The excellent The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters exposed the wider world to the strange subculture of classic video game high score competitions in 2007. Now that the ensuing quest for ever higher and higher Donkey Kong scores looks like it's coming to an end, it's the perfect time for a new documentary focused on an even stranger sub-niche: players who spend days "marathoning" classic arcade games for high scores. In other words, it's the perfect time for Man vs. Snake: The Long and Twisted Tale of Nibbler.
Man vs. Snake (currently available for download and in an extremely limited theatrical run) includes a number of amusingly candid quotes along the lines of "What the fuck is Nibbler?" You'd be forgiven if you were thinking the same thing; the 1982 release's mix of Pac-Man and Snake gameplay failed to impact the arcade marketplace at the time, and it wasn't a massive seller for jukebox manufacturer Rock-Ola, either. But the game did catch the eye of Tim McVey, who became the first person ever confirmed to score 1 billion points on any video game in early 1984, winning himself a Nibbler arcade cabinet in the process.
McVey's feat was only possible because Nibbler is part of a certain subset of classic arcade games that are amenable to marathoning. Because the game continues to give extra lives at regular intervals (and because the game's speed and endlessly repeating mazes stop getting harder at an early point), the only thing limiting a skilled player's score is their ability to stay awake and focused at the machine for hours at a time. While a Donkey Kong high score run only takes three or fours hours to complete, getting a top score on Nibbler can easily take 40 hours or more of mind-numbing repetition (save for occasional breaks where the player trades a few extra lives for a few moments of rest).
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