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Guest Column: A Life in Video Game Holidays

Guest columnist Mike Drucker reminisces about holidays past, and what video games meant to him growing up.

Now to spend six months only playing this game.
Now to spend six months only playing this game.

What did people give for presents before video games? I know that some people still don't want to receive and/or give video games for Christmas or Hanukkah or birthdays. I know that, but it doesn't make sense. Video games are expensive, you usually have more than you need, and your grandparents will invariably get you the wrong one.

They are the perfect gifts.

Even now, when I'm an adult who makes human money for job work, I get excited by Christmas. I'll literally buy games on sale and order Amazon gift wrap so they feel more special. That's not cute or healthy. It's really lonely and really sad and really the yearning this season gives me for the holidays.

My parents were never really rich. Scratch that, my mother grew up dirt poor in Chicago, and my father grew up in middle class Iowa. My mom always dreamed of providing the happy Christmas her family never had, and my Dad, a non-religious Jewish kid who--again--grew up in Iowa, just wanted a chance to join the fun.

My parents did this, but with boxes.
My parents did this, but with boxes.

When they had kids, my parents wanted to create a magical holiday experience for their kids. Unfortunately, because they were broke, those experiences had to be "sweetened" a bit. Small gifts would be put in a slightly bigger box, which itself was inside an even slightly bigger box. Decorations would be handmade by my mom. And video games would be treated like nitroglycerin, only to be handed out very carefully.

Maybe it's the expensive nature of games that, as a kid, made them feel so valuable. Kids don't really understand high-priced gifts that aren't electronic. If you gave me a nice cookware set as a kid, I would've been an asshole. I know this because when I was a kid, I got a nice cookware set and I was an asshole.

I mean, I really was a piece of crap about that cookware set. My parents thought it would help me lose weight to learn to cook for myself. I thought this was freaking Christmas and I had cleaned the house for grandma, so maybe make good on the freaking games.

That ungrateful piece of shit child just wanted games. Always. Give a child a toy for Christmas, and they'll play for a day and then get it broken by their bully, Elliot. Give a child a video game for Christmas, and they'll play for the rest of their lives and Elliot will be really nice about it because he also wants to play Mortal Kombat II.

I always knew my parents were buying the games because Santa had my mom's scribble handwriting.
I always knew my parents were buying the games because Santa had my mom's scribble handwriting.

Video games were aspirational life changers for me when I was a kid. They weren't something to do after school or a fun way to kill time after chores. They were the reason to put up with school and family and bullies. This isn't a new thought; I know I'm not the first sad kid to express this nostalgia for bad times. But it is why the holidays felt so big.

When you're a kid during the holidays (and birthdays and bar mitzvahs and bat mitzvahs and not-confirmation, because all I got was a Precious Moments doll), you can just ask for video games. You make a list! You look over the year of games you couldn't afford and never dreamed of having and say, "Yes! F-Zero will change my life for the better!"

It was almost like going to a casino. There was a great chance you'd get Yoshi's Island or Sonic & Knuckles. But there was also a chance you'd get Bubsy and that was the game you'd have to play (checks watch) forever. And your status in the local friend community could be made or broken on that game. Elliot hated Bubsy.

It's an animal in a t-shirt! He'll love it!
It's an animal in a t-shirt! He'll love it!

I recognize that I'm nostalgic from a time when my parents struggled, and I had to bribe a bully to not punch me in the face with video games. I know, I know. But I do miss the sense that this was the time of the year to get new games. Not because they were on sale or, you know, just coming out. Because it was the only chance I'd have to actually get a new game.

And then it stopped. We get older. We get jobs. We can't throw a fit if someone gets us clothes. Although, really? Clothes? This is the time for that? You have the chance to buy me anything that matches who I am and you choose to change me? I refuse! Only I can pick out the right clothes resting between XL and XXL. You don't know me!

Now we can buy games for ourselves and that's its own kind of great. It's nice to be able to buy Final Fantasy XV for myself without worrying my mom will get confused by, let's be honest, a really weird title. Having control is better than having no control. Unless this is Final Fantasy XV, which thinks "having control" while driving is the same thing as not. It's my only big complaint on what is otherwise a fine adventure.

At the same time, we can't lose sight of that magic. We can't forget how special games really are. When you're in the middle of making them, writing about them, or obsessively playing them, it's easy to forget how magical they once seemed, or fret that the magic is gone. It's not. Games are better than they've ever been, and I should know because I said so and this is my space so suck it. Also, Bubsy. Bubsy sucked.

I know I should be saying that video games aren't important and that the holidays are about giving and togetherness. But video games are important and togetherness sucks. Any of you want to hang out with me? No? Then I don't want to hear anymore about it.

Remember what it was like to tear open boxes as a kid? Remember that intense, borderline violent expression of joy? I do.
Remember what it was like to tear open boxes as a kid? Remember that intense, borderline violent expression of joy? I do.

No, I'm kidding. Obviously the togetherness mattered. The feeling of eager gratefulness. The show-off joy of having something that the richer kids did not, if even for a slight moment. That all came from wanting to play games with and show games to other people. The escapism was good, but the sense that the world was good is better.

I don't eagerly tear open boxes anymore. As my family members (and some friends) have died, the opening of gifts has grown slower and more careful. I don't really want to get to the prize inside. Why would I? My Christmas list is now a B-team of old games and books on sale that my parents can afford. I just want to keep that experience in my hands before it disappears.

Instead, I buy the games for people now. I find the experiences people would like and help them escape for a little while. I introduced my sister to Telltale games. I got my brother into XCOM. Last year, I installed Dosbox on my dad's computer so he could play Super Tetris for the first time in 20 years. He didn't leave his office all day and since the door was open, I knew he wasn't masturbating. Did I need to explain that last part? Probably not.

That childhood magic of games still exists. I just can't approach it the same way anymore. Games are expensive for a kid, but cheap for an adult. Instead, I have to try to give a little bit of that magic back to the people who gave it to me. Giving is good and maybe I can get people to have that wellspring of joy I had, even for a minute.

Also, I really want Dishonored 2.

Mike Drucker is a Giant Bomb contributor and co-head writer for “Bill Nye Saves the World,” coming to Netflix in 2017. He's also written for The Tonight Show, Nintendo, The Onion, and SNL. He also co-hosts the podcasts, “How To Be a Person” and “The Room Where It's Happening.” You can follow him on Twitter @mikedrucker and watch him on Twitch under the surprising name “MikeDrucker.”

Mike Drucker on Google+

22 Comments

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Bribbins

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Great read. My wife rolls her eyes when I buy games for our younger family members, but, for someone without much disposable income who loves to play, they are the best gifts.

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katpottz

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Awesome write up! (My favorite yet). I find that I don't tend to ask for video games anymore for Christmas, to be honest I find it hard to tell people what I want at all for Christmas. Makes me realize as I grow up that the things I want are beyond what material possessions can bring me.

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rebellion91

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Edited By rebellion91

This is basically my childhood Christmas story written by a person that knows how to convert text into actual emotions and nostalgia. This is a very good article. I just bought a 2DS, Zelda: A Link Between Worlds, Pokemon Moon, and Mario Kart for my soon-to-be nephew in law. I hope he loves it.

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KorgothOfBarbaria

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Mike, for the love of Zardoz, don't ever stop writing guest columns for GB.

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Colonel_Pockets

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Good stuff as always.

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PeezMachine

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Games received as gifts help create that unique game landscape for folks. I probably never would have bought The Neverhood for myself, and I know it's got a lot of major problems, but I received it as a gift when I was kid, so it was The Game I Played until something else came along. Who else grew up playing that and Tony La Russa Baseball 2 and Hoyle Card Games and Civilization 2? Gifts given by people who had never played a PC game in their life, and as such exposed me to games of all types of genres and quality. And someone else received different gifts from different folks with no clue and has their own patchwork game history, and that's just so rad to me.

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sonofa2

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Great article Mike. My niece and nephew aren't old enough to get into games yet, so I haven't resorted to getting them hooked yet, but give it anther year or two. I can't wait to see the smile on their faces when that day comes. I remember my sister and I having the same reaction as the N64 opening you showed in your article (seeing that put a smile on my face).

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deactivated-5f39c75856922

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@sonofa2 said:

Great article Mike. My niece and nephew aren't old enough to get into games yet, so I haven't resorted to getting them hooked yet, but give it anther year or two. I can't wait to see the smile on their faces when that day comes. I remember my sister and I having the same reaction as the N64 opening you showed in your article (seeing that put a smile on my face).

My uncle got me my first game system (an NES) and it is probably the best gift I have ever gotten.

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sonofa2

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@floydeo: The NES was always just there in my memory (alongside the intelivision. I remember getting the SNES and being pumped to play super Mario world and the new Zelda (ended up being A Link to the Past). The N64 though.... I swear I reacted like that kid in the video.

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Judoboy

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Yes, as I approach 30 I find myself becoming more nostalgic and can relate to all of this. Video games were cherished then. I asked for WoW:Legion for Xmas this year and realized that WoW has been around for almost half of my life. I can't deny I'm drawn to that world for nostalgia, especially logging on during the holidays. Growing up there were only a handful of occasions when I could ask for a $50 game so I naturally played the crap out of them. And like music, I can think of certain games that capture an important phase or moment of my life. That happens less so now. I find myself trying to slow down try to get into that child-like mindset. Trying to focus on the games I'm currently playing instead of always looking to the future. I don't know, it's a reflective time of year I suppose which brings those bittersweet feels.

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Poppduder

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Lord_Anime

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I mean, I really was a piece of crap about that cookware set

nice raw write up about the magic of games during the Holidays

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hassun

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Edited By hassun

I think every video game I ever got as a present was chosen by me.

Probably for the best.

I have taken to gifting people games on Steam though.

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Dray2k

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Great read, hope you and everyone else reading this have a great holiday!

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Darth_Navster

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Outstanding read Mike. Video games truly do make the best gifts. If I had to rank my childhood memories, opening up a new console would probably take up a significant portion of my top ten. Perhaps it's consumerism run amok, but it's special to me all the same.

And you know what? All that crap people say about it being better to give than to receive? It's true, and doubly so for video games. I recall buying Professor Layton and the Curious Village for my niece nearly ten years ago when she was nine. A bright kid who loved a good story, I knew that the game would be perfect for her, and I was right. Ten years later, she's still taking her 3DS to college to play the latest Layton game. It still puts a smile on my face to think about that.

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bathala

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Great read.

When I was a kid my family was poor too and I only get to play video games at video game cafes. This was the 16 bit era. Didn't get my own console until Donkey Kong Country came out

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DrJonez

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Edited By DrJonez

Man, what I'd give for a time machine to go back to those days :/

Didn't know Drucker had moved on from The Tonight Show. Cool to see he's working with Bill Nye :)

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bavelb

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My wife bought me a WiiU with NSMB and SM3D world christmas 2014. That warped me back to those days where the only shot at a new gameboy game was the holidays. Nothing says christmas like a new Nintendo game.

Come to think....to this day I tend to (re)play a mario or zelda during the holidays, and I just bought megaman legacy edition to play the coming week....I just never linked it to nostalgia untill this article.

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billyok

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Edited By billyok

This feeling never leaves. I still look at even the most common and worthless (S)NES game pak as more valuable than the most lavish $60 game on the market today. I buy my girlfriend's kid Genesis games that cost a buck each and it feels more exciting than when I buy myself something brand new.

Games are amazing now and I regularly lament how disposable they sometimes feel as result of both adulthood making them easy to attain and the marketplace opening the floodgates and putting games everywhere, making them attainable with a few clicks or taps, and providing so many opportunities for the prices to drop so hard that people regularly buy games on sale with no immediate or even near-term intention of playing them.

If you told me it'd be like this as a kid, I'd flip out with excitement, and yet I regularly miss the mystique a new game had when I was a kid and new games didn't come around nearly as often as they now do.

Thank you for this, Mike.

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steveurkel

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Growing up nearly every christmas my parents somehow got me every thing that I wanted I don't know how they did but sure enough my birthday boom Mortal Kombat, another birthday boom Mortal Kombat 2. Christmas one year? id Anthology and lets just say I played at least 2000+ hours of quake ever since I opened that package in the mid 90s.

One christmas under my tree was 2 gifts. Wrapped very obviously like computer games. I open them up. Command & Conquer and Warcraft 2. I still remember where the tree was. The smell of the house. This was one of the best "wins" for a parent ever because how do you buy for a teenager who wants nothing and has the internet?

How the hell did my parents know? Neither of them EVER played a video game and I didn't just run around with a list stapled to my back side saying "buy me what will change my life forever".

This year, I got a selfie stick and a whole bunch of winter clothes and winter boots because last time I stepped on the ice I was staring straight in the sky half second later going "fuck ice".

I don't want video games, or clothes, or anything to be honest. I just want the people I love to still be around, but that is too much of a miracle for even St. Nick since they only exist in memories and fading pictures.

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kdenicolo

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I literally was the N64 kid. Fucking greatest Christmas ever. Got Mario 64, Mario Kart 64, and Mario Golf all in one day... So much wonder

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Amducious

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Again, a brilliant article Mike. I loved it.

For me, I didn't get video games for Christmas mainly due to me being an old git so it was toy cars and when I was 12 I received the greatest Xmas gift, a TCR racing set (plastic track with little cars that zoomed around). Had hours of fun until my stupid extended family burnt it out on boxing day.

C'est la vie.