Macedonian Video Game History - My Slavic Christmas Holiday Retro Gaming Memories from the Balkans

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 1 ม.ค. 2025

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  • @dozerfan1979
    @dozerfan1979 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Great video! Loved learning about all of this

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  7 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Thanks, that means a lot. There's practically nothing online on Macedonia's gaming history and I don't want to just make an informative video and recite it, I'd rather tell these stories as I personally was experiencing them and through my experiences and stories people will also learn our gaming history.

  • @MaximumRD
    @MaximumRD 20 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา +1

    Great video and story/history! Thanks for sharing!

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  20 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา +1

      So happy you enjoyed it, friend, thanks

  • @benstylus
    @benstylus วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    My goodness, this video is a treasure trove. Thank you so much for sharing. Always so cool to see more countries' gaming history

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  วันที่ผ่านมา

      Thank YOU for watching it! This video has the worst viewer retention of all my videos but it seems everyone who watched it through loved it, so thanks a ton, bud.

  • @jpzuri
    @jpzuri 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    nice, brother! greetings from Brazil

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  7 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Thank you so much! Brazilian gaming history is incredible.

  • @rantsolot
    @rantsolot 4 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Fire content here, it's so cool that you had games like Sonic 3 & Ristar back then, those are 2 of my favorite games of all time. I know the post-Yugoslav years were quite tumultuous for many living in the Balkans, it's very touching that you have such warm reminiscences of childhood back then. It's also so cool learning about Soviet LCD games from the 80s. I'm obsessed with Soviet & Yugoslav era so this was incredibly interesting for me.
    Also, love the music choices here, the vibe and editing is so well-crafted.

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  4 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      So glad you enjoyed the video :)
      When it comes to games, we had absolutely everything.
      Dragon Quest III and TwinBee have "Christmas" like music by default :)
      Also the 90's in Macedonia were great, we peacefully separated from Yugoslavia so there was no issues here, some internal squabbling sure and the economy wasn't the best but it wasn't anything awful at all. Many of us remember the 90's very fondly. Sadly Serbia, Croatia and such had to deal with that war and everything, so much tragedy there, but Macedonia during the 90's was pretty good.

  • @K9arcade
    @K9arcade 17 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา +1

    Really glad that I found this channel. This is a question that crosses my mind very regularly as I'm fascinated with the tech-side of the history in eastern europe, particularly Makedonija. I try to archive various retro arcades around the world but whenever i ask a macedonian, 9 times out of ten they tell me "sto e toa?" XD so I normally don't get far.
    Thanks for the video, and Srekna Nova Godina! 🎆✝

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  16 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Wait, wait wait, this makes no sense, Macedonians are asking you what arcades are? Buddy, we had at least 1 usually 2-3 arcades PER Neighborhood here in the 80's and 90's, chuck full of the latest arcade games both bootleg and original. Many Macedonians know them as Flippers (Fliperi) not Arcades tho. How old were these Macedonians who didn't know what arcades were?
      Arcades were so big here in Yugoslavia and Macedonia throughout the 80's and 90's that even kids who weren't nerds or into gaming would hang out at the arcades and play games. I guess if the folks you talked to are in their 20's/early 20's they don't remember arcades, but we had arcades until the 2000's here tho they were really booming in the 80's and 90's.
      Please get back to me on this when you can as I find it odd that Macedonians wouldn't know what arcades are. Cadillacs and Dinosaurs was known as Mustafa here, there's no way they haven't played Mustafa at the "Fliperi" lol I dunno what else to say.
      EDIT: Oh right, I got carried away because I find this subject too important not to nerd out over it I forgot to thank you for watching and enjoying the video, so thanks a ton :D

    • @K9arcade
      @K9arcade 4 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      @@GamingPalOllieMK That's ok I probably didn't word my story well, basically I asked some youngsters but also some much older macedonians that likely would've known them as fliperi yes. Not sure if their generation enjoyed video-games much.
      Awesome to know that there were booming arcades in the 80/90s because i only have seen 1 video on youtube of a guy playing some great games, and i've been to one arcade in skopje. Was just hoping that there's more out there in present day but so far not much luck :/
      Looking forward to watching more videos

  • @IvanSpaceBiker
    @IvanSpaceBiker 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I always play supersmash bros on the gamecube with my brother on christmas every year and make burritoes, we live in australia, its interesting hearing other peoples sense of meaningfulness of digital/virtual experiences.

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  7 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Nintendo systems are just made for christmas :) Smash is the perfect game for the holidays to play with siblings and cousins

  • @charlessmith8058
    @charlessmith8058 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Merry Christmas 🎅 from the USA 🇺🇸

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  7 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Merry Christmas, friend
      Ours isn't until January tho but thanks all the same :)

  • @jaimecavazos9090
    @jaimecavazos9090 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Hello Gaming Pal Ollie!!! Amazing video right there, I loved the millennial fair music , great footage of your city back in the day, great game history and gameplay. Thanks for share some of your thoughts, history and life as a gamer!! I’m from Mexico and we have something call “mercados” which is like a flea market , as you described in your video, people selling items in the streets or parks, with tents and tables; I don’t know how pricy games were in Masedonia, but at least in Mexico were kind of expensive until we got to the PS1-Xbox era , that’s where the ilegal game copies were around $20 pesos (like 2 dollars at that time ) but before, everything gaming related, was more expensive.
    I had a cousin that had a bootleg NES cassette with many games , and every Christmas I used to go to his home and play that :) great nostalgia moment right there :)
    Keep the good content coming Ollie !! Great work.

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Thanks, bud, this means a lot.
      I dunno for how long I can keep making videos before I have to get back to work :) but I will keep at it for as long as I can! Awesome comment, thanks man.

    • @jaimecavazos9090
      @jaimecavazos9090 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @ when you go back to work, we will wait patiently for you to come back with new videos, I am already subscribed with notifications, so as soon as you have a new video, I will be here first row to watch it !!

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@jaimecavazos9090 Well last time it took more than 5 years :) It's really not possible for me to do illustration AND make videos and have time for gaming.

    • @jaimecavazos9090
      @jaimecavazos9090 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      @@GamingPalOllieMK 5 years, that’s a lot of time, but no worries, we will always wait for you. Also, if there is any way to support your work following you in social media or other channels, I will definitely do it !!

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  9 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      @@jaimecavazos9090 thanks, bro, but no I don't want to turn this into an influencer thing, it's just a private channel for me to share my thoughts and feelings on gaming. I'm still going to be making videos for the forseeable future, at least until September so I should cover my favorite topics like VFD games, arcade games in Macedonia, I will talk about the positive effects piracy had on countries like mine and so on.

  • @jeromedado7416
    @jeromedado7416 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I luv famiclone, no struggle to connect on modern TV plus replaceable controller has unlike the Japanese Famicom. 😊

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I personally use the AV Famicom for both my original famicom and famiclone games nowadays, most famiclones are very low quality devices that break easily but the AV Famicom is sturdy and well made, very stable too. You can use standard NES controllers and it has regular controller ports, none of that built in nonsense.

    • @jeromedado7416
      @jeromedado7416 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      @@GamingPalOllieMK for 5$ dollars, it's was not a big deal.it's cheap, but it's works for me. I have 3 famiclone, the quality is not great, but it's really worth it for my daily used for more than 2 years now.! 😊

  • @GotroCode
    @GotroCode 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Good video make a video with some crt monitors and nostalgic games

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  6 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I mean all my videos are with CRTs and nostalgic games, or do you mean PC Specific? If so I have some stuff in mind I just need to figure out that set up first as I don't have much room for more CRTs. I even bought two CRT PC Monitors recently just for that purpose but they're in the building's basement for now, well packed and secured.
      I dunno when I'm going to get around to that, for now I stick to console games so we'll see.

  • @belstar1128
    @belstar1128 5 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    18:40 i had something similar but mine claimed it had 9999 games because they viewed every level and speed setting as its own game. Macedonia is a very interesting country i wonder what it was like seeing your country being founded in real time but i guess you were not old enough to care about such things yet. i used to wonder what the point of these bootleg games were since they just seemed like scams but now that i know Nintendo was not active in most of the world i realised they were very important .

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  5 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      I was 8 years old and at the risk of starting an all out Balkan Smash Bros brawl tournament here, I'll tell you that my country wasn't so much as founded but simply separated from Yugoslavia.
      There was never a time when I wasn't taught that we are Macedonian first and that we are simply a part of Yugoslavia like the other nationalities and countries/republics were.
      My grandparents and great grandparents had a very strong Macedonian identity, my great grandpa, my grandma's dad on my mom side was a teacher and very well educated. Both him and my great grandmother were identifying themselves as Macedonian as far back as they could remember. The same goes for my great grandparents on my dad's side albeit they weren't as highly educated they still held the same identity and values.
      Both sets of my grandparents clearly remember having gone through Bulgarian and Serbian time as they called it, depending on who occupied or took over our country at the time and having to specifically learn both languages during these times at school. Our languages are similar but they're different enough that they still had to actually sit down and properly learn them.
      So for me and many others, Macedonia wasn't so much as founded but rather gained its independence, it always had its own identity, nationality and language. Macedonians have been striving for independence from as far back as Ottoman times, separate from Bulgarians, Greeks, Serbs and so on.
      We were part of Yugoslavia, sure, but we were acknowledged as a separate nationality with its own identity and we peacefully separated from Yugoslavia.
      I have a lot of nostalgia for Yugoslavia, I was born 1983, so I remember both Yugoslavia and the USSR which I visited a few times very fondly.

    • @GamingPalOllieMK
      @GamingPalOllieMK  5 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Now to get back to you on the gaming side of things :)
      On the tetris side of things, I believe tho I could be wrong the 999 in 1 tetris handhelds came out later, initially we'd get just plain ol' tetris with maybe 2-3 variants so they'd be called 2-in-1 or 3-in-1, then Tetris handhelds like the Apollo here came out with 12-in-1 games, some had 20somthing and so on.
      As for Nintendo and SEGA, neither were officially present in Macedonia and to this day you can't make an eShop account with Macedonia as your country and they will never support us.
      Even so, thanks to bootleg games, we had just as much exposure if not more so as countries where Nintendo officially offered support which is really cool. Same goes for SEGA :)