http://www.nms.ac.uk/national-museum-of ... e-masters/"
We knew it'd be poor in any case so thought it'd be more fun to be all flippant, neglect the games list and just go in blind for some good old fashioned pre internet surprise disappointment - list here:
http://www.nms.ac.uk/national-museum-of ... ble-games/"
The gift shop should've been warning enough as it was dominated by Angry Birds and Minecraft Merchandise. The friendly host girl at the entrance asked us if we were big gamers so we both cringed a bit, toed the line and said yes. She asked what games we liked and I muttered something about Street Fighter 2. She feigned some excitement before asking if we'd ever played Streets of Rage

The arcade section had about 15 woodies, a couple of which were out of order and others with wobbly screen burn monitors. I had a couple of goes on Xevious, Elevator Action and Donkey Kong but spent most of my time on 2P Virtua Fighter which had a purple monitor which badly needed degaussed.
The console section had a few good games running on the proper hardware although Nintendo stuff like Super Mario and Ocarina of Time had a NES and N64 sitting in a display case under the monitors but were actually running on Wiis. I fancied a quick go on Nights into Dreams but the Saturn had frozen

I played a bit of Parappa before I left but there were no headphones so it was pretty pointless

Chat from developers was via tablet and headphones attached to poles so I never bothered. I'm sure the same vids are available on YouTube.
Entry was a tenner

To be fair I think it's more geared towards kids whose parents don't know any better really.
