Last time I was in this situation - Marv Wolfman's birthday party was at a Dave & Buster's - I gave my tix to a random kid to add to his already-formidable accumulation. I got lucky and won the 200 - a futile achievement since when I went to the prize redemption booth, I decided there was nothing there I wanted, even for free. It costs two bucks to play and top prize is two hundred tickets which, at this arcade, could get you a package of bubble gum worth (I'm guessing) fifty cents. ![]() ![]() The models are not the ladies from the TV show and the unseen announcer/host is not Howie Mandel but they have the graphics and music…and of course, you're playing for prize tickets, not money. There are sixteen cases which are opened on the 36" high-def video screen by sixteen models. Out of curiosity, I took a crack at the Deal or No Deal game I found there. Nor is it a real Deal or No Deal model on the screen.Ī week ago, for reasons too boring even for this weblog, I found myself briefly in a video arcade in Westwood - one of those places where you put in money, win tickets and later find out that no matter how much you played and how much you won, you don't have enough tickets for any of the good prizes.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |