Retro Gamer

DOKI DOKI UNIVERSE

Many of our collectors look like they essentially run small private gaming museums, but this month’s collector is a little different. Aditya Rai runs Doki Doki Station – part-game-store, part-museum, with plenty of his own items on show.

As you may have guessed from the name, Aditya’s interests are primarily in Japanese games – most console games coming into Indonesia during the Nineties were Japanese. “Initially, I was interested in for the Famicom. I wondered why games like that were in high demand in Japan, because at that time I preferred action games. After I tried playing it, I became fond of RPGs and started learning Japanese.” Soon, these skills would transfer into work. “When I worked part-time at a game store, I was trusted as a game tester to tell people how to play the game. Because even though many Japanese games have entered Indonesia, only a few Indonesians can speak Japanese.”

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Retro Gamer

Retro Gamer2 min read
ILLUSTRATOR Q&A
CAN YOU EXPLAIN HOW THE PROCESS WORKED FOR EACH ILLUSTRATION? The process was rather basic. I’d go to the ad agency in downtown Chicago, which was within walking distance of my little loft, and the art director would describe the game. Then he’d give
Retro Gamer1 min read
Trip To The Year 3000
The naming convention for SimCity 3000 might allude to some sci-fi elements, but the fact is the focus is still on starting from the year 1900 and growing exponentially from there. With SimCity 2000 acting as the foundation in all regards for the thi
Retro Gamer3 min read
Obituary Anthony Taglione
◼ As this article was being finished, Anthony Taglione unexpectedly passed away in December 2023. Our condolences go out to his friends and family. Anthony’s games development adventure began alongside his brother Philip (who passed in June 2019), an

Related Books & Audiobooks