half of Berlin. And I always had a walkman knockoff with me, and my music audio tapes. The car was always searched thoroughly, but these were never taken. Not once. My dad was on a special watch-list as well, as he was as high ranking police officer at that time. Way above detective or anything like that. I was used to feeling watched, even as a kid, it was spooky, but I didn't understand the half of it back then. For me, that was an exciting ride into a totally different planet, each and every time. And oh-god did Berlin look run-down in many places. Shabby storefronts, and much of it was half ruins, half living space for people. I once found a hint book in a book store on adventures for the Schneider/Anstrad CPC. Back then I was amazed. How do people in the GDR play these games in the first place? Well, that's when I found out that they did, on a somewhat compatible computer system called the "KC Kompakt". This thing was basically a sort of re-branded Schneider CPC, and I think you had to assemble it with your own hands, and aquiring one would get you on some sort of watch-list as well.

    • @Jammet
      @Jammet 7 лет назад +1

      Again, the KC computers were Amstrad CPC "knockoffs", hence the Zilog Z80 and all that.

  • @RoyRogerer
    @RoyRogerer 5 лет назад

    Holy shit. Great video. I literally live 10 min away from this museum, but never bet an eye on it, since Berlin is also plagued with sub-par pop museums that show irrelevant things (an example would be, in the new spy museum, apparently the biggest highlight is the laser room where you navigate between laser...) and I thought this was one of them. I had no idea there was this much of an interesting topic behind it. Now I must go and check it out.
    I can't believe I never discovered this channel, as it is exactly what I was wishing for. Thanks for all the contents, I now have no choice but to watch all videos. Keep it up, you are among one of my favorite channel, though I watched only a handful of videos.

  • @KuraIthys
    @KuraIthys 7 лет назад +3

    You've got to wonder sometimes.
    Part of the Soviet Block's problems were just a severe lack of industrial capacity.
    Around the time Communism took hold, if you compare Russia to the United states, one has massive amounts of industrial infrastructure, the other is still dominated by rural farmland and relatively little industry to speak of.
    You might think it sad that all they managed is inferior knock-offs of western computer technology, but when you really stop and think about it, the fact that they could build semi-decent clones of this stuff at all was a major accomplishment in it's own right.
    Computer technology requires a LOT of resources to do effectively.
    So much so that the most critical components are the product of maybe a half dozen factories at most.
    An earthquake in a single country a decade or so ago, which crippled only one or two factories was enough to cut the global supply of RAM chips by 30%
    East German computers huh.
    I guess given those restrictions, if you had the connections and wealth to get a machine imported in the late 80's it seems pretty clear to me you'd want an Amiga;
    Since you weren't allowed to have software... Yeah, that seems like the most impressive thing you could get if you had to make all your own software and tools for it...

    • @egoalter1276
      @egoalter1276 6 лет назад

      It was more like poor application of existing industrial capacity.

    • @KopperNeoman
      @KopperNeoman 3 года назад

      Command economies suck. The alternative to top-down command economy is a form of capitalism. Simple, really.

  • @Geirern87
    @Geirern87 7 лет назад +1

    The paint skills are insane! Also - was waiting for the Papers Please theme, seemed like the perfect video for some dark chiptunes

  • @cyanwolf7368
    @cyanwolf7368 7 лет назад +30

    This is very similar to the first part of the noclip series on The Witcher

    • @hiredsword
      @hiredsword 7 лет назад +7

      I had this very same feeling, not that this is a bad thing, it's interesting to see how these countries managed to still game in their own way regardless of their political and economical situations.

    • @sofija1996
      @sofija1996 7 лет назад +1

      He actually put a link to the Noclip's video in the description: "Wondering what was happening in Poland's PC gaming scene around the same time? ruclips.net/video/uNZkTk5gLuo/видео.html "

    • @hiredsword
      @hiredsword 7 лет назад

      Whining Ylthin nice, I know they are both fans of each other's work and even met up a few months ago in Tokyo.

  • @jeremyj.5687
    @jeremyj.5687 7 лет назад

    I am again in awe of the quality and depth of your content. You´re absolutely godlike in that regard, please never stop. Bless your investigative little soul.

  • @CzubsterThePolak
    @CzubsterThePolak 7 лет назад +7

    To be fair, it wold be realy intresting to see what sort of video games would we get after a decade or two of a ban on violence.

    • @HosKaetan
      @HosKaetan 7 лет назад +2

      tsch and no western sanctions on exporting tecnology to soviet allies
      we can only imagine what could have been made

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 7 лет назад

      It would be nice to have more non violent mechanics. The vast majority of video games rely on violence which is not bad but like I think we all want some more diversity.

    • @videogamebomer
      @videogamebomer 6 лет назад

      hedgehog3180 How is it bad

  • @jerrymcghoulberry355
    @jerrymcghoulberry355 6 лет назад

    I came back to this video just to say that this is probably my favorite video on the entirety of the internet.

  • @Nurpus
    @Nurpus 7 лет назад +5

    I wonder what are the videogames in North Korea...

    • @bobjones27
      @bobjones27 6 лет назад +1

      According to defectors and visitors, they play a lot of famiclones and really old arcade games. They used to sell really old games online that play like an old Flash game or a very simple iOS game, but don't know if they still sell those.

    • @MyH3ntaiGirl
      @MyH3ntaiGirl 6 лет назад

      Nurpus maybe those shithead at the top completely rip off one of the top FPS games and put "Kill US dogs" into it
      They have history of rip off movie clips or musics to put in their over the top "true korea" stuff

    • @danheinz13
      @danheinz13 5 лет назад

      Lil kim is the player the population is the npcs

  • @Camanyph
    @Camanyph 7 лет назад

    Great video! I never knew i wanted to know what gaming was like in East Germany, but when i saw your title i just had to know.

  • @Rabarbarzynca
    @Rabarbarzynca 7 лет назад +5

    You have no idea how fun was to play "Raid over Moscow" in late 80'ies Poland... ;)

  • @Fischfutter191087
    @Fischfutter191087 7 лет назад

    Great video! As an east german, neither I nor my parents knew that there were video games developed in the GDR. The first contact I ever had with games was in 92 when my parents got their first PC, which included prince of persia. It's also weird that I learn this stuff from an international source and not a domestic one.

  • @jmiquelmb
    @jmiquelmb 7 лет назад +5

    Man the MGS3 intro sure sounds much less epic voiced by you

  • @NamelessBody
    @NamelessBody 7 лет назад

    Fascinating. As a West German, I had literally no idea about gaming in the East. Thank you, that was enlightening.

  • @Nazareadain
    @Nazareadain 7 лет назад +1

    I've said this before, but I don't know where else I could go for content like this. You've got a monopoly, George.

  • @NKDuisburg02
    @NKDuisburg02 7 лет назад +12

    Reagan teared down the wall? lol ;D

    • @wahlex841
      @wahlex841 7 лет назад +2

      Yeah, personally.

  • @SergeantSam3D
    @SergeantSam3D 7 лет назад

    Holy Moly really well made Video Thief, would also love to see more of this topic.

  • @LowenStrosst
    @LowenStrosst 7 лет назад +44

    Lots of comments from people who just can't wait to drag their version of communism into this for no reason. Great video, George, thanks.

    • @LowenStrosst
      @LowenStrosst 7 лет назад +15

      Meh, being triggered is fine and it's an interesting debate, especially through this game-centric lens. It's just the misinformation that I'm having trouble with.

    • @Petey0707
      @Petey0707 7 лет назад +5

      I'm constantly seeing the right-wing giving me numbers between 60 to 100 some even 200 million.

  • @somegirliguess645
    @somegirliguess645 7 лет назад

    This has probably been one of your best videos, George. Thank you for shining light on this little section of history!

  • @darklsn
    @darklsn 7 лет назад +3

    Bunny-Bae

  • @shaiglatshtein7093
    @shaiglatshtein7093 7 лет назад

    glad a new vid is up, it has been quite a while.
    hope this means you will be more active in the near future!

  • @johnjuiceshipper4963
    @johnjuiceshipper4963 7 лет назад +116

    And here's a comment section full of 14-year olds that grew up in a suburban neighbourhood in a 1st world country telling you why communism is a great idea.

    • @Petey0707
      @Petey0707 7 лет назад +35

      Most people I know who are communists are grown workers who have lived in the lower class.. but sure, keep living in a bubble.

    • @stardestroyer19
      @stardestroyer19 7 лет назад +55

      eluxsus0195684 I grew up in an ex communist country and my family was prosecuted during commie rule. Please tell me how great Stalinism was.

    • @joechinchar9833
      @joechinchar9833 7 лет назад +18

      Communism is pretty simple: I dont make as much money as that guy over there so he should give me some of his. Nevermind the fact that "that guy over there" probably worked hard and took risks in order to get into the position that he's in and that the only reason I have my current job at all is because of risk takers and intovators like him who employee me. No. he should give me money simply because I make less than him.

    • @Glassandcandy
      @Glassandcandy 7 лет назад +25

      Communism is not the same thing as Stalinism. The Soviet Union post the revolution degenerated into a brutal authoritarian regime that, instead of promoting communist ideals of communal fellowship and mutualism, ruled through a brutally centralized, top down form of rule which erroneously believed in a high-modernist folly that the entire nation could be run from the safety of a bureaucratic office in the capital city. This is why many communists from the very inception of the Bolshevik revolution broke ties with the second international and why just as many of the exiles from said authoritarian countries were not just capitalists but also communists with a decidingly ex-soviet ideology. But yeah, all communist ideology is the same, right?

    • @Wigggy
      @Wigggy 7 лет назад +38

      Here comes a comment section full of 14-year old gamers who grew up in a first world suburb, playing games made by slave-labor, telling you why capitalism is a great idea

  • @roronoapedro
    @roronoapedro 7 лет назад +2

    It's amazing that the second video after his Patreon went gold uses mostly MS Paint montages to aid the information.
    I fucking love George.

  • @gaurd3
    @gaurd3 7 лет назад +53

    North Korea is showing us all how oppression is done right

    • @that1zombi3kid
      @that1zombi3kid 7 лет назад +5

      gaurd3 And if you're extra good maybe in a year or two we can be just like them :D

    • @dsandoval9396
      @dsandoval9396 7 лет назад +2

      EXACTLY! If anybody knows how to do insane tyrannical dictatorship, it's North Korea. To tell the truth I'm glad they're the way they are, this world needs a new World War enemy we can all (most of the sane community of countries) can all rally behind as the thing we all hate and need to destroy. Kinda gives me a warm feeling in my tummy to know we as a world can still work together on some thing big.

    • @Aewon84
      @Aewon84 7 лет назад +4

      There is no such thing as oppression done right. Sooner or later the desire for freedom will win. If North Korea continues down this path for a hundred more years it'll look like a medieval country compared to the surrounding countries.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 7 лет назад +2

      D Sandoval That sounds a big psychopathic. You do know you're cheering for a war with a nation that has nuclear weapons right? That's not something to look forward to. Plus the North Korean people aren't at fault here. They're trapped in a system not of their choosing. This is not like WWII where Germany was definitely evil and the Germans actually had a choice and knew about the outside world.

    • @One3673241
      @One3673241 7 лет назад +4

      They're essentially China's failed abortion, and literally only exist to be a buffer between China and South Korea (America).

  • @projectz975
    @projectz975 7 лет назад

    this channel is just on a whole nother lever 👍👍 this isnt a topic i would have even thought of

  • @CocoHutzpah
    @CocoHutzpah 7 лет назад +118

    Video games in a communist society look amazing! There's no need for fluid controls or spectacular graphics. That's just a bunch of capitalistic nonsense. The Party Leader will tell me what is fun and what is not.

    • @Petey0707
      @Petey0707 7 лет назад +20

      You're mixing communism with fascism.

    • @Accostrophe
      @Accostrophe 7 лет назад +43

      Not much of a difference in most peoples eyes, cept that communism has killed far more and yet 14 year olds like yourself still cling to it as a good system.

    • @broski3442
      @broski3442 7 лет назад +5

      I think you guys are missing obvious sarcasm

    • @CocoHutzpah
      @CocoHutzpah 7 лет назад +7

      It's more fun if you don't tell them that.

    • @DiabeetusPrime
      @DiabeetusPrime 7 лет назад +4

      Yamcha Kippur The best-selling video game of all time was developed in the Soviet Union.

  • @Maurad77
    @Maurad77 7 лет назад

    This is 44th in trending right now.
    Never expected you to be there but I'm glad nonetheless, great video George.
    But when's next TOVG podcast bruh?

  • @MrRattlebones640
    @MrRattlebones640 7 лет назад +4

    >Capitalist Luxury

  • @laloasaelrios7239
    @laloasaelrios7239 7 лет назад

    It's really nice to see this type of content. Thank you very much!

  • @Gaybootytwerk
    @Gaybootytwerk 7 лет назад +7

    Yeah I'm from Eastern Germany. Yes I'm a gamer.

  • @frogery
    @frogery 7 лет назад

    for thanksgiving i am thankful for this channel.

  • @xThuby
    @xThuby 7 лет назад +4

    YEA BOIO

  • @Cdaddyhudsoc
    @Cdaddyhudsoc 7 лет назад

    this was a really well done and interesting video article. Good Job George, and thank you for the content you put out.

  • @piehalo
    @piehalo 7 лет назад +23

    The Soviet economy did not supply "basic necessities at very cheap prices"

    • @AlexanderUnit-731
      @AlexanderUnit-731 7 лет назад +28

      it actually did

    • @nox5555
      @nox5555 7 лет назад +13

      Well People didnt starve, and they had some Rum and cigars in higher quality than the west.
      Standing in line for basic stuff was very common, that wouldnt be such a problem, if they didnt blocked gameboys...

    • @tumeg8282
      @tumeg8282 7 лет назад +14

      >people didn't starve
      H O L O D O M O R

    • @Terker2
      @Terker2 7 лет назад +1

      The really shitty living conditions in the DDR even fostered some good inventions that are still used to this day. Like the modern german kindergarten-service.

    • @Crazy-Drokon
      @Crazy-Drokon 7 лет назад +3

      Holodomor, exactly this term is a modern neo-nazi propaganda. It says that starvation before WW2 was presented only in Ukraine, which is false. Starvation didn't take modern borders in account and many other territories were under a strike.
      Now if we are talking about those mass starvation cases, soviets indeed fucked up good there. But those event took place in the first half of 20th century. It's not very correct to extrapolate this event on a full time scale.

  • @mushikabuto387
    @mushikabuto387 7 лет назад

    Thank You so much for producing this Docu. It's a sorely under-discussed topic regarding gaming in the Eastern Bloc, where hardware was scarce but demand was just as high in the West. I hope you do one on Russia with that odd clone console!

  • @vianenhive
    @vianenhive 7 лет назад +57

    Somebody should show this at the GDC next time a developer says videogames can benefit from marxism.

    • @AlexanderUnit-731
      @AlexanderUnit-731 7 лет назад +6

      Sociology, history and political economy are based on marxism.

    • @goosegoose5361
      @goosegoose5361 7 лет назад +30

      Alexander Abdulov comment when you arent on drugs pham

    • @vianenhive
      @vianenhive 7 лет назад +17

      History? I would like to hear an explanation about that, its sounds rather unreasonable.

    • @deliciousdishes4531
      @deliciousdishes4531 7 лет назад +20

      Vianen E as both an art-form and an industry where innovation is key, video games CAN profit from marxism.
      Long story short: 1. "Rewarding" innovation monetarily is actually counter-productive and has shown to actually decrease meaningful innovation.
      2. If innovators and artists have to work to survive, they have less time to innovate or direct time and energy towards things they are more passionate about. This can work both in favor and against good games. We would definitely see more artsy games in a more marxist society (similar to east-block films being more artsy/more complex than hollywood films at the time - disregarding propaganda films on both sides), but maybe less success-driven games. Again, this could be good or bad, given your taste.

    • @sherwinparvizian2414
      @sherwinparvizian2414 7 лет назад

      Vianen E Can I get a link for that?

  • @devon-crain
    @devon-crain 7 лет назад +1

    George, this is super rad stuff. Thanks for another great upload!

  • @Thepajonk
    @Thepajonk 7 лет назад +10

    Venture capitalists :D Good call!

  • @95Andyyy
    @95Andyyy 6 лет назад

    I once went to the videogame museum from this video and I was really suprised by the existence of east german video games as well (born and raised in west Berlin)

  • @caligulacorday
    @caligulacorday 7 лет назад +17

    imagine what would have been possible for the East German programmers were it not for the onerous Western sanctions imposed on socialist countries!

    • @tumeg8282
      @tumeg8282 7 лет назад +14

      Imagine what would have happened to socialist economies if they had the benefit of the clear technological superiority produced by superior political systems

    • @Ultizer
      @Ultizer 7 лет назад +12

      imagine if Stalin didn't conquer half of Europe & left after they defeated Germany. East Germany would have never been oppressed in the first place.

    • @tlr9403
      @tlr9403 7 лет назад +2

      Gypsum Fantastic image the ussr had one of the best spacial programms and best militaries in the world oh wait

    • @tumeg8282
      @tumeg8282 7 лет назад +4

      Yeah sputnik was pretty cool. Too bad about all the slavery and genocides though.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 7 лет назад +1

      Gypsum Fantastic Uhhh you do know what the US was up to at that point? I mean the US still supports several states like Suadi Arabia that use slave labour and is literally founded on slavery and genocide.

  • @LordExutor
    @LordExutor 6 лет назад

    Hey superbunnyhop,
    I'm into games since around 15 years and I'm digging myself into that topic and everything thats surrounding it from the development itself, the technology behind it, its history, games that brought todays games into their shape and also the Marketing, so all the shit eA and Konami etc. are pulling of since around 4 years. They shall become my job... I haven't expected that anything about games could still surprise me that much after everything I thought I know about them. You showed me a side of the history of games and my home country from which I never thought that it even existed. The development of Games is a very unattended topic here in Germany because there are not much really big players or investments going on here, so seeing that part of games history just really impressed me.
    So, great and honest thanks for showing me this,
    Greetings from Germany

  • @MitsurugiR
    @MitsurugiR 7 лет назад +20

    And to think there a people who want to live in a socialist society, lmao.

    • @DRaGZ141
      @DRaGZ141 7 лет назад +6

      Gavin socialism is not communism. The UK is socialism. South Korea is socialism. Japan is socialism.

    • @sherwinparvizian2414
      @sherwinparvizian2414 7 лет назад +8

      Marvin Socialism is workers owning the means of production, none of the countries you mentioned fit that criterium.
      Gavin probably doesn't know the definition either.

    • @overlord165
      @overlord165 7 лет назад +1

      Yeah because living in Norway is so terrible

    • @DRaGZ141
      @DRaGZ141 7 лет назад +1

      Sherwin Parvizian yes they do, it's called government. And in those countries, the public definitely owns the government. The government is beholden to the needs of the people, not the other way around.
      In America, the government owns the public. The people are swayed to believe that the wants of the government are their needs as well. It's an oligarchy.
      Communism is if you also remake your economic system. But socialism in and of itself can coexist, uneasily, with capitalism, as demonstrated in tons of countries.

    • @isaacargesmith8217
      @isaacargesmith8217 7 лет назад

      No full -ism works. Full capitalism doesn't work jsut like how full socialism doesn't work. THat's why the US is msotyl capitalism but with elements of things such as socialism.

  • @lunarmartian3840
    @lunarmartian3840 5 лет назад

    Thank you for making this video. I was born in West Germany in 1991 so East Germany is this strange other world to me. I never experienced them being seperate, but I notice random influences throughout. Yet it is still a big mystery and this strange cross between german and Soviet culture, especially when it comes to day to day life and the entertainment. What is nuts is that there used to be a lot of hard core supporters who had been brainwashed to think that times used to be better (parents of some of my friends included) despite it obviously being much worse. Not so much nowadays, but back when I was a kid/teen.
    I do love hearing how secretive and creative people were in order to circumvent restrictions.

  • @ragequit_taco_gaming
    @ragequit_taco_gaming 7 лет назад +3

    Yo

  • @ShapeyFiend
    @ShapeyFiend 7 лет назад

    I visited that museum last year and they've got a lot of interesting things in there. Berlin is a fantastic destination in general. The food, beer and nightclubbing are next level.

  • @mariokarter13
    @mariokarter13 7 лет назад +5

    Marxism: Not even once.