claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.023
RetroRalph acquires rare Midway Grid arcade cabinet; plans expo showcase and explores Arcade1Up reproduction potential.
The Grid was Midway's last arcade game, released in 2000
high confidence · Jon directly states this as established fact; The Grid is the final title in Midway's arcade lineup
Production numbers for The Grid are conflicting: Insert Coin documentary claims 500-550 units, but other sources suggest a couple thousand were made
medium confidence · Jon acknowledges uncertainty: 'In the Insert Coin documentary, they say about 500 to 550 were made. However, there's conflicting information that says that maybe a couple thousand were made.'
The Grid uses Zeus 2 hardware (32-bit); only two games used this platform: The Grid and Cruisin' Exotica
high confidence · Technical specification confirmed while reviewing the PCB: 'This ran on this is the Zeus 2 hardware. It's a 32-bit architecture. The only two games that Midway used this for was The Grid and Cruisin' Exotica.'
Jon found two working boards at Castles and Coasters and now has one working cabinet; goal is to create two more units for Game On Pinball Expo in Phoenix
high confidence · Jon outlines restoration plan: 'The goal would be to create two more. And we tossed around a couple of ideas and concepts... we would feature them at the Game On Pinball Expo this year in Phoenix, Arizona'
The Grid supports multiplayer for up to six players by linking multiple cabinets
high confidence · Jon states: 'local multiplayer is possible with up to six players by linking up multiple cabinets. Very innovative for its time.'
“I got a chance to play The Grid last year at Galloping Ghost, and man, this game is awesome. It was developed by Midway and released in the year 2000. It was actually Midway's last arcade game.”
Jon (RetroRalph)@ 0:35 — Establishes The Grid's historical significance as Midway's final arcade title
“The only two games that Midway used this for was The Grid and Cruisin' Exotica. So you know being the end of Midway and this being the last game they released, those are the only two games that actually ever made it on this hardware.”
Jon (RetroRalph)@ 6:23 — Highlights the rarity and exclusivity of Zeus 2 hardware platform
“In the Insert Coin documentary, they say about 500 to 550 were made. However, there's conflicting information that says that maybe a couple thousand were made. The thing is, that was over 20 years ago, and a lot of them were actually destroyed.”
Jon (RetroRalph)@ 1:13 — Acknowledges production number uncertainty and explains rarity due to cabinet destruction over time
“Wouldn't it be cool to have deathmatch type of a cabinet where you could be playing with other people around the world that you can jump into the games, jump out of the games. I feel like this would be a really cool cabinet for them to reproduce.”
Jon (RetroRalph)@ 5:20 — Speculation on potential Arcade1Up reproduction interest; frames The Grid as untapped licensing opportunity
“To me, it's a game everybody should play. It's so fun. Just lots of really cool aspects to it. And honestly, so much fun if you have a bunch of people playing together.”
Jon (RetroRalph)@ 7:41 — Jon's overall assessment; emphasizes multiplayer appeal as core value proposition
community_signal: Jon uses his platform to solicit community feedback on hypothetical Arcade1Up Grid reproduction, framing it as an interactive poll
high · Jon directly asks viewers: 'if they made a bigger version... would you do that? Would you want to do that? Would that interest you?' and invites comment responses
licensing_signal: Jon speculates about Arcade1Up potentially licensing The Grid for reproduction as a networked multiplayer cabinet, citing their history of securing arcade game licenses
low · Jon asks: 'I feel like this would be a really cool cabinet for them to reproduce. I don't know what the licensing would be like, but Arcade1Up, couldn't you do that? I mean, couldn't you do it? You get licenses for just about everything else.'
market_signal: The Grid remains exceedingly rare in the secondary market; production numbers are disputed (500-550 vs. potentially several thousand), but only documented units in circulation suggest extreme scarcity
medium · Jon notes: 'But you don't see them really at all. Although they are scattered in various places around the country.' Production numbers conflict between Insert Coin documentary and other sources.
announcement: Jon announces publicly that he acquired The Grid and plans to restore two additional units for display at Game On Pinball Expo in Phoenix
high · Jon states: 'And the idea would be that we would feature them at the Game On Pinball Expo this year in Phoenix, Arizona for other people to enjoy.'
positive(0.85)— Jon expresses enthusiasm and excitement throughout, calling the acquisition 'epic' and the game 'awesome.' He's engaged with the restoration project and optimistic about its potential. Only minor frustration about missing topper and network switch configuration, but these are addressed constructively. Overall tone is celebratory and community-focused.
youtube_groq_whisper · $0.024