Which brings me to my biggest bone to pick with
Namco Museum. Yes, it has six excellent games, four of which I still play regularly. Yes, the games hold up under scrutiny of the modern eye -- show me a shooter more entertaining than Galaga and I’ll show you... er, something that doesn’t exist. But that’s all this disc has. Six games, plus one little Kaboom rip-off for your VMU, are what you get for a rather hefty price-tag. The PlayStation
Namco Museums had all sorts of useless stuff along with the games -- cabinets, pamphlets, everything. This is bare-bones and stripped.
Now, don’t get me wrong. The games are uniformly entertaining. You have Pac-Man and Ms. Pac-Man, neither of which I feel need any sort of explanation or introduction. Then you have Galaxian, and its new and much spiffier child, Galaga. I would be willing to bet that I plunked enough quarters in Galaga machines throughout my life to pay for two or three stand-ups. The game is fantastic, and I still break it out to this day. Galaxian is good as well, but you’ll find yourself coming back to Galaga more often than not. Pole Position was a nice little racing game (although Pole Position 2 was a good bit better), but it’s hell to control with a standard Dreamcast controller. I’d imagine that a steering wheel would be more appropriate, but that being neither here nor there, Pole Position is a good way to waste a few minutes when you don’t want to play a serious racing game. And then there’s Dig-Dug, that cute yet fiendishly addictive game where you inflate dragons and cute little red dudes until they pop. It’s a quintessential Japanese game, and also one game that I’ve never tired of. I probably couldn’t buy a stand-up cabinet with the money I’ve put into Dig-Dug, but it’d be pretty close.
So the games are overall fantastic. If they’re not truly emulated, it’s pretty close -- I didn’t bother to do the Galaga no-bullet trick to test it, since that could have been added to the simulated version as well. But there’s just not enough extra meat on the GD-ROM’s bones.