
By Daniel Conderman
“I don’t understand the fuss,” Grandma says, eyeing the shiny, sleek packaging of Spider-Man 2. “$70? You kids have it easy.”
She waves the game around like it’s evidence in a court case, and honestly—it might as well be. She has seen it all, from clunky joysticks with one red button to virtual worlds so realistic you’d swear they’re photographs.
“Back in 1983,” she recalls with a mischievous glint in her eye, “BurgerTime cost me nearly $40! That’s over $100 today. For what? Pixels chasing pixels!”
She isn’t wrong. Gaming has always been an expensive hobby. Flash back to those rainbow-striped aisles of Toys “R” Us, where dreams—and family budgets—went to test their limits. Games like Donkey Kong Jr. were priced at around $30, translating to nearly $90 today. Consoles like ColecoVision and Atari 5200 were groundbreaking at the time, but by modern standards, they’re quaint antiques.
“We were thrilled,” Grandma laughs, shaking her head. “Sure, the graphics were basic, the audio was just beeps and boops, but we didn’t care. It was ours. You’d master that game, show it off to your friends, and force your siblings to watch you beat the final level again.”
It wasn’t just entertainment—it was bragging rights, and those rights weren’t cheap.
Today’s gaming, though, offers a different kind of value. Grandma flips the Spider-Man 2 box over, marveling at the images on the back. She admits, grudgingly impressed, “I suppose your dollar does go further nowadays.”
She’s got a point. Modern gamers get expansive worlds, rich storytelling, lifelike visuals, and endless multiplayer adventures. Services like Xbox Game Pass offer dozens of games for a monthly fee, something unimaginable when Grandma had to budget $20 for “The Empire Strikes Back,” where gameplay involved little more than maneuvering pixelated squares.
But the true value, Grandma insists, isn’t just graphics or game length. “It’s always been about joy, about being transported somewhere magical, even if that magic was just a bunch of blinking squares on the family TV.”
She sighs, her eyes softening with nostalgia. “Maybe that’s why we happily paid $111 for BurgerTime. Panic and laughter were priceless.”
So, is gaming expensive today? Sure. But Grandma wants you to remember this:
“You’re not just paying for a game. You’re investing in memories. Trust me—one day you’ll look back and think $70 was a small price for the joy it brought.”
Wise words from someone who’s been there, done that, and still thinks River Raid deserves every penny.