What was the most mischief any gamer managed to get into at Twin Galaxies arcade? Who was the gamer?
Billy Mitchell was the biggest mischief-maker. One night he hurled a pool cue like a javelin and broke the back glass of a pinball machine.
Going back to Day One of the scoreboard, imagine someone coming up to you, saying: "Thirty-Five years from now, this scoreboard will still be in operation." What do you think your reaction would have been?
I would have been surprised, of course. Yet, throughout the whole experience there was a constant sense of destiny for the whole project.
Where does your passion for trading cards come from? Do you have a collection of, maybe, baseball cards at home?
I have a passion for history, people, and printed ephemera. Somehow, they merge together to create my interest in using cards as a vehicle to study history. I have launched similar projects in the past using historic newspaper, high school yearbooks, and business cards.
What can you tell asked about your childhood or pre-scoreboard history that predisposed you to have an interest in video games or the scoreboard?
On my Third-Grade Report Card in 1958 (Mattie Lou Maxwell Elementary School -- Anaheim, California), my teacher wrote a note to my parents that said: "Walter leads gangs on the playground."
How has meditation complemented your work in the video game world and could you have accomplished as much without it?"
All my history-based projects have required me to tap into an unlimited reservoir of creativity, energy, and intelligence. It is commonly known that practicing Transcendental Meditation twice per day puts you in touch with that inner reservoir and allows you to draw upon it on a daily basis. Without question, I would not have been able to create and promote my projects if I had not been meditating every day.
Did you ever think when you were younger you would be creating Video Game trading cards?
My interest in cards goes back many years. I tried to start this set in 1983 and again 1985. Then, I tried to do a major history project with business cards in the early 1990s -- using them to study our evolving culture.
Have you ever received any media coverage for your Walter Day Trading Cards? If so, where?
So far, the card set has received praise in the Fairfield Ledger, the Des Moines Register, Austin American Statesman, and numerous local papers that have reported on their local residents appearing in the card set.
What comes to mind when you hear the word ‘Fairfield’?
Fairfield is the home of MAHARISHI UNIVERSITY OF MANAGEMENT. This university is unique in that it offers consciousness-based education. Not only do the students study traditional subjects like math, physics, and languages, but the practice of Transcendental Meditation (TM) gives the student the opportunity to expand their mind and gain a deeper understanding of the world's knowledge than could be gained through merely studying books. And, while the students are gaining inner wisdom through the practice of TM, their mental & physical health is improving and their intelligence blossoms. Because I have been so impressed with Fairfield, MUM and TM, I have chosen to live in Fairfield since 1979. Fairfield has become a cultural crossroads and many people are moving to this town from far-off cities.
What are your opinions about today’s generation of video games? How do you compare them to older, classic games?
The older games had to have more involved gameplay because they didn't have flashy graphics to entertain the gamer. So, the older games are harder to master. That's why the high scores on many games from the early 1980s have not yet been maxed out.
Do you remember your first video game / arcade you played and what do you remember about it?
I played in the Malibu Gran Prix in Houston, June 1980. I played Space Invaders and fell in love with video games. I opened Twin Galaxies as an excuse to be able to play more video games.
Are you still involved with gaming today, and what role do you play?
Today, I am switching my focus to doing music and writing science fiction novels, so no more gaming lurks on the horizon for me. But when I did play, I liked Centipede, Gorf, Galaxian, Make Trax, Mousetrap, Wizard of Wor, Tutankhamen, Lady Bug, and Robotron.
What you put your attention on in your life -- grows in your life. Video games MUST find a way to create games that inspire intelligence and creativity while minimizing negativity and destruction.