The official channel for the hit documentary Insert Coin. Relive the glory of 90s video games and discover the people and secrets of your favorite games such as Mortal Kombat and NBA Jam.
Come back often to see what we have unearthed from your childhood, one quarter at a time!
What is he asking him? Is it if Lex can slam him on camera? Or if Sal Davita can slam him? Either way i think Yoko was protecting the biz a little bit if that's what i heard. He was agile as hell for a guy his size and I think he could at least get another hip toss out of Lex like he did aboard that ship in 93
Judging by Shawn's look, the shape he's in, and the fact that he has the IC belt I'd say this was filmed in July of 1995. By August he was losing the mullet look and turning full fledged babyface and before that he was kinda bloated (either from the steroids (which he got popped for) or too much drinking). Btw I always loved HBKs stomp in this game. Too bad there's no footage of it here. Op do you have any other footage of the other wrestler's filming. Id like to see Undertaker or Yokozuna especially. Also why the hell wasnt Owen Hart or the world champion Diesel in the game? Those are strange exclusions.
Man, seeing this just brought back all those awesome memories growing up in Chicago experiencing the arcade culture and atmosphere. The smells, the sounds, the sights and the friends we made and lost along the way. Good times.
6:28 You can see from the directory structure and naming that this is a windows machine "c:\windows". Mortal Kombat 3 was programmed in TMS assembly language while this program being compiled is in C++. It must be some type of internal tool to assist with game development. From the compile screen it looks like the name of the program being compiled is "mview.exe" 6:51 My questions are what version of windows is this? Windows 3.1? Also, what C++ compiler is that? I don't recognize the IDE. Is this Borland Turbo C++ or some version of Microsoft C++? Thanks to anyone who knows.
So are these the same programs you can use to edit these midway games like Mortal Kombat 3, 2 on 2 NHL open ice, wwf wrestlemania the arcade game and can TMS also work on ps1 games if, not what can work on psx iso files?
@@anticorporatists9959 Midway never worked directly on the ports of Mortal Kombat 2 or 3. That was done by Acclaim and other companies. Also, this is footage while the Arcade games are being developed. None of the ports to playstation were being simultaneously being developed while the original arcade games were being made. Also, TMS is a chipset made by Texas Instruments which is completely different from the chips that the playstation uses.
That's pretty classic moment where Sal Divita and Yoko are negotionating what Yoko is going to do for the camera. Can only wonder how much more footage is locked up. These guys were inventing the process on the fly and this was all still very cutting edge at the time- which is why they didn't have their plans of the moves on hand or props that the wrestlers were going to be interacting with.
I sense that there is an Insert Coin 2 coming at some point! Bought the documentary when it came out and could tell there is a quite a bit more to the story.
Not possible, this was not shooted on 35mm, only NTSC BetacamSP Tape with 480i Resolution and directly grabbed with the own capture cards, Targa or what ever was used.
@@VGSuite we can still scan them and it would be higher resolution than what was used at the time. 480i film of the animations would look beautiful on a HD platform
@@GamerGee Yes, its no problem to make a new digitizing from the 480i betacam analog tape in lossless quality and with high end deinterlacing and enhancing with AI to HD resolution or what ever, this will be look much better. But I meant that the footage was not recorded on 35mm with Panavisions Moviecams or Arri Cams, It was only recorded with a normal Sony broadcast TV cam in BetacamSP format in 480i, this was standard in the TV sector in this time.
@@indymudshow Actually, Brownback showed up in the local arcades around this time. I was 18 in 1996. He wasn't much younger, and he wasn't any good. I mostly remember him just playing Tekken 3.
I bought the doc on iTunes and keep coming to RU-vid for the extras. I love these behind the scenes videos of Midway. Got anything for the pinball side of Williams?
Well, if you watched the live premier like I did, it was in reference to how they were pretending/acting (aka faking) to do things and work to get shots for a promo video.