# This Arcade Game SUCKS!

**Source:** RetroRalph  
**Type:** video  
**Published:** 2023-06-02  
**Duration:** 5m 44s  
**Beat:** Pinball

**URL:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CWzCu_nBwZY

---

## Analysis

RetroRalph reviews the Chicago Gaming Company Ultimate Arcade 2 Plus multicade cabinet from his collection, criticizing its underpowered single-board computer processor that causes emulation issues and screen tearing despite having good controls, a nice CRT monitor, and licensed games from Atari, Capcom, Midway, and other publishers. While acknowledging the cabinet's quality construction and parts, he considers it his least favorite arcade machine due to poor value proposition at its original $3,500-$5,000 retail price.

### Key Claims

- [MEDIUM] The Ultimate Arcade 2 Plus retailed for $3,500 to $5,000 when it came out — _Jon states price range from memory; marked as estimate ('I want to say they were like...')_
- [HIGH] The cabinet uses a very underpowered single-board computer that causes screen tearing in games — _Jon directly observed and demonstrated the internal hardware, explicitly identified the processor as underpowered and linked it to emulation issues_
- [MEDIUM] Chicago Gaming Company has since moved to PC-based emulation in newer multicade units with better emulation quality — _Jon states this as update information but does not provide specific source or timeline; presented as current knowledge_
- [HIGH] The cabinet uses Cherry Micro switches and HAP buttons/trackball, which are commercial-grade quality parts — _Jon visually identified and named the specific components inside the cabinet_
- [HIGH] The cabinet has difficulty running games with unique control schemes like Joust due to the control configuration — _Jon states this as a design limitation he observed in gameplay_

### Notable Quotes

> "I'm shocked that they would allow it or approve it when some of the emulation isn't great."
> — **Jon (RetroRalph)**, ~5:30
> _Expresses surprise that major publishers (Atari, Capcom, Midway, Incredible Technologies) approved licensing for a cabinet with substandard emulation_

> "You could run a Pandora's box and it would work better than this."
> — **Jon (RetroRalph)**, ~7:00
> _Direct comparison to alternative multicade solution, suggesting Pandora's Box would be superior for emulation quality_

> "for paying that amount of money, you obviously have a bunch of licensed games... but the emulation of them are not great"
> — **Jon (RetroRalph)**, ~2:00
> _Core criticism: high price point not justified by poor emulation despite having licensed content_

> "I'm really trying to focus on not just buying everything because it's cool and it's a good deal, but I'm trying to buy the games I really love."
> — **Jon (RetroRalph)**, ~13:30
> _Reveals his collection curation philosophy, explaining why despite the machine's objective quality, he doesn't value it_

> "It seems like people have a hard time getting rid of them believe it or not even though they retailed for a lot of money"
> — **Jon (RetroRalph)**, ~12:30
> _Market observation about secondary market difficulty despite high original retail price_

### Entities

| Name | Type | Context |
|------|------|---------|
| Chicago Gaming Company | company | Manufacturer of the Ultimate Arcade 2 Plus multicade cabinet; has since moved to PC-based emulation in newer models |
| Ultimate Arcade 2 Plus | product | CGC multicade cabinet with licensed Atari, Capcom, Midway, and Incredible Technologies games; criticized for underpowered processor and emulation issues |
| RetroRalph | person | YouTube content creator reviewing arcade games from his personal collection; host of 'Tee'd Off' channel |
| Atari | company | Publisher/licensor of classic arcade games included in the Ultimate Arcade 2 Plus (Asteroids, Tempest, Missile Command, etc.) |
| Capcom | company | Publisher/licensor of games on the cabinet (1942, 1943, Final Fight, Ghouls and Ghosts, etc.) |
| Midway | company | Publisher/licensor of games on the cabinet (Joust, Robotron, Defender, Tron) |
| Incredible Technologies | company | Publisher/licensor of games on the cabinet (Golden Tee series mentioned) |
| Taito | company | Publisher/licensor with games included on the cabinet |
| Pandora's Box | product | Alternative multicade solution cited by Jon as having superior emulation quality compared to Ultimate Arcade 2 Plus |

### Topics

- **Primary:** Multicade cabinet quality and emulation, Hardware specifications and processor performance, Arcade cabinet pricing and value proposition
- **Secondary:** Arcade cabinet controls and input devices, Licensed arcade game collections, Secondary market for vintage arcade machines, Collection curation philosophy

### Sentiment

**Negative** (-0.75) — Jon is clearly disappointed with the Ultimate Arcade 2 Plus, calling it his least favorite arcade game in his collection. However, sentiment is not entirely harsh—he acknowledges genuine positives (CRT monitor, control quality, cabinet construction, licensed games) while maintaining that these do not justify the machine's critical flaws or original price point. His tone is measured and fair rather than hostile.

### Signals

- **[business_signal]** Chicago Gaming Company has evolved their multicade approach from single-board computer to PC-based emulation in current generation of products (confidence: medium) — Jon states 'Chicago Gaming Company still does make these. I think they've moved to a PC. The emulation is much better.' but notes this is an update to the product line
- **[design_philosophy]** Cabinet's control configuration makes certain games with unique control schemes (e.g., Joust) difficult to play effectively (confidence: medium) — Jon states 'some of the games actually have unique controls like joust and it becomes really hard to play joust in this type of a configuration'
- **[licensing_signal]** Chicago Gaming Company licensed games from major publishers (Atari, Capcom, Midway, Incredible Technologies, Taito) for the Ultimate Arcade 2 Plus multicade (confidence: high) — Jon enumerated the licensed game libraries from each publisher available on the cabinet
- **[market_signal]** Secondary market for Ultimate Arcade 2 Plus multicades is difficult despite high original retail prices; machines are hard to resell (confidence: medium) — Jon observes 'I don't really even know how much money you can get for these things these days. It seems like people have a hard time getting rid of them believe it or not even though they retailed for a lot of money'
- **[product_concern]** Ultimate Arcade 2 Plus experiences screen tearing and emulation issues due to underpowered processor despite high retail price ($3,500-$5,000) (confidence: high) — Jon directly observed screen tearing, inspected the internal processor, and confirmed it as 'very, very underpowered' responsible for the emulation problems

---

## Transcript

Hey guys, welcome back to the channel. So in today's video, we're going to cover my least favorite arcade game in my collection. Now, I collect dedicated arcade games mostly, but I got this Multicade as part of a trade. It was a bunch of other things, but this came as part of it. It's the Chicago Gaming Company, it's the Ultimate Arcade 2 Plus. I guess this one was kind of rare, they didn't make many of the 2 Pluses. My problem with it really is that I'm not the biggest fan of these Multicade devices. it does have some positives though it has a really really nice crt the crt looks amazing it's bright and tight and looks great the game selection is actually good the problem is a lot of the emulation isn't good it uses a super underpowered little single board computer that i'll show you in a second the joysticks are actually decent it uses cherry micro switches they have hap buttons with cherry micro switches so it's not like they skimped on the parts it doesn't have a coin door because this isn't meant to be put in a facility in like an arcade or a bar or anything. It's just strictly made for home use. These things were also super expensive. I want to say they were like $3,500 to $5,000 when they came out. But I just feel like for paying that amount of money, you obviously have a bunch of licensed games because they worked with Atari and Capcom. You can see they have Atari, Capcom, Incredible Technologies, Midway, Taito. So they have a bunch of different companies they worked with So all the games are licensed and that cool but the emulation of them are not great And then some of the games actually have unique controls like joust and it becomes really hard to play joust in this type of a configuration So while I think this might be okay for the super casual, I'm just not a big fan. So I'm going to open this up so you can see what runs this thing. Okay, so to get inside it, you just kind of like lift this up and then you just push this up. It's a shelf and that's the single board computer that runs this. It's very, very underpowered. So that's the thing. I think with some of the games, you get screen tearing and stuff like that, and it's just because it's an underpowered processor, which kind of shocks me because of the fact that they worked with all these manufacturers like Atari and Capcom and Incredible and Midway. I'm shocked that they would allow it or approve it when some of the emulation isn't great. But like I said, in the control panel, they use good parts. You can see these are Cherry Micro switches. These are HAP buttons. So they use good parts. I think it even has a HAP trackball. Let's see. Yeah, it does. It has a Hap Trackball too, so they didn't skimp on parts. Like, it's really a commercial-grade device. The real, I'd say the real Achilles heel to this thing is definitely the single board computer. You could run a Pandora's box and it would work better than this. So, it's just kind of one of those things, you know, I think for a casual it might be totally fine, but for me, I just feel like if I'm going to pay this amount of money, even though I got it in a trade and I did not pay retail for it it just doesn seem worth it to me Like I was saying And on the positive front look at all the games it has So on the Atari collection it got Asteroids Warlords Tempest Super Breakout Space Duel Red Baron Missile Command Millipede Lunar Lander Liberator Gravatar Crystal Castle great games And if you go to Capcom, 1942, 1943, it's got Captain Commando, Commando, Final Fight, Ghosts and Ghouls, Ghouls and Ghosts. There's great games on this. Incredible technologies. you got the older golden tees from midway you have all of the you know joust and robotron and defender robotron actually surprisingly plays pretty well on this you'd be surprised um it does use both the sticks most of the mappings of the game itself do run pretty well so like it has its positives but you know i'm this is the games that i feel in my collection that are the worst there's just too many flaws with this thing and especially for the price they expected people to pay for this back in the day, it definitely wasn't worth it in my opinion. Now I'm going to put a huge asterisk on this. So Chicago Gaming Company still does make these. I think they've moved to a PC. The emulation is much better. They still use all the same parts. So I know the modern ones, it's not a good reflection of the modern ones. But for this time period, if you bought something like this, I just feel like they could have done better. And if I'm looking at the games in my collection, it stands out to me as one that I'd probably get rid of at some point down the road if someone was interested in it. I don't really even know how much money you can get for these things these days It seems like people have a hard time getting rid of them believe it or not even though they retailed for a lot of money This one actually almost isn even used The tape that protects the chrome T is still on it So this one, honestly, it almost looks brand new. Some of you guys are probably thinking, well, that Chicago Gaming Company game isn't that bad. But the thing is, I've really slimmed down my collection. I'm really trying to focus on not just buying everything because it's cool and it's a good deal, but I'm trying to buy games I really love. So that's why I would categorize it that way. I wouldn't shy away from buying it, although if you can deal with some of the emulation issues, it's just surprising that for the cost of that at that time, that it would have had screen tearing and other emulation issues. The positive is the monitor is beautiful, the controls are good, and the construction of the cabinet is awesome. They did a really good job. But like I said, out of my collection, it's probably the one that stands out to me as one that I could probably sell, and I wouldn't really care, and I wouldn't miss it very much. So hopefully you guys enjoyed this video. So let me know if you have an arcade collection, what would you consider your least favorite game in your collection, because I know we all have them. And put your comments below, I want to hear from you. And that's it for now, we will see you on the next one.

_(Acquisition: youtube_groq_whisper, Enrichment: v3)_

---

*Exported from Journalist Tool on 2026-04-13 | Item ID: d0e12c92-5ecc-4a86-9697-c65dd4f2c80b*
