βοΈ βοΈ βοΈ βοΈ βοΈ/5
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As an older millennial, I vividly remember receiving my first Nintendo NES system. What I didnβt realize at the time was that my parents were secretly taking the consoleβand Super Mario Bros.βout every night to play, then hiding it back in the closet until Christmas morning.
My mother jokingly calls herself an vid-diot and loves games of all kinds. Card games, board games, video games, sheβs down to play. She was the kind of mom who, if you said, βHey Mom, Iβm on level eight. Iβm almost at Bowserβs castle. I have 99 lives and a full inventoryβcan you please leave the TV on for me?ββthere was a 50/50 chance that youβd either wake up to find sheβd beaten the game, or that the TV was still on, patiently waiting for you to finish.
If you asked my dad the same thing, heβd likely get confused and accidentally turn the TV off. It was never maliciousβhe just never really got video games the way my mom did.
Good Game, No Rematch is both a history of video games and a subtle, hilarious biography of every awkward millennial adult trying to navigate modern life. One of my favorite quotes from the book is: βTry being a people-pleaser who doesnβt understand how to peopleββa line that perfectly encapsulates my life.
The book traces the evolution of video games from the perspective of the millennial generation, for whom the NES was a defining piece of childhood. Many books on video game history attempt to cram too much into one volume. While that can be ambitious, it often makes the narrative overwhelming or dry. This book smartly narrows its focus, making the material engaging and accessible throughout.
Before reading this, I didnβt know much about Mike Drucker. Iβm not a huge TV person, so I hadnβt connected his name to the well-known shows heβs written for. But now, Iβm off to explore his body of work. His writing is sharp, witty, and genuinely funnyβit makes you feel like you want to hang out with him. (Well, sort ofβIβm kind of agoraphobic and not particularly fond of leaving the house.)
In any case, if you grew up playing video games, love reading, and find comfort in shared nostalgiaβor youβre just trying to survive adulthood as an elder millennialβthis book is absolutely for you.
On sale now, you can get your copy here.
Thank you to the author Mike Drucker, the publisher Harlequin Trade Publishing | Hanover Square Press and NetGalley for the ARC copy of this book!
P.S.- if you’re an audiobook girlie like me, this one is author narrated and excellent!!
As always, I encourage you to read this one for yourself and formulate your own opinion.
