A Eulogy for Illusionz
(I very specifically tried to write this entry without names because I'll feel bad for forgetting people, but most of you know who you are in the things I've mentioned.)
This morning Magic Mike sent out an email of "Illusionz is closed". Not "closing", but "closed". The announcement's also up on their website.
Illusionz is/was this huge arcade out in Issaquah, about a 30-40 minute drive from me. When I arrived in Seattle, it had *FIVE* DDR machines, a Guitar Freaks/Drummania/KeyboardMania setup, a Dance Maniax, a Samba de Amigo, a Para Para Paradise, and two Pop'n'Music machines. It was THE place in Seattle to go for Japanese music videogame goodness.
It's funny. The last time I was there was literally exactly one year ago today. I remember making the staff turn on PNM5 for me, and then having people come in to bowl and I couldn't hear the machine for the rest of the time there.
Despite that I haven't really played DDR much in the last three years, Bemani and Illusionz were a huge part of my first year and a half in Seattle. Illusionz was part of what made me decide to want to move to Seattle -- even my first time visiting the city, I got a friend to drive me out there, and I was so happy to play DDRMAX (this was in early 2002 when the only DDR machine in Pittsburgh was a 4th mix an hour out of the city). My third day ever even living in Seattle, I went out to Illusionz to play DDR -- and first encountered those "crazy good Team Seattle people with their weird card lines". Having gone from being one of the better players in Pittsburgh to the absolute worst player in Seattle was pretty striking, let me tell you :)
I entered the DDR Magic 4 tournament three weeks later... the day after going hiking on Mt. Rainier. So, I sucked. A lot. But I met a few people that day, and then three weeks after that I went to Free Bemani Night, and sometime after that I started actually talking to people on the DDR Global BBS, started going to IZ regularly on Wednesday nights to hang out with people. I remember the week that DDR Extreme came out, I literally spent about 30 hours at Illusionz, between new year's events there and just going to hang out. Eventually I stopped being scared of everyone, probably around when I started hosting those IIDX parties at my house, and when I started really branching into getting competent at all the other Bemani games. And then we had those "glory days" at IZ, when every Saturday night we'd have a gigantic crowd of us around, we'd play 5-person Session on GF/DM/KBM, we'd have huge crowds of us doing Para Para around the machine, we'd go out to eat dinner afterwards, and I'd always end up giving people rides back to UW on my way home. Magic Mike himself used to read our BBS and post about improvements at the arcade, and he knew most of the Bemani regulars by name. The weekend of Illusionz DDR Magic 5, I had like six people staying over at my house, we had a huge party, I spent like 20 hours of the weekend helping out at the tournament, it was a blast.
Not sure what happened exactly. Eventually the machines stopped being well-maintained, and there was a lot of group drama going on, and so the huge group stopped hanging out. People went to Narrows instead a lot more since the machines were better, and I personally started playing DDR more at Sunset Bowl and Kenmore and closer places than IZ, for exercise -- it wasn't worth driving 30-45 minutes to hang out at Illusionz by myself. When they first had the In The Groove location test there it sort of revived the group thing a bit -- I remember it was a lot of fun playtesting it at first (some of you will remember my absolute glee at the mines exploding the first time I played "Hip Hop Blam", as I called it), but around then I also started having my knee problems, and so then the issue became that it wasn't worth driving 30-45 minutes to go watch other people play ITG on a regular basis. When I got a Desktop Arcade Pop'n'Music controller near the end of 2004, that pretty much signalled the end of me ever having any reason to go back to IZ again.
I do sort of miss that feeling of having a place where I could go to and play videogames and always have people to hang out with. Having a central hangout for a big group of people that isn't a personal residence is really important to me -- all through my time at CMU we always had various places that served that purpose, whether it was the office of a student organization, or the CS lounge, or dorm lounges, and so on. So IZ had become that for me for my first year or two in Seattle... the place where, if I had no plans in particular, I figured I could go out there and I'd run into someone I knew and be able to have fun. The fact that I was part of one of the best DDR/Bemani groups in the country back when it wasn't completely mainstream was just a side effect.
Funny, IZ is actually somewhat partially responsible, even indirectly, for my current baseball writing hobby and infamy, because without IZ I wouldn't have met the people who introduced me to Puzzle Pirates, which is where I met the friend who went with me to my first USSM meetup over two years ago, where I had a conversation that led me to decide to start writing Marinerds. And one of those IZ friends even went with me to my first baseball game in Japan, which is where I became a Nippon Ham Fighters fan. Go figure.
Magic Mike asked for people to send in pictures of Illusionz, of which I have a bazillion, though I took most of them off the net 2-3 years ago because I was sick of people photoshopping mean things out of the people in them. I hate the internet sometimes. I'll have to see if I can find some of the shots with no people in them -- I know that at one point when they rearranged the machines in 2003, I went around and just took pictures of the layout. I'll post some here if/when I get around to doing that.
RIP Illusionz. 大事な所を絶対忘れないよ.
This morning Magic Mike sent out an email of "Illusionz is closed". Not "closing", but "closed". The announcement's also up on their website.
Illusionz is/was this huge arcade out in Issaquah, about a 30-40 minute drive from me. When I arrived in Seattle, it had *FIVE* DDR machines, a Guitar Freaks/Drummania/KeyboardMania setup, a Dance Maniax, a Samba de Amigo, a Para Para Paradise, and two Pop'n'Music machines. It was THE place in Seattle to go for Japanese music videogame goodness.
It's funny. The last time I was there was literally exactly one year ago today. I remember making the staff turn on PNM5 for me, and then having people come in to bowl and I couldn't hear the machine for the rest of the time there.
Despite that I haven't really played DDR much in the last three years, Bemani and Illusionz were a huge part of my first year and a half in Seattle. Illusionz was part of what made me decide to want to move to Seattle -- even my first time visiting the city, I got a friend to drive me out there, and I was so happy to play DDRMAX (this was in early 2002 when the only DDR machine in Pittsburgh was a 4th mix an hour out of the city). My third day ever even living in Seattle, I went out to Illusionz to play DDR -- and first encountered those "crazy good Team Seattle people with their weird card lines". Having gone from being one of the better players in Pittsburgh to the absolute worst player in Seattle was pretty striking, let me tell you :)
I entered the DDR Magic 4 tournament three weeks later... the day after going hiking on Mt. Rainier. So, I sucked. A lot. But I met a few people that day, and then three weeks after that I went to Free Bemani Night, and sometime after that I started actually talking to people on the DDR Global BBS, started going to IZ regularly on Wednesday nights to hang out with people. I remember the week that DDR Extreme came out, I literally spent about 30 hours at Illusionz, between new year's events there and just going to hang out. Eventually I stopped being scared of everyone, probably around when I started hosting those IIDX parties at my house, and when I started really branching into getting competent at all the other Bemani games. And then we had those "glory days" at IZ, when every Saturday night we'd have a gigantic crowd of us around, we'd play 5-person Session on GF/DM/KBM, we'd have huge crowds of us doing Para Para around the machine, we'd go out to eat dinner afterwards, and I'd always end up giving people rides back to UW on my way home. Magic Mike himself used to read our BBS and post about improvements at the arcade, and he knew most of the Bemani regulars by name. The weekend of Illusionz DDR Magic 5, I had like six people staying over at my house, we had a huge party, I spent like 20 hours of the weekend helping out at the tournament, it was a blast.
Not sure what happened exactly. Eventually the machines stopped being well-maintained, and there was a lot of group drama going on, and so the huge group stopped hanging out. People went to Narrows instead a lot more since the machines were better, and I personally started playing DDR more at Sunset Bowl and Kenmore and closer places than IZ, for exercise -- it wasn't worth driving 30-45 minutes to hang out at Illusionz by myself. When they first had the In The Groove location test there it sort of revived the group thing a bit -- I remember it was a lot of fun playtesting it at first (some of you will remember my absolute glee at the mines exploding the first time I played "Hip Hop Blam", as I called it), but around then I also started having my knee problems, and so then the issue became that it wasn't worth driving 30-45 minutes to go watch other people play ITG on a regular basis. When I got a Desktop Arcade Pop'n'Music controller near the end of 2004, that pretty much signalled the end of me ever having any reason to go back to IZ again.
I do sort of miss that feeling of having a place where I could go to and play videogames and always have people to hang out with. Having a central hangout for a big group of people that isn't a personal residence is really important to me -- all through my time at CMU we always had various places that served that purpose, whether it was the office of a student organization, or the CS lounge, or dorm lounges, and so on. So IZ had become that for me for my first year or two in Seattle... the place where, if I had no plans in particular, I figured I could go out there and I'd run into someone I knew and be able to have fun. The fact that I was part of one of the best DDR/Bemani groups in the country back when it wasn't completely mainstream was just a side effect.
Funny, IZ is actually somewhat partially responsible, even indirectly, for my current baseball writing hobby and infamy, because without IZ I wouldn't have met the people who introduced me to Puzzle Pirates, which is where I met the friend who went with me to my first USSM meetup over two years ago, where I had a conversation that led me to decide to start writing Marinerds. And one of those IZ friends even went with me to my first baseball game in Japan, which is where I became a Nippon Ham Fighters fan. Go figure.
Magic Mike asked for people to send in pictures of Illusionz, of which I have a bazillion, though I took most of them off the net 2-3 years ago because I was sick of people photoshopping mean things out of the people in them. I hate the internet sometimes. I'll have to see if I can find some of the shots with no people in them -- I know that at one point when they rearranged the machines in 2003, I went around and just took pictures of the layout. I'll post some here if/when I get around to doing that.
RIP Illusionz. 大事な所を絶対忘れないよ.

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:)
So sad to see Illusionz gone. All the memories. I need to dig up the pictures from the DDR fundraising/challenge thing.
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This was the machine facing the climbing wall. I was sitting on the pad for that when I sketched this out.
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