Home Games Classic Arcade
Classic Arcade
Windows 95/98ArcadeCasualCompilation

Classic Arcade

Developer: BeachWare · Published by BeachWare · 2000
A grab bag of simple arcade thrills, right down to the sticky floor.
CollectionRetroArcadeMouseQuickTime
3.5
Good
POCG VERDICT
A retro arcade grab-bag that scratches a casual itch, even if half the games are filler.
Ten games, ten bucks? Three of them are keepers. Classic Arcade serves up Sub Hunt and Hyper Hockey as bite-sized fun, but duplicates and rough pixels hold it back.
About This Game

Classic Arcade is a compilation of ten retro-style arcade games developed and published by BeachWare. Released in 2000 for Windows 95 and Macintosh, the collection aims to recreate the feel of a neighborhood arcade, complete with a virtual arcade room where players walk up to different colored consoles to launch each game. The games span several casual genres: submarine cavern exploration (Sub Hunt, Caverns of Atlantis), lunar landing (Moon Lander, Jupiter Lander), a ball-and-paddle style boing game (Astro Boing, Paleolithic Boing), a bombing game (Bomber Blitz), a vertcial shooter (Ballistic Avenger), and air hockey variants (Bumper Hockey, Hyper Hockey). Two pairs of games, the lander titles and the boing titles, are essentially reskins with identical mechanics and different backdrops, which drew criticism for lack of variety. Each game includes on-screen instructions accessible via a button bar, as no printed manual is provided. The collection runs from a hybrid CD-ROM that uses QuickTime for attract-mode demo movies. Installation is automatic with Windows AutoPlay; a Pentium-class PC with 256-color display and CD-ROM drive is required. The interface is entirely mouse-driven, with simple point-and-click navigation through the arcade and minimal controls during gameplay. The graphics are deliberately primitive, employing chunky pixels and bright, cartoony sprites that evoke early arcade cabinets. Sound effects are basic beeps and explosions, with a toggle to disable them. Classic Arcade was priced at $29.95 and targeted casual players looking for quick, low-commitment gaming sessions. While it lacks depth and polish, its handful of enjoyable titles, particularly Sub Hunt and the hockey games, gave it a modest following among fans of digital diversions like Solitaire or Gubble.

Screenshots1 shot
Classic Arcade screenshot
POCG ReviewOriginal: March 5, 2000 · Restored: June 14, 2026
3.5
Good
Review Verdict
Private: Classic Arcade
Ten games, ten bucks? Three of them are keepers. Classic Arcade serves up Sub Hunt and Hyper Hockey as bite-sized fun, but duplicates and rough pixels hold it back.
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Preservation
How to Play TodayYour options for running this game in 2026
Original Hardware
The game comes on a hybrid PC/Mac CD-ROM. Just pop it into a Windows 95 machine with AutoPlay enabled; it runs off the disc. A Pentium with 256 colors is all you need.
Emulation / Other Options
Runs fine in Windows 95 compatibility mode on later systems. The disc includes QuickTime 3 for the demo movies; if your system already has QuickTime, you can skip that install.