146 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
146 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1403
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Title: HPR1403: hiro from GamingGrannar at Retrospelsmässan
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1403/hpr1403.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 00:53:04
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---
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Today, on Hacker Public Radio, we will talk about old games and interview an expert from
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Sweden.
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In 2012, the Swedish gaming community level 7 voted for the blog Gaming Granar to become
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gaming blog of the year.
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Gaming Granar, or the gaming neighbors, consists of David Dave Boström, Emily Ecken Karlsson
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and Andreas Hiro Karlsson.
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Dave won the Swedish Championship in Nintendo in 2003 and has a great Metroid collection.
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Ecken is an accomplished gamer, creates edible game cakes, and also has a newly started
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collection of games with pink cartridges.
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Hiro can be recognised by his retro game inspired tattoos, and is known for his love for series
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like Mega Man X and Castlevania.
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Together, the three neighbors release a video blog about everything and anything gaming related,
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but often with a focus on older games.
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Hiro and I met at Retrospael's Mesa in 2013.
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This retro game convention is on its fourth year and has grown considerably during those years.
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Now in the second largest exhibition hall in Gothenburg, with roughly 2,000 visitors,
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and a 3 hour queue to get in.
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Yeah, 3 hours.
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But it was worth it, I really enjoyed it.
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There are competitions in old games, you can buy retro games and consoles,
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there's cosplay competitions and so on and so forth.
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One of the organisers, Marcus Sverlander, said that Retrospael's Mesa is a yearly event with
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focus on consoles and computers that was released before the year 2000.
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So it was not strange to find Hiro here.
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Let's listen to what he has to say about the good things in life.
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My name is Andreas Carlson, also known as Hiro here in Sweden.
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I'm a video game blogger or video blogger, more or less.
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I'm one of the three gaming granders, which in English means something like gaming neighbors.
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We are three people that my sister, her boyfriend and me, we are gaming a lot and we are neighbors.
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So therefore the bog is named gaming neighbors.
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Wonderful.
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And what are you doing here today?
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We're here for the blog, where we'll of course take some video clips, show people that can come
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to these sort of things.
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What can you do here?
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Talking to the people that sell stuff.
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There are a lot of cabinets full with matroid items you've never seen before in your entire life.
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There are competitions in Super Mario Kart.
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Every year they have like the unofficial Super Mario Brothers, Swedish master ships.
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So yeah, it's like a really big thing for Swedish nerd gamers to be here.
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Wonderful. And did you have anything special in mind when you came here today?
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Oh well, there's always a little part of me that wants to shop something extra cool,
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something extra that didn't count on getting when I got there.
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But talking to all the people, we have a lot of followers on our YouTube channel,
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on our blog. It's fantastic to talk to those guys and girls.
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We have a guy in a wheelchair and he just wanted to talk to us, saying like I watch you guys
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every day, you make my life easier. So it's just fantastic to talk to that guy and then
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take some pictures with him. And you're not only known from gaming, Grana, but also
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Spell classic music, also in English, something like gaming classic music.
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It's one of Sweden's only podcasts for video game music. So I'm one of the two hosts there.
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And how long have you been going? Spell classic music. We're about 187 episodes right now,
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once a week for like four years or something. I entered the show in episode 70 or something.
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So to be I say he was alone until I got there. That's quite impressive. Yeah, yeah, now this
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autumn it's going to be like the 200th episode and we really have to think can we go on for 100 more
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because we have like an unwritten rule. Don't play the same song twice. And we have about 10 songs
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per episode. Plus when people write us and play this song when you have a castaway near a special
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or something like that. So we have played like two and a half thousand songs. So it's a little
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hard to find new, unique, fantastic tunes now. Scraping the bottom of the barrel. Yeah, something like that.
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And gaming, Grana has been going on for how long? Three years. We actually just a couple of
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months ago. We celebrated three years. And this year, every spring there is the Swedish people and
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the Swedish, like the coming people in gaming. They vote on what blog, what gaming site, what
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magazine, etc. It's are the best. And this year we actually won the gaming neighbors.
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And that's for 2012. Yeah, yeah. So what we do, we release a video once a week. And I think that's why
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people like us. That's why we do something different. We do our thing. Everyone can more or less
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start a blog and write, I like this game. It's a good game. Go buy it. But we actually, we have done
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everything from baking Kirby cupcakes to make a Street Fighter workout video. So you can get your
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stomach in. And yeah, we're sitting things like this. One episode I remember particularly was when
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you and day was sitting by some former water in the summertime, just recording whatever you thought
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would happen in the coming year. You don't remember that episode? Yeah, I don't remember it. We
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actually have red and green converse shoes assembling tomorrow on Luigi, though, of course.
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And we talked about, we walked past some some bugs and stuff and we started talking about
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Pokemon. And then we just said about water and we shared our Mega Man X speedrun hints and
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the air in us. But that's your thing. You're very casual. It's easy. It's nothing
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particularly well. It doesn't feel rehearsed. It feels natural. Yeah, we don't. Of course, we
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have an idea how the video is supposed to be. But when we start shooting, we don't have, we say
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stuff as they come. And therefore we might make some mistakes in when the games are released,
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etc. And who did that game? But it's all part of the gaming neighbors community.
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Yeah, and you have a community that are readily happy to correct you with you.
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Yeah, I'm not offended, but that's great. And what kind of equipment do you use?
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We have the video cameras, like 12,000 Swedish grounds, that's like $2,000. Something like that.
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Our microphone, when we walk around, it's your iPhone microphone with a free recorder
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program or something. So it's not expensive stuff. The camera is very important. So that we
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actually got HD quality and stuff like that. In the beginning, we had a small camera, just a random
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$400 camera or something like that. And as we got HD quality, the views got up and everything got
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better. Dave, one of the three members, he's the one doing all editing. And he does everything in
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premier elements, something like that. And he have learned everything by himself. So that's why
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the videos sometimes aren't that good. But we were getting better every week.
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And you're not neighbors anymore? No, actually, they moved a bigger apartment. David, he's got like
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2,000, 2,500 games. So he needed a room just for games. But it takes five minutes to go through.
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It's not, I can almost see their house from my balcony. Close enough so you don't have to change
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the name of it. No, no, no, no, no. And what is it with retro games in particular that catches
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your fancy? Why isn't something else? First and foremost, I think it's childhood memories.
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I played Mega Man X and Super Castlevania for a lot. And today I got Castlevania tattooed on my
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arm here. And I got the Mega Man collection of, like, A, the games. So a lot of childhood memories.
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And now when I work, I got on my own economy. I can actually buy those games. I didn't
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afford as a child. I know this particular Super Nintendo game. Hey, punk, are you tough enough?
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It's like a really, really bad Street Fighter game. I so wanted this because I read in the
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magazine as a child. Oh, my God. I got to have this game. Maybe seven years ago, I bought it.
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I played it for 15 minutes. And it's like, oh, this is bad. This is really bad. But now I got it.
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As part of my child is complete. And I play a lot of new games as well. But there's something special
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about the retro stage. Wonderful. And so that's where you recommend people to start with the local
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geek gatherings and with the things that they remember from their childhood.
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Yeah, like if you had a Super Nintendo when you were a child, buy it. If you only pay like
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Playstation 3 and Xbox 360 today, but you remember those good old days with Super Mario World and
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Super Metroid by one. If you don't like it, then you will get the same amount of money back
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because retro is, it's a good money today. You will not make a bad deal in a retro game, more or less.
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But you're not interested in remakes and retro and stuff that makes it possible to play old games
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on new consoles and such solutions. Some of them are good. I've been checking out those
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power packs. Have you seen those for the NES and the Super Nintendo? It's like a home-brewed
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cartage that you can place a SD card with the ROMs in. So you can actually play on the Super Nintendo,
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on a TV with the Super Nintendo controller, but you don't have to actually use the real cartages.
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No, right. So in a collector point of view, that's a good thing. They don't have to...
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So the cassette, the original cassette, it stands in the bookshelf, nice, tidy, you don't touch it
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at all. Right, understand that. So what would you like to plug them at the end of this interview?
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What would you like people to visit? Do I have a look at? It might be a problem when the most
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of the stuff you do is in Swedish, but perhaps something could entice even an English-speaking audience.
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These gatherings, I'm pretty sure they are all over the world. So if you maybe live in England
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and you see that, oh, it's 20 miles from here, go there. You have nothing to lose, except maybe
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a free day of work, or something like that. But get together with other nerds. You'll love it.
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I only got nerd friends these days. All right, splendid. Any last words?
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Gamer, I'm fun. That's what it might fall about.
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Spend it. Thank you very much. Yeah, thank you.
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The date for the 2014 edition of Retro Space Messon is already set. Saturday the 3rd of May
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in Irikspice, Holland, Gothenburg. In the show notes, you will find links to the Retro Space Messon
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Convention, the Gaming Granada Video Blog, the Spielklassiker Musik Retro Music Podcast,
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and the other stuff that was mentioned in the interview. The podcast that he re-hosts
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together with Tobias Jensen, a NES and Amiga 500 gamer who wished he had more time for games,
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hit the 200th episode in November 2013. Now let us end this episode of HPR with Hero's
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Life Advice. Game and have fun. It's a CT signing off.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio. We are a community
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