Allow Me to Inspire You: Game Over, Yeah, Part Deux

1.26.2007


In my last post, I rejoiced to acquaint you, Gentle Reader, with my finding the much-sought "Game Over, Yeaaaaaaah!" soundclip from the ancient racing game Sega Rally Championship. Lest my exuberance over this bit of electronic archaeology earn the wounding-but-typical "Nerd alert! Nerd alert!" comment from the rarely-in-the-gaming-know LWB, I'd like to now help you understand more thoroughly what an impact that soundclip has had not just on your humble servant, but on this our popular culture.

You see, recognizing that soundclip for the golden nugget of gaming trivia it is ranks with grasping such esoteric mysteries as: The illuminati of gaming cherish and preserve these morsels of lore and more, but such are not commonly appreciated by the public at large, who in general prefer attention to clearly ancillary concerns like personal hygiene, disposal of takeout containers within a week of acquisition, and the outdoors.

Jerks.

Perhaps the most convincing evidence that the legacy of this soundclip lives on is in the ways it is reinvented and folded back into our popular culture. Countless1 reviews of the game itself and its successors make a point to reference the announcer -- many of them written long after the time when the reviewers could expect their primary audience to have seen or played the game firsthand. Their collective accounts afford us a synaural record of the true impact of this soundclip's first advent.

I therefore encourage you, Gentle Reader, to go out now and read everything you can about the cultural detonation that was "Game Over, Yeah!"

No, I mean go now. Just go read that stuff, and then come back. Go on.

(Cue research montage clip, perhaps with tasteful inclusion of "Eye of the Tiger" music or similar)

Back already? I should also have mentioned that there's even a website now called "Game Over, Yeah!" It's about videogames, of course. Go back and look at that too, okay?

(Montage reprise)

I'll bet you're inspired and invigorated from that, aren't you? And well you should be, Gentle-and-Newly-Informed Reader. And so I'll leave you with a personally transformative video that further testifies to the enduring power of this soundclip, courtesy of Fenslerfilm:

Click Here!

1Meaning I didn't bother to count. There were definitely a lot of Google hits.

Game Over YEAAAAAAAAAH!

1.19.2007


Way back in the dawn of polygon gaming, back before the first analog controller was released for the Sony Playstation, there was a phenomenal rally racing1 game for the Sega Saturn.

Yeah, that's right, I owned one of the ill-fated Sega Saturns. A darn good system too, I might add, were it not for Sega's hamfisted marketing. It coulda beena contenda.

Back to the rally racing game: it was called Sega Rally Championship, and despite the fact that you had to use a digital pad to tap-tap-tap your way around turns, the game had one of the most amazing feels of any rally racing games before or since. It also was the first game, IMO, to have a replay function worth actually watching.

Being a Japanese product, though, it was not immune from the cultural peculiarities of its design team. Perhaps the most notable non-racing feature in the game was the fact that it had this full-cheese announcer who, when the race was finished for whatever reason and the phrase "Game Over" appeared on the screen, would sing "Game Over, Yeeeeeeaaaah!" in a voice that sounded like an indie Seattle-scene vocalist doing some moonlighting. It was freakish, and instantly became part of the vocabulary shared between my brother and I.

So I've been looking for that soundclip for probably five years now, and nothing's come up. This is made harder by the fact that the game is so old, and also because until recently there weren't any good emulators of the Saturn system I could use to capture it.

But last week I found it. It's a crappy recording, clearly done by someone with no attention to detail, but who cares? It's good enough for a telephone ringtone, much to my officemates' annoyance.

Listen to all its gloriousness yourself: Click Here!

1Rally races are auto races that take place offroad, the most famous of them being the Paris-Dakar rally.

Wuxtry

1.14.2007


Things happening down 'round our way:That's about all for now. Later!

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