Home » Not Since ‘Ready Player One’ Has A Company So Effectively Made Me Feel Weird About Video Game Nostalgia

Not Since ‘Ready Player One’ Has A Company So Effectively Made Me Feel Weird About Video Game Nostalgia

Rr Retro Top

There are certain kinds of nostalgia that I am an absolute sucker for, no question. I’m not proud of this, but it’s something I’ve accepted about myself. As a particular type of Gen Xer who benefited/suffered a good amount of the kind of parental inattention endemic to my generation, my sweet spot for nostalgia is probably the late ’70s to late ’80s.

This era corresponds with the rise of the first home computers and video game consoles and video game arcades, all of which were big influences on my young life and sense of aesthetics. As a result, I have a special fondness for old 8-bit-era computers and video games, and the compromises and limitations inherent to those media formats helped to form visual vocabulary that feels like home to me.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

As a result, in addition to obsessing over cars, I also obsess over old retro tech, which I collect and incorporate into my artwork and pretty much cram into any situation I think I can get away with it. Like how I use old ’80s-era Apple II computers to make member perks for the site, for example. And look at all the crap I’m hoarding in my basement:

So, yeah, I think it’s safe to say I’m going to pay attention to almost anything that is categorized as 8-bit retro whatever. Again, I’m not proud, but there it is.

Rr Retro Front

That’s why when I saw that Rolls-Royce, the well-known builder of affordable commuter cars (if my understanding is correct), announced the “first-ever Bespoke Rolls-Royce inspired by vintage video game culture” I was, of course, curious. The car is called the Black Badge Ghost Gamer, the name taken from Rolls-Royce’s Black Badge bespoke division, and the model is the Ghost, and you know, Gamer because video games. Here’s what Rolls’ press release has to say about the car:

Rolls-Royce unveils Black Badge Ghost Gamer: a Bespoke commission inspired by the 8-bit universe of vintage video games. Created for a client with a deep passion for early arcade culture, this nostalgic motor car incorporates intricately crafted references to the dawn of gaming. Coded with details including a hand-painted ‘Cheeky Alien’ exterior Coachline motif, ‘Player One’ seat embroidery, ‘Pixel Blaster’ Starlight Headliner, a unique ‘Laser Base’ Illuminated Fascia, and a hidden cache of joystick-era Easter eggs, the discovery of every feature turns the motor car itself into a stunningly crafted game.

Now, I’m delighted to see people making cars their own, and if you have the money, why not get yourself a Rolls-Royce customized to represent concepts and art and culture that resonates with you, and if that means early video games, fantastic.

But there’s something about the whole execution of this thing that just feels, I don’t know, kind of, well, half-assed. Maybe a little cynical. It feels like the most expensive manifestation of an 8-bit themed sticker kit, and I say this as someone who once owned this truck:

That was just a bunch of 8-bit invader stickers, but I suspect I paid the equivalent of several mansions and a kidney less than whatever this Black Badge Ghost Gamer Cost.

Here’s a Rolls-Royce video of some of the 8-bit inspired design incorporated into this thing:

Okay, so let’s get into what this has. There’s a two tone paint job, “the main body in Salamanca Blue and the upper body in deep-shimmer Crystal over Diamond Black,” according to Rolls-Royce. And on this paint are some little pixellated alien guys painted into the pinstriping, along with some little explosions:

Rr Retro Paint

And, okay, cute, whatever. The hand-painters did a good job making consistently-sized pixels, at least.

Rr Retro Headliner

The illuminated headliner, which normally has a starry sky pattern, is a very cool modern Rolls-Royce trademark (the kind of thing that would require you to spend well over $100 on Amazon to emulate) has been modified to be more like a Space Invaders-type scene, with alien ship blocks and moving laser blasts. That’s fun.

Rr Retro Intrear

The seats also have PLAYER 1-4 embroidered on them in a pixellated font, and there’s some arcade cabinet side art-type of imagery on the “waterfall” between the rear seats, featuring an alien horizon and some flying saucers.

Rr Retro Pressstart

The thresholds have little 8-bit-era phrases like PRESS START and LEVEL UP and INSERT COIN, again in an 8-bit pixel-visible typeface.

Rr Retro Dash

The dashboard’s ambient illumination includes a dimensional, first-person-flying-through-space/Windows screensaver-type starfield and a low-resolution spaceship around the name GHOST, too.

Rr Retro Table

And, finally, the rear seat snackables tray has another little pixellated alien on it.

Sure, all these things are fun, and I’m sure the quality of materials and craftsmanship is incredible, but at the same time, they’re all a little, I don’t know, boring? Phoned-in? Half-assed? There’s nothing wrong with it, but let’s remember, a Rolls-Royce Black Badge Bespoke customized car can cost between $500,000 and $600,000 easily. This car is almost certainly somewhere in that half-a-million range. And this is all that they can do?

I mean, hell, when we were prepping our $800, $375,000 mile taxi, I installed a real 8-bit Atari computer system in the back to play games. And that cost me about $40, maybe. You know what that kid up there is doing that you can’t do in that Rolls-Royce? Playing Frogger on a real 8-bit machine that’s integrated right into the car. For close to half a million dollars less.

Rolls-Royce couldn’t have done something like that? They couldn’t have been a little more creative here, integrated a few more clever things or interactive elements or some real vintage hardware in there? Of course they could have.

Instead, they just slapped some 8-bit-era-looking stuff onto an expensive car, in much the same way that the book and movie Ready Player One just kind of took 1980s culture and 8-bit era aesthetics and references and just shoveled it into a flimsy plot and characters so thin that they have the proportions of Steak-ums and called it a day.

Ready Player One was obsessive about ’80s pop culture and video games, but it was all handled in a sort of hoarder’s mentality. The book and movie seemed to be focused on just cramming as many references and trivia about the era as possible into every bit of dialogue and exposition, but without any real appreciation or understanding. It’d be like ordering everything on the menu of a Michelin-star restaurant and having it all mixed up in a bucket, Mr.Creosote-style.

Now, if our unnamed wealthy patron that commissioned this thing had really wanted to make something incredible, they could have bought a Rolls-Royce Ghost and spent what would likely be a lot less money by getting some actual artists to modify the car with all the 8-bit goodness they wanted.

I know many artists who work in the retro video game genre, and many talented engineers and builders who absolutely could have made something far more interesting than what we see here. Sure, Rolls-Royce made a one-off car, but somehow they managed to make a one-off car feel like a mass-produced theme package at the same time.

I love the idea of this car, but I can’t help but be disappointed by the concepts and execution, which I know could have been so much better in the hands of independent real artists who really know this genre. I think whoever this secret rich retro video game lover is, they should, just in the interests of healthy competition, buy some more affordable but still swanky car, maybe a Genesis G70 or something, and then take, oh, $100,000 and go to some artists and builders and tell them to make an 8-bit-era tribute car.

I’m pretty certain they’d get something that would kick this overpriced nostalgia-pandering Rolls off the high score screen.

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Grey alien in a beige sedan
Member
Grey alien in a beige sedan
2 months ago

Because all the kids are driving RR’s these days…

GhosnInABox
GhosnInABox
2 months ago

This is how Billy Mitchell arrives at Funspot. Blasting Tears for Fears’ “Everybody Wants to Rule the World”, of course.

Jakob K's Garage
Jakob K's Garage
2 months ago

Yo dawg 😀

It makes sense for just that one person who ordered it.
It is just as good (or bad) as a Hello Kitty themed old Corolla.

If he (or she…) was old money, they would just have kept it private and not leaked it to the press though.

-And my kids love RP1, so I have learned to see the qualities of it..

Last edited 2 months ago by Jakob K's Garage
Sissyfoot
Sissyfoot
2 months ago

I thought Ready Player One was…fine. But his second book, Armada, was awful.

FndrStrat06
FndrStrat06
2 months ago
Reply to  Sissyfoot

Ready Player Two was even worse.

First Last
Member
First Last
2 months ago

This would be such an awesome Autopian project, to get some real artists and build a real 8-bit tribute car.

Jonathan Hendry
Jonathan Hendry
2 months ago

I’m just happy it isn’t Nintendo stuff, which I have no emotional connection to. We didn’t have one and i was more of an Atari era kid.

Shooting Brake
Member
Shooting Brake
3 months ago

I mean come on, they should at least get a Genesis G80 or 90? If they’ve got this kinda cash might as get the more usable back seat. But that’s us thinking like poors. The point isn’t the car, or the gaming, or even the execution of the idea. The point is that they had enough money to blow on having RR make this thing for them in the first place.

MAX FRESH OFF
Member
MAX FRESH OFF
3 months ago
Reply to  Shooting Brake

Are you talking about making some sort of Sega Genesis?

Mark Tucker
Mark Tucker
3 months ago

The book Ready Player One was enjoyable, but the movie was an abomination. There’s a second book, Ready Player Two (of course). It is… not good.

Balloondoggle
Member
Balloondoggle
3 months ago
Reply to  Mark Tucker

My favorite part of the movie was seeing the police driving Nissan Leafs.

Jack Trade
Member
Jack Trade
3 months ago
Reply to  Mark Tucker

And the book actually delves a little into the oldschool scifi thing the movie almost totally ignores, the makeup of the dystopian society that makes spending one’s life online preferable for many.

Jb996
Member
Jb996
2 months ago
Reply to  Mark Tucker

The book was good, definitely more about the dystopian society aspects in it.

The movie was just fun, that’s all it was meant to be. I get that it was ALOT on the nostalgia, and no, it wasn’t Shawshank Redemption, but it wasn’t supposed to be; and I thought it was a fun way to spend 2 hours.

Thea Utopian
Thea Utopian
3 months ago

“Created for a client with a deep passion for early arcade culture”
So you starting this website finally pays off, huh? 😉

Emil Minty
Emil Minty
3 months ago
Reply to  Thea Utopian

Not enough attention paid to the tail lights.

Grippy Caballeros
Grippy Caballeros
3 months ago

A shit idea well-executed is still a shit idea.

Hangover Grenade
Hangover Grenade
2 months ago

I think this is the opposite: A good idea shit-executed.

Michael Beranek
Member
Michael Beranek
3 months ago

When they made Ready Player One, they thought-spiked my brain and mined out all of the 80s nostalgia. It was like they made the damn movie just for me.

GhosnInABox
GhosnInABox
2 months ago

I want to see the movie where classic game characters wage war on that blasted Minecraft world. Implode that casino world for good measure too.

It's Fine
Member
It's Fine
3 months ago

I refuse to believe the pinstripe bits are hand-painted. Those look like decals all day. Otherwise, the paint is holding some pretty sharp corners in the z-axis, which is impressive if true.

Vanagan
Member
Vanagan
3 months ago
Reply to  It's Fine

Yeah. I can tell those are not hand painted. Unless they used a stencil. Definitely an applique or decal.

Cerberus
Member
Cerberus
3 months ago
Reply to  It's Fine

Looks like it was masked off with tape, especially with the little bit of green bleed onto the black on the alien head.

Joregon
Member
Joregon
3 months ago

It’s odd RR even featured this particular one-off. It looks super meh.

Boulevard_Yachtsman
Member
Boulevard_Yachtsman
3 months ago

“rear seat snackables tray”

I really enjoy how swiftly you’re able to eviscerate the general pretentiousness of a Rolls interior, Torch.

As to nostalgia, this isn’t it. I’d be much more nostalgic for a video-game themed car being a rock-solid nine-passenger Ford LTD station wagon with a table-top Pac-man or Galaga game custom mounted in the rear.

For maximum effectiveness the rest of the interior would need to be covered in 70’s wood paneling smelling vaguely of Marlboro smoke, Miller High Life, and the promise of a really tasty sausage and onion pizza arriving right after the last quarter is spent.

Jack Trade
Member
Jack Trade
2 months ago

Not to mention a time when “playing video games” meant you actually went somewhere to do it. I think kids of our era got much of our cardio from riding our bikes to the arcade.

Boulevard_Yachtsman
Member
Boulevard_Yachtsman
2 months ago
Reply to  Jack Trade

That’s a good point – it was 9 blocks via BMX bike from my house to the convenience store. Not to mention all the lawns mowed to get the quarters in the first place. I remember the eqauation well enough: 1 lawn = 5 dollars = 20 quarters = 1 soda + 1 hour at the MiniMart

Stryker_T
Member
Stryker_T
3 months ago

willing to bet that there was no way they were going to be able to realistically license the actual 8-bit characters, marks and equipment for this, so they had to just do generic ones, and them being generic is why you get that weird feeling.

DialMforMiata
Member
DialMforMiata
3 months ago

Torch, your take on both RPO and this car are absolutely correct and go a long way toward making up for your shameless intra-vehicular consumption of chicken nuggets.

D-dub
Member
D-dub
3 months ago

Part of the half-assed feeling is due to the lack of actual video game references. I guess they just couldn’t afford to license the Pac Man ghosts for their 8 bit Ghost.

Emil Minty
Emil Minty
3 months ago

The pixelated theme on the Hyundai Ioniq 5 is so much cooler and better done as a nod to the eight bit era. It’s an overall great design.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
3 months ago

Having watched videos of hand-painted pinstriping, I can’t imagine how skilled you’d be doing blocks if that was all done freehand.

Dottie
Member
Dottie
3 months ago

This ride is for the final boss of the nepo baby streamers, but wow that headliner is really cool.

Sid Bridge
Member
Sid Bridge
3 months ago

This has “rich guy prank” written all over it.

His next call was to a Russian Jeweler to commission a Faberge Egg version of Pac-Man.

Nlpnt
Member
Nlpnt
3 months ago

The thing with hiring actual artists to third party customize a Rolls is it’s kind of…Bhagwan Rajneesh, isn’t it?

Remember him, the guy who gave “You have died of dysentery on the Oregon Trail” literal meaning?

Last edited 3 months ago by Nlpnt
ChefCJ
ChefCJ
3 months ago

This is the future you get when you let Pimp my Ride happen. Thanks Xzibit

Michael Beranek
Member
Michael Beranek
3 months ago
Reply to  ChefCJ

This is what happens when R-R goes rogue and gets wasted on Red Bulls and absinthe.

Bleeder
Member
Bleeder
2 months ago

Did someone say Rogue? Rolls Royce Rogue badge-engineering edition!

Michael Beranek
Member
Michael Beranek
2 months ago
Reply to  Bleeder

Does JC Whitney sell RR grilles for Rogues like they used to for Beetles?

GhosnInABox
GhosnInABox
2 months ago

Coming soon to an Infiniti dealer near you.

Ash78
Ash78
3 months ago

This is oddly gross and sickening in a weird way. It’s like the overall Nostalgia Trend turned up to 11…but if you look at the gamer/coder/phreaker subcultures of the 70s and 80s, they were kind of the antithesis of everything Rolls Royce was (and is).

Might as well have a Sex Pistols-themed Bentley or something. With patented Sid Viscous™ rear differential.

Goof
Goof
3 months ago

Game over, maaaaaan. Gaaame over!

Goof
Goof
3 months ago
Reply to  Goof

Too late to edit, apparently. Rolls buyers have changed. A lot.

Back in my day (I’m younger than Torch by a fair bit) you didn’t get super showy and cringe with your Rolls. The Bentley is what’s meant to be parked out front, the Rolls is what’s hidden well behind the gate you can’t get past. Rolls Royces are named after ephemeral, ethereal, temporary things for a reason.

”Wait — was that a Rolls Royce?” That was the whole point.

— ——

A week ago I saw a street parked Dawn. Muted yellow with a dark espresso brown top. I assume closing a deal on some tenement that was for sale. Driveway, but not in it, instead on one of the busier streets in the city.

To me, that was where I didn’t get it. Colors are one thing, but having it street parked on such a busy street was someone absolutely flexing that they have a Rolls.

Data
Data
3 months ago
Reply to  Goof

Maybe we can build a fire, sing a couple of songs, huh?

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