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- Oct 3, 2004
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- Trigon
Hard to believe, but today is the 25th anniversary of the founding of shivaSite. At the time, I just wanted to be a starcraft site, but funny how things worked out.
It was 1999. By the end of that year, the entire Pinball industry went right to the crapper, and there was a time when it looked like it was over. Even then, there were rumours Williams was going to pull the plug, we had already lost Gottlieb and Capcom, and Sega was done as well. The industry was dead, and it looked like it would never return. IPDB (first version) closed it's doors, and things looked grimmer and grimmer as 1999 went along. Williams did close, and though Gary Stern bought what was left of Sega, the odds were not with him. The entire web presence for pinball was down to a few very small websites and a mail news group (remember those?).
I can't remember when I did my first pinball related post on my then (real tiny) website, or even why I continued to do pinball related content. Maybe because I couldn't handle the fact the game I love was pretty much gone, but something inside me said "maybe things will get better, maybe I can make a difference".
so 25 years later...
There was no way anyone could have predicted what we have now. Just looking back at that time now, and the impact and the pure insanity that was shivaSite is still a marvel to behold. There was no master plan, it was if it was pinball related, throw it againest the wall and see if it sticks. Literally, nothing else. The biggest downfall was it didn't occur to me that there would be so many people who felt the exact same way that I did.
It all started with wpcMame (basically the grand father of Vpinmame) and the set of "Clean" master roms I got my hands on, and then it sort of snowballed from there. I found the first set of pdf manuals, and the site just kept growing and growing and growing and... People like Destruk, Steve, Joxer, and Blue Tex became involved pretty quickly, then Randy and I (and later Chris) got together and the result is history.
The website stopped being my site, it became everyone's website, and I think that's why the site became so special, because everyone contributed to it in their own way, because we all wanted pinball to stay alive. The most important thing I can say about shivaSite was, it came at exactly the right time, and when it was most needed when the times were very grim. The website was the starting point of so many things that we all enjoy now, VP, FP, a arcade pinball industry that is thriving, and a computer base industry that is really growing. We have tens if not hundreds of thousands of pinball games we can play, we have the entire cabinet industry, we have VR, and pinball is back where it belongs, in the arcades.
I still see shivaSite stuff all over the place even now. IPDB (2nd version) ended up with a lot of the content, but it's all over the place. The torch has been passed on, and there are so many great pinball websites out there, so hopefully, we will never need a shivaSite ever again because there is no need. That's a good thing in my books. Our community is strong now. Our industry is strong. Pinball doesn't just have a past and a present, it also has a future, and that is the most important thing.
I'm proud of what shivaSite and everyone involved with it achieved, never in my wildest dreams exactly 25 years ago today would I have thought we all enjoy as much as we do now, and the shear impact it actually had. I am grateful that people still remember the website fondly even to this day, it truly turned into a special website. So today is the one day we think of the past, with the knowledge that when tomorrow comes, it is the first day of our future.
And what a future it could be.
It was 1999. By the end of that year, the entire Pinball industry went right to the crapper, and there was a time when it looked like it was over. Even then, there were rumours Williams was going to pull the plug, we had already lost Gottlieb and Capcom, and Sega was done as well. The industry was dead, and it looked like it would never return. IPDB (first version) closed it's doors, and things looked grimmer and grimmer as 1999 went along. Williams did close, and though Gary Stern bought what was left of Sega, the odds were not with him. The entire web presence for pinball was down to a few very small websites and a mail news group (remember those?).
I can't remember when I did my first pinball related post on my then (real tiny) website, or even why I continued to do pinball related content. Maybe because I couldn't handle the fact the game I love was pretty much gone, but something inside me said "maybe things will get better, maybe I can make a difference".
so 25 years later...
There was no way anyone could have predicted what we have now. Just looking back at that time now, and the impact and the pure insanity that was shivaSite is still a marvel to behold. There was no master plan, it was if it was pinball related, throw it againest the wall and see if it sticks. Literally, nothing else. The biggest downfall was it didn't occur to me that there would be so many people who felt the exact same way that I did.
It all started with wpcMame (basically the grand father of Vpinmame) and the set of "Clean" master roms I got my hands on, and then it sort of snowballed from there. I found the first set of pdf manuals, and the site just kept growing and growing and growing and... People like Destruk, Steve, Joxer, and Blue Tex became involved pretty quickly, then Randy and I (and later Chris) got together and the result is history.
The website stopped being my site, it became everyone's website, and I think that's why the site became so special, because everyone contributed to it in their own way, because we all wanted pinball to stay alive. The most important thing I can say about shivaSite was, it came at exactly the right time, and when it was most needed when the times were very grim. The website was the starting point of so many things that we all enjoy now, VP, FP, a arcade pinball industry that is thriving, and a computer base industry that is really growing. We have tens if not hundreds of thousands of pinball games we can play, we have the entire cabinet industry, we have VR, and pinball is back where it belongs, in the arcades.
I still see shivaSite stuff all over the place even now. IPDB (2nd version) ended up with a lot of the content, but it's all over the place. The torch has been passed on, and there are so many great pinball websites out there, so hopefully, we will never need a shivaSite ever again because there is no need. That's a good thing in my books. Our community is strong now. Our industry is strong. Pinball doesn't just have a past and a present, it also has a future, and that is the most important thing.
I'm proud of what shivaSite and everyone involved with it achieved, never in my wildest dreams exactly 25 years ago today would I have thought we all enjoy as much as we do now, and the shear impact it actually had. I am grateful that people still remember the website fondly even to this day, it truly turned into a special website. So today is the one day we think of the past, with the knowledge that when tomorrow comes, it is the first day of our future.
And what a future it could be.