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This has been a leading discussion forum for coin-operated videogames, pinball, and slot machines for over 20 years.
Re: what happened to the Killer List of Video Games?! Well, I for one would at least like to know what happened to KLOV. Could it also be like VAPS a few years ago and lose your online settings? Still shows miss info for my games in other areas.
I think the "Museum of the Game" (which sounds clunky/awkward as hell, imo) became more prevalent with the forum overhaul within the last year or so. Killer List of Videogames is listed as a registered trademark on the main klov.com landing page, so it would SEEM that the "right" people own it.
After scouring the Killer List and many of the forum posts, I have still been unable to identify a video game I played in the mid 80s (circa '84 - '86). Hope someone might recognize it. It was a standup, coin-op, arcade-style video game.
All previous versions of this list, including those posted on-line in rec.games.video.arcade.collecting (RGVAC), rec.games.video.arcade.marketplace (RGVAM), and the Killer List of Video Games (KLOV) website, remain the sole Copyrighted and intellectual property of L. Scott Caldwell.
A large list of all video games, with information about each one. It would be a lot of work, and would be quite massive. It would be one Killer List Of Videogames. All jokes aside though, the KLOV list needs some work.
Sep 7, 2015. #1. For reference I'm compiling a list of 6-button fighting games released in US arcades. Add any you can think of. Capcom Fighting Jam. Capcom vs Snk 1-2. Darkstalkers (Series) Fighter's History. Killer Instinct 1-2.
Killer Shark arcade game used in Jaws. (Universal, 1975) Vintage Killer Shark arcade game in original cabinet as seen in the beachside arcade on Amity Island in Steven Spielberg's horror classic. Released by SEGA in 1972, the game is one the earliest examples of a first person shooter, with players taking on the role of a diver firing harpoons ...
Spot Killer On-(from http://www.pinrepair.com/video/wg6100.htm) If the "spot killer" LED lights on the monitor's deflection board, this indicates there is a problem. First test the voltages going to the chassis-mounted large transistors (2N3716 and 2N3792).
I recently picked up Devil Zone from @Islandpirate (great guy to deal with BTW). This is my 3rd Universal Game (along with Cosmic Alien and Cosmic Avenger)...