Monday, March 22, 2010
Videogames of Egypt
Having returned from my two week sojourn in Egypt, I recount my visit to the local equivalent of the Akihabara, with my driver and guide Mohamed (pictured)
Of the international videogame scenes which are unique, each can be divided into one of two categories – and by unique I mean distinct from the industry leaders of Japan, America and England/Europe (and I realise there are unique elements in every European country). The first category is regions which domestically produce their own content: France with its seldom-exported games based on local bandes dessinĂ©es; China and its frankly astounding PC scene, comprising numerous amazing RPGs found nowhere else, and which have been slow to be fan-translated; South Korea’s enormous scene featuring locally-exclusive hardware, games, magazines, and much more which, despite currently being investigated by HG101’s Derboo for the most epic article of all time, has been isolated from and ignored by the west.
The second category would be countries which, due to economic or political reasons, piggyback off another country’s scene, most commonly China, Taiwan and Hong Kong’s pirate scenes, to create their own distinct melange. Egypt, like most of Africa, falls into the second category, with most of its pre-PS1 hardware and software being Chinese bootlegs, and anything more recent appearing to be semi-official imports. There were an inordinate amount of boxed PS2s available, which I can only assume are part of the official quota exported to Arabic countries.
Several years ago, when I wrote the monthly Global Gaming column in Retro Gamer, I often thought I’d like to compile a book detailing the videogame scenes in all world’s countries, since as a follower of videogames, it interested me to see the arcades that children in Africa or South America frequented, or the game centres from North Korea. I interviewed a lot more people than the countries I eventually covered, and one of the biggest problems, besides whining readers complaining that I didn’t accurately cover enough in 2 pages, was that a lot of these scenes were based around Famicom piracy. Since English was the second language of many of those I spoke with, it wasn’t easy to turn their matter-of-fact descriptions into floral prose which conveyed the exotic beauty of the indigenous cultures which were a backdrop to the games. It’s this blending with local culture which makes it so interesting, and without it I was often left with emails which read too similarly.
Two of the best descriptions I had included one from Sergei Servianov, who described how his love of Soviet antiquity and videogames came together when visiting his grandmother and walking through the Russian woods to a local arcade; the other was from Amir Asghari, originally from Iran, who described in equal parts Tehran’s MSX scene and the conflict with neighbouring Iraq, which left stores reduced to rubble and forced his dad to burn the manual to his copy of Metal Gear, out of fear that the militaristic images within could land them in trouble.
Mostly though, by being unable to see things for myself, Global Gaming was painfully frustrating to research. So when I visited Egypt in March 2010, I was eager to see its gaming scene personally.
The highlight of my trip was not the pyramids or Sphinx which, thanks to the excess of loud tourists, had a gaudy and unappealing atmosphere. Rather it was the 3 hour night-time tour by car of downtown Cairo and a visit to the Ataba and El Mosky markets and their electronics stalls. There’s also Khan El Khalily market, but that doesn’t have any videogames – it also caters heavily to tourists, and every nationality is anticipated. The most amusing incident was seeing Arabic hawkers shouting out “Nihao!” and, in broken Chinese, try to entice anyone of East Asian origin to their stall.
Even without the videogame element it was incredible to see how people lived and worked in this heavily populated, heavily polluted city. Thousands of cars thronging through night-time streets which lacked any form of road markings, adhering to invisible lines with a mutual understanding of which side has which direction. Cars and trucks miss each other by a hair’s breadth or less while a swarm of vespas zoom past at speed.
Countless carhorns blare and fight against the noise of misfiring engines which pour black soot on to the street. If I didn’t know better I’d believe the blaring horns somehow offered divine protection to their drivers. In the sky above the Imams call out the evening’s prayers from the minarets of Cairo’s mosques, chanting Allah Ahkbar (God is Great), and other Islamic prayers. Inside the safe bubble of the car my driver’s radio plays middle-eastern pop-music and there’s a taste of dirty gasoline in my lungs from the open window. Lighting a cigarette we drive on and are smothered by the smell from Arabic spice merchants, while passing by us is a man on a bicycle, one hand on the handlebars, the other on a basket sitting atop his head, longer and wider than the bicycle and stacked high with freshly baked bread. No amount of words or pictures can fully describe the intensity of downtown Cairo at night.
(This bread bicycle photo was taken on a second trip to Cairo, during the day)
My driver Mohamed, who was also my guide, was fortunate enough to find parking – for a fee several runners will squeeze cars into any available space, with vehicles often packed 3 deep. You leave your handbrakes off, so if someone parked at the rear wants to leave the runners will roll your car by hand to make space. When you return you might find that during the evening your car has moved several feet. Although appearing chaotic, it’s a very efficient system for maximising space in such a crowded city, and the runners also make sure your vehicle is kept safe.
We walked down an alley lined with trinket stores, then crossed a major intersection and reached, what I was told, were the Ataba and El Moscky market areas. Leather bags, mobile phones, sunglasses and pretty much anything you want, is probably available somewhere here.
Trying to describe things is almost impossible, since the scene is one of visually intense, ordered chaos, and I only spent maybe 30 minutes exploring. The outer front of videogame stalls was probably less than 50 meters to walk from one end around the street corner to its other end, whereupon you reach PC territory. These are open air though, and beyond them, deeper within the urban maze, are further stores positioned around concrete columns. As you go deeper it becomes less obvious whether you are under cover of a roof or not, and some passages within this labyrinthine mass are only big enough for people to pass through single-file.
Along with hundreds of PlayStation controllers, many of which appeared counterfeit, there were several models of Famicom clone. Although manufactured in China, there were some featuring Arabic writing, and some systems even came with Arabic keyboards. One store owner referred to them as being “Atari Family” games. The prices for Famicom clones ranged from 40-60 Egyptian Pounds (EP), which at $1 to EP5, is like $8-12 converted. Famicom cartridges were exclusively multicarts, from 4-in-1 carts up to several-hundred-in-one (more on these later), and they cost between EP5 and EP10 ($1-2). I also found what appeared to be official SNES units priced at EP190 ($38), plenty of Mega Drive 2 systems at EP75 ($15), and even more PS2 units at EP850 ($170), though I suspect the guy was hiking the price because a foreigner was asking. Everything in Egypt has two prices: one for foreigners, and one for the locals. The PS3 (models 40GB and 80GB) ranged in price from EP1600 ($320) up to EP2500 ($500) depending on store and model.
It’s interesting to note that the successful systems are those that were easy to pirate for. Succeeding the Famicom are bootleg Mega Drives and enormous stacks of 4-in-1 MD cartridges costing EP10 ($5) each. While I saw the SNES units, plus some controllers and a few dirty cartridges with damaged labels, this was only at one store and miniscule compared to the bootleg MD stuff all over the place. Following this was the PS1, then PS2, and an enormous amount of copied CDs/DVDs. A bootleg copy of God Hand on PS2 to a tourist was EP25 ($5). Some stores also stocked legitimate Wii and PS3 merchandise, though curiously I didn’t see anything at all for the Xbox 360, which I know you can pirate for quite easily. I have no idea if the Saturn was ever popular or even sold in the area. There were also plenty of boxed GBA games, presumably pirates, and also PSP systems. I didn’t spot the DS anywhere, but I wasn’t really looking.
Through meandering passages I ascended stairs to places they said no tourist ever visited. The area was a complicated maze permeated by the smell of dust and burning incense, illuminated by artificial light with scant windows onto the outside world. It reminded me of a story my father told me, about when he was stationed in China, near the city of Nanchang. He explained how, upon my request for him to buy a selection of bootleg games in China, he had asked his assigned interpreter Mr Gwu to take him to a place which sold them. Gwu, having never been to such a place, asked around and then took my father to what appeared to be the entrance to a subway station. Down below was, literally, an underground black market filled with stalls selling all manner of games and electronic junk. Gwu explained that several merchants were surprised to see my father, since in 20 years of being there they’d never seen a westerner visit the place – Gwu also became somewhat agitated, asking if they could leave because he feared they could be killed and no one would find out about it (honest to God, this is how my father retells the story, whether the exaggeration is his, or Gwu’s, I’m not sure). My father didn’t end up buying me anything, because he said all the games were in Chinese and, not being able to find the names of anything on my list, assumed I wouldn’t want anything (which was absolutely the wrong thing to think). But he did bump into an old Chinese guy, in his fifties or sixties, who asked my dad if he spoke Russian – which he did, having learned it at school when Eastern Europe was still under communism. The two sat drinking Chinese rice wine, with Gwu abstaining, and the old man claimed in broken Russian that he’d fought alongside the Russian military, against the capitalist west many years ago, all the while toasting my father and calling him comrade – my father doesn’t recall if he mentioned the name of the war, but I’d guess it was the Korean, since North Korea was pushed back into China and, if Wikipedia is to be believed, was then assisted by the Chinese army to reclaim the northern part of the peninsula (where the Russian military comes in I’ve no idea, since I wasn’t aware they took part in the conflict outside of air support near the border). My dad didn’t have a camera, so I’ve no photos, and when I press him for further details he grows annoyed that I’d want to document such a story, but that’s how it was told to me. The photo below is not of this area – it was posted on a forum, possibly NTSC-uk or SelectButton, by someone else in China. But it’s fascinating nonetheless to consider the rich, undocumented culture of Chinese videogames!
I don’t know if anyone else feels the same, but with the way America and England forever seem to be in conflict with various countries of the world, I’m embarrassed to speak English in a foreign country. As such I always described myself as coming from France, since although the French have their own rocky history with Algeria and Vietnam, my thinking is it would instil less animosity than if they thought I was British. They say videogames and politics never intermingle, but walking those gaming stalls I felt the urgent and embarrassed need to pass myself off as another nationality.
Due to the differences in spending power of the population (according to an Aljazeera news story, over 40% live below the poverty line in Egypt), there is still a demand for cheaper, older games. While we in G8 countries debate whether games are art and other faux-intellectual topics regarding our hobby, it’s fascinating to see the distillation of what’s popular, and then its cheap perpetuation through piracy. Right now, in Cairo, you can buy a Famicom cartridge containing all 4 of the Ninja Turtles games which appeared on the system (1, 2, 3 and Tournament Fighters), and this sits alongside classic Mega Drive games and shrinkwrapped PS2 titles. In America, England and France, you need to visit very specialised stores to see such diversity, and the prices would likely be much higher. Although I can’t claim to understand the workings behind the situation, I find the cyclical boom/bust nature, and limited choice, of videogame stores in G8 countries rather disheartening. You either have to visit eBay, thrift and junk stores, or a specialist to find unusual things.
While there I bought two MD cartridges, two Famicom multicarts and a cheap Famicom clone. One MD cart featured Tiny Toons, Tazmania, Little Mermaid and Battletoads – I bought it because, having no experience of the MD Tiny Toons game, I hoped it would be similar to Buster Busts Loose on the SNES. Sadly it’s pretty awful. Battletoads is also nowhere near as good as the SNES version. The second cart had Sonic 3, Shinobi, Aquatic Games and some Olympics thing. I was curious if it was actually Sonic 3, since I doubted they’d include a battery for save functionality, and I wanted to know why they’d included an anime picture for Aquatic Games. Sonic 3 is actually just Sonic 1, and Aquatic Games is the James Pond minigame collection, so all in all, a fairly rubbish cartridge. I really wanted one with Castlevania, but couldn’t see one.
You could try printing this photo off, and using it to explain to a guide where you want to go, should you find yourself in Cairo
The 130-in-1 Famicom multicart is a huge disappointment, since it’s actually just 6 crappy games, repeated ad-nauseam. This is annoying, since I recall a time when multicarts had some effort put into them. I once owned a 42-in-1 cart, and it had just that, 42 entirely separate games, pretty much the entire back-catalogue of classic Arcade-to-Famicom ports, plus a selection of other smaller titles. It was awesome and to this day I regret my father giving it away to charity (I’d been given a SNES, and he took it upon himself to donate my old Famicom system). I had hoped for something similar with this 42-in-1 cart, but sadly not. The 4-in-1 cart includes Batman, Turtles 1, Turtles Tournament Fighters and a Spiderman hack of Ninja Gaiden 3. It’s alright, but I really wish I could have found a cart with Samurai Pizza Cats on it or something. Perhaps with more searching, but I was in a hurry.
As for the Famiclone, I was tempted to get one with an Arabic keyboard, but it was like $4 extra and I was feeling stingy. The unit I bought is functional, running in 50Hz with mono sound through A/V cables, and it’s what you’d expect from a cheap bootleg. It has a stinky plastic casing which probably causes cancer, short leads, and naff control pads. Still, at least they have a d-pad, some controllers on other clone machines have PS1-styled button d-pads which are hideously uncomfortable.
I also bought pirate DVDs of Inglorious Basterds and Terminator 4. IB is one of the worst copies I’ve seen, but Terminator is perfect. Each cost me only EP15 ($3).
This is a fleeting glance of a world in constant flux, and as I type this, I wonder what if any videogames were available in Cairo, 1985. And what about Cairo in 1995? And 2005? How have these things changed over the years? These photos and this blog post tell us little about Egyptian videogame culture – only that it exists and beyond it is a history we will never know. Some might criticise that in a country reputed to have so many historical monuments, I’m focusing on pirate videogames, but games are still an element of the cultural tapestry. I’m reminded of a documentary I saw on some far-off East European country’s film archives – possibly Romania’s. There was a vault housing hundreds of pre-WW2 film reels, forgotten by the outside world, but containing valuable relics pertaining to kings and noblemen.
And much like the above example of my father in China, I fear these miniature eras are being overlooked by all except its locals, and will in time be forgotten.
I must say I'm a little surprised that how this is so similar to where I live, Indonesia.
ReplyDeleteWell, maybe not the MD carts (and pyramids and deserts), but everything else is the same.
Fascinating stuff.
ReplyDeleteThe ironic thing about bootlegged consoles is that most of them come with totally badass-looking gun peripherals... the kind that will probably get you shot down or strip-searched by customs officials if you try to bring one back home. ;-)
Really interesting.
ReplyDeleteI personally would have said I was British then dissociated myself with Suez, Gladstone etc.; they were British but it's not as you're responsible for them just because they share (y)our country of origin.
I am just wondering if you could get anything in English.
Also I'm wondering if any of the wonderful Chinese RPGs you speak of have ever come out in English.
Yes I'm a classic Englishman with very little experience of foreign languages and I apologise
Great article, very interesting to read. I'm sure there are some English-speaking, Egyptian gamers out there who could illuminate the situation for us even further, particularly regarding whether or not there were video games in Cairo ten or twenty years ago.
ReplyDeleteThe traffic situation sounds to me just like every other developing nation. It always amazed me how there weren't more accidents in the places I've visited, but that's probably because we've been conditioned to believe that people can't manage without rules imposed by "leaders" from the top down. Society truly is spontaneously self-ordering.
Fantastic post.
ReplyDeleteHere in Chile (South America) and we get everything that comes out in the US, so you can guess the videogame scene here, BUT, there's a lot of pirated stuff too, a lot of "polystations" and whatnot.
If i make an article about that i'd love to publish it here, i think the bootleg/pirated stuff is really interesting to analyze and it tells you a lot about the culture of the country.
Sure, email Kurt on the standard HG101 address and I'm sure he'll put it up.
ReplyDeleteI'm actually considering starting my own website, a kind of sister-site to HG101, covering the A-Z of the world's videogame countries.
Like Dusan's Chile, my Brasil is half USA, half Egypt. In one corner, you have a shop which sells officially imported games, but if you look across the street, you'll see another shop full of pirate Famicom clones and cartridges for it.
ReplyDeleteWhile the rich people here discuss whether games are art or not, playing their Play 3s and 360s, poor children happily buy their 140-in-1 cartridges, which are actually 140 variations of Super Mario Bros.
"South Korea’s enormous scene featuring locally-exclusive hardware, games, magazines, and much more which, despite currently being investigated by HG101’s Derboo for the most epic article of all time..."
ReplyDeleteHi! Can someone please post a link to Derboo's article, I can not find it and I give a shit about Egypt's gaming scene but I want to know about South Korea kthxbye
Great article :)
ReplyDeleteFor what it worth: I lived in Egypt in 1988 and I clearly remember that Sega SC-3000 cartridges were widely available in a shop I used to go. Which is quite peculiar since the SC-3000 was mostly a JPN/USA/NZ thing with a few available in European countries such as France and Italia.
ReplyDeleteI bought SG-1000/SC-3000 Hyper Sports there (in 1988), regular Japanese version it was.
Otherwise the main popular thing with Atari 2600 and variations then.
Much, however, to see things themselves, Global Gaming was a painfully frustrating search. So when I went to Egypt in March 2010, I was eager to see the scene play itself.
ReplyDeleteWoW Account
Wow......thankfully Egypt is in waaay better shape that N.Korea where gaming is concerned. And better than most of the middle east and Africa for that matter.
ReplyDeleteI am really thankful to you for this great read!! You did a very great job, keep it up.
ReplyDeleteNice article :)
ReplyDeleteI'm a game developer, originally from Iraq, and now living in Egypt. The gaming situation in Iraq was very identical to what you found in Egypt until around 2005, when things changed in favor of PS2/XBOX and then XBOX360, all modded of course.
However, that's not what I wanted to talk about... you asked how the gaming community looked like in the 80s and 90s. Surprisingly, back then, although rarely found.. it wasn't much different compared to western countries, perhaps because counterfeiting was at a much lower rate (I personally haven't seen not even one bootlegged console until the mid-90s) and the economical situation was better.
What we had more was real home computing community backthen.. with meetings, contests, books, and the whole deal.
several computer models were produced in Iraq and the gulf, mostly based on japanese models. We had arabic-supporting NEC PC-6001, PC-6002, and other models, it was called `Al Warkaa`. We exchanged games via 3.5" floppy discs and sometimes used tape drives. I was one of the Al Warkaa guys :D
The gulf based AlAlamiah produced MSX home computers. Of which the MSX Sakhr 170 was the absolute most famous, games circulated via MSX cartridges and a big community around it, and I've seen 2.5" floppy discs used.
There was a constant contest between Al Warkaa community and Sakhr 170 community in Iraq to prove which is the better computer (they are both identical from a hardware level), this included a national contest that each group tried to win, involving making games and demos.
Another company, Najm computers, produced Atari home computers. But I only saw a few around, and no real community for it in Iraq, I found this rare picutre online: http://www.savetz.com/vintagecomputers/arabic65xe/
this is pretty much the only model I've seen back then.
Man... much lost gaming history.
I've only just noticed this post - thank you for posting it!
ReplyDeleteHello, thanks for the great read. I live in Cairo, and only two weeks ago I happened to visit the hidden upstairs laberynth. I was there in an attempt to satisfy a craving for retro games, and I wasn't disappointed. In a corner shop I managed to purchase a N64, NES and SNES consoles with a bunch of game carts and controllers, all originals and all showing signs of use, but beggars can't be choosers and overall I'm more than happy to have added them to my retro consoles collection.
ReplyDeleteBack in the 1990's, I remember those same stalls had a very good business dealing in (and repairing) Atari 2600's. I have one of two consoles I got in that era, still in working condition, with only one controller remaining.
Trade in authentic consoles is starting to boom, with many high-end outlets dealing in modern consoles. Xbox's, PS3s and nintendo wii's are all available, although markedly overpriced if compared to what you'd pay for them anywhere else.
One question though: You mentioned that one of the stalls had authentic SNES consoles and carts? can you remember which one?
Hi there,
ReplyDeleteI'm a producer with Australian Kids Show Good Game Spawn Point, We're on the Australian public broadcaster ABC. which is equivalent to BBC in UK and PBS in USA.
We're doing a series of segments on Video Games around the world and we have one coming up on Egypt, we would love to get your permission to include some of your videos and pictures from this post in the segment.
Here are some previous segments we've done.
http://www.abc.net.au/abc3/goodgamesp/segments/gaming_world.htm
I haven't been able to find a contact for you at all, so if you could please email me back at goodgame(at)your.abc.net.au with subject tag "EGYPT FOOTAGE" with your permission if you're willing, that would be fantastic
cheers,
LJ