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30th anniversary honors. |
Thursday, January 29, 2015
3rd in order, Hall of Famer
After years of research, the Laser Tag Museum has declared Star Laser Force to be the third indoor laser tag system opened to the public worldwide (after Photon in Dallas and Laser Zone in Chicago). If you were ever at Star Laser Force, that makes you an industry pioneer!
Monday, October 20, 2014
Battle Suits received at the Laser Tag Museum
I'm delighted to report that the Laser Tag Museum has secured three sets of the original Star Laser Force battle gear, or packs, for collection and display. Congratulations!
Edit: New link
Edit: New link
Thursday, September 11, 2014
Star Laser Force video
Many thanks to the Laser Tag Museum for permission to mirror this John Davenport report from the early days of Star Laser Force.
Here's a quick overview with commentary:
00:06 - These were the early days. The front entrance opened
directly into a small waiting area with a front counter -- a sensible floor plan
for, say, a manufacturing company, but for a service business drawing crowds
this rapidly became untenable. Parking in the rear became mandatory and
you entered the back door of the building, passed through a tunnel and into a larger
waiting area (which included the new ticket window, vending/games, and space for parties). The former waiting area became what we would
now call the briefing room.
00:11 - Does anyone know her?
00:17 - This sequence would have taken place in the vesting room.
00:22 - The tech room.
00:30 - Here you can see inside the front box; the display board is visible without the aluminum cover.
00:33 - Soon, all the walls were scratched up like that. Looks like the snap-on helmet visors were never actually used in the game. I had wondered if they had once been used, but apparently not.
00:35 - Bill Lewis himself in one of the Transporter rooms. The wall treatment, the hatchway (shown) and the transporter sound FX (not used in the video) made the start of the game memorable and immersive.
00:44 - In small games, both teams could fit in the same Transporter and only 1 attendant was needed.
Seems like these helmets do not fit these kids very well... either that or their heads are still sweaty from the last game and they're trying to cool off.
00:52 - Leaving the bridge and turning to go down the ridiculously steep ramp.
01:04 - The final scene takes place on the Bridge, with the Saturn mural/viewscreen in the background.
Although short, this report was a real treat to see. Thanks to whoever donated it to the museum!
Edit: new link
Here's a quick overview with commentary:
00:02 - The right-hand building included the offices, waiting area, ticket window, and later the party area; the left-hand building had the playing field.
00:09 - That was the whole waiting area in the early days. The
cameraman is standing in the corner next to the ticket window. Benches
were added later. I had forgotten they once had no place to sit! I sat
on that floor, but only on my first visit.
00:11 - Does anyone know her?
00:15 - Ugh! Those nasty plastic hairnets kept the heat from leaving your head and kept your hair saturated with sweat. Kids, this is why most battle places don't have helmets: It's just too stinkin' realistic.
00:17 - This sequence would have taken place in the vesting room.
The attendant is holding the gun connector in his right hand and
plugging it into the bottom of the bottom of the front box, then handing
the gun to the player. This helped people to not get tangled in the
gun cable when putting the armor on. Today manufacturers use coiled gun cables.
00:18 - Look how clean the armor was...
00:19 - If you look carefully you can see the gun holster on left side of the front box on the armor.
00:22 - The tech room.
00:28
- That is the gun sound of Star Laser Force.
The long breakaway barrels got knocked off the gun a lot. Eventually
they were left off, or shortened. I would imagine it would be dangerous to step on a loose barrel, dangerous to
be poked in the eye by one... seems like just an all-around bad idea, except the gun looks like it belongs to Han Solo!
00:30 - Here you can see inside the front box; the display board is visible without the aluminum cover.
Watch and see it start to count up 10 points, the penalty for
being hit. Eyeballing the counting speed, it looks like you had barely 4 seconds to hide before you could be hit again.
00:33 - Soon, all the walls were scratched up like that. Looks like the snap-on helmet visors were never actually used in the game. I had wondered if they had once been used, but apparently not.
00:35 - Bill Lewis himself in one of the Transporter rooms. The wall treatment, the hatchway (shown) and the transporter sound FX (not used in the video) made the start of the game memorable and immersive.
00:44 - In small games, both teams could fit in the same Transporter and only 1 attendant was needed.
Seems like these helmets do not fit these kids very well... either that or their heads are still sweaty from the last game and they're trying to cool off.
00:47 - The cluster of barrels - there were only a few. What is that glowing thing?
00:52 - Leaving the bridge and turning to go down the ridiculously steep ramp.
01:04 - The final scene takes place on the Bridge, with the Saturn mural/viewscreen in the background.
Although short, this report was a real treat to see. Thanks to whoever donated it to the museum!
Edit: new link
Saturday, September 21, 2013
Fun summer action (in 1986)
I said that I'd found no mention of Star Laser Force in my newspaper-research sojourn this year, but that wasn't strictly true; there was one article in the index that I couldn't find in the actual archive, and then there is this one, which I already had. For the sake of completeness, here are the hours and prices, part of a longer list of things to do during the summer of 1986.
Getting to the point...
In case you're wondering, the other attractions listed were:
Edit: Updated title, added a bit of detail to the other attractions, and commentary about the pricing.
Houston Chronicle
July 6, 1986
Fun summer action for those on a budget
Gina Seay
Most parents struggling to make ends meet will have to tell Johnny and Suzy to put their dream vacations on hold. But that doesn't mean the summer has to be long and boring.
There are lots of indoor and outdoor activities in the greater Houston area that fit within a teen-ager's budget....
Getting to the point...
Star Laser Force, 5810 S. Rice Ave., allows visitors to live out their "Star Trek" fantasies in laser gun duels. Everyone gets a light-sensitive helmet and shoulder pads. Purchase a lifetime membership for $3.50. Games for members are $1.25; for non-members, $4. Hours are 2-11 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 2 p.m-1 a.m. Friday and Saturday and noon-11 p.m. Sunday.$1.25 a game is ridiculously cheap, and suggests desperation in response to the threat of Photon, which was the much "hotter" and better-promoted laser tag experience. It's interesting that they also allowed "non-members" to play, and I wonder if they were still using the liability release form at this time. It's quite possible that the bulk of the revenue at this time was coming from birthday parties, an element that would spread from pizza/arcade places to become a crucial part of operations in all entertainment destinations over the following ten years.
In case you're wondering, the other attractions listed were:
- Fame City (a very early family entertainment center)
- AstroWorld (the theme park, owned by Six Flags and later closed)
- WaterWorld (next to Astroworld)
- Sea-Arama Marineworld
- Galveston Island
- Armand Bayou Nature Center
- The Houston Zoo
- The Oil Ranch
- Games People Play
- The Children's Museum (fairly new back then), and finally...
- Splash Town USA ("scheduled to open in early August") which is still around to this day.
Edit: Updated title, added a bit of detail to the other attractions, and commentary about the pricing.
Sunday, September 15, 2013
Death, you old toad, where is thy sting?
It's fair to say the inhabitants of Houston and surrounding communities (both then and today) would generally be comfortable with guns, and that there was scarcely a moment of fear that the game would transform the visiting child into a killing machine. Finding a jackrabbit in the city limits might have been tough, though, even back then. The fathers of some of those inhabitants picked most of them off a generation before.
For those not aware, the Houston City Council will issue a proclamation for the asking. It is of no particular significance and just shows that Sheil was doing her due diligence.
Spokane Chronicle - Mar 27, 1986
For Photon's warriors, death's just an inconvenience
By Fred Grimm
Knight-Ridder
HOUSTON — A sudden buzz, like a burst of radio static, and a phaser-wielding assassin leaps, giggling, from ambush and disappears down a darkened maze. The victim (me) was zapped, fatally.
But death is only a minor inconvenience there amid the rising fog of Photon.
Just four seconds. Just a four-second sojourn into that darkest void. Sort of lacks finality, doesn't it? Death, you old toad, where is thy sting?
Monday, September 9, 2013
First Laser Tag in Houston
(Here's the text of the article posted last year. Errors have been left unchanged.)
HOUSTON MAGAZINE
April, 1986
pp. 49-52
PRO/FILE
SPACE WAR BUSINESSES COMPETE IN SOUTHWEST
Two Firms Offer Space Fantasies
In a distant galaxy, warriors like Gandalf, Thorin, Mr. Micro and the Chameleon battle continuously with Sgt. York, Rambo, Captain Kirk and the entire Cleaver family—Ward, June, Wally and the Beaver—for control of the Photon. A few light years away on South Rice Avenue, the Starship Blue Force struggles against the Xenon Red Raiders on the planet Xenon.
Armed with infrared phasers, chest pods and sonic helmets, the Photon warriors zap each other until they have exhausted their energy and their time. After six and a half minutes, the Photonians relinquish the field to two fresh battalions who begin the battle again.
Packing turbo phasers and armor similar to that of the Photonians, the Blue Force and Red Raiders attack, the flash of lasers and rumble of battle sounds flooding the planet like a violent thunderstorm. The battle on Xenon lasts slightly longer, about seven minutes, before the soldiers call a truce to assess casualties.
As the Photonian warriors leave the battlefield and remove their gear, the reveal their true identities. Gandalf is an accountant, Thorin a lawyer, Rambo a truck driver, and the Cleavers are college students. Sgt. York fudged only slightly. He's a private on leave from the U.S. Marine Corps. The group has just finished playing Photon, a high-tech version of "capture the flag." The Starship Blue Force and the Xenon Red Raiders have just played Star Laser Force, a game similar to Photon.
Native Houstonian Bill Lewis began thinking of ways to stage a mock laser battle after watching Star Wars. He built and sold several businesses, including a driving school and a day care center, before embarking on Star Laser Force.
HOUSTON MAGAZINE
April, 1986
pp. 49-52
PRO/FILE
SPACE WAR BUSINESSES COMPETE IN SOUTHWEST
Two Firms Offer Space Fantasies
In a distant galaxy, warriors like Gandalf, Thorin, Mr. Micro and the Chameleon battle continuously with Sgt. York, Rambo, Captain Kirk and the entire Cleaver family—Ward, June, Wally and the Beaver—for control of the Photon. A few light years away on South Rice Avenue, the Starship Blue Force struggles against the Xenon Red Raiders on the planet Xenon.
Armed with infrared phasers, chest pods and sonic helmets, the Photon warriors zap each other until they have exhausted their energy and their time. After six and a half minutes, the Photonians relinquish the field to two fresh battalions who begin the battle again.
Packing turbo phasers and armor similar to that of the Photonians, the Blue Force and Red Raiders attack, the flash of lasers and rumble of battle sounds flooding the planet like a violent thunderstorm. The battle on Xenon lasts slightly longer, about seven minutes, before the soldiers call a truce to assess casualties.
As the Photonian warriors leave the battlefield and remove their gear, the reveal their true identities. Gandalf is an accountant, Thorin a lawyer, Rambo a truck driver, and the Cleavers are college students. Sgt. York fudged only slightly. He's a private on leave from the U.S. Marine Corps. The group has just finished playing Photon, a high-tech version of "capture the flag." The Starship Blue Force and the Xenon Red Raiders have just played Star Laser Force, a game similar to Photon.
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Photon warriors don helmets, slip into chest pods and arm themselves to battle for control of the "planet." |
Sunday, June 23, 2013
The view from the Target Audience
We've seen the calm and even reticent reactions of the self-proclaimed 'fuddy-duddies' to the as-yet unnamed sports of laser tag and paintball in the last two posts. Ken Lanterman, the reporter in this final article swings the other way, glib and giddy about "the new photon/laser games" and "the paint pellet war games" and dripping with enthusiasm (and sweat). He takes the trouble to describe the games in detail, making the summer-activities feature piece perfect for inflaming kids with hype and ensuring parents would soon hear, "Can you take me to....?"
Photos accompanying the article reproduced quite badly in microfilm, unfortunately, and are probably lost to history.
Photos accompanying the article reproduced quite badly in microfilm, unfortunately, and are probably lost to history.
No. 1 rule of the game: Shoot to thrill
Ken Lanterman
Houston Post
May 23, 1986
Some may deny it, but deep down inside we are all curious to know how we'd do in battle. If nothing else, we are looking for a little adventure-- something more than the vicarious thrills we get from the movies.
We want to know what we'd do if our lives were put on the line. If we'd fight back. If so, [how?] Would we react like the noble unaggressive creature we may think we are or like the animal we all fear we might be?
Beyond that, how would we do? Would we survive? Are our instincts and skills good enough?
Besides providing the simple exhilaration of hide-and-seek and tag, this is what weekend warriors who play the paint pellet war games or the new photon/laser games learn about themselves.
In the past three years, several versions of these games have sprung up in and around Houston. We visited the newest of each of these: Adventure Games of America and Photon.
Friday, June 21, 2013
Eric Gerber on Photon
Continuing the side trip through articles written about Photon Houston, here's columnist Eric Gerber's first-hand account from just a few months after their opening day. There are all kinds of interesting details in here. (Seriously, the head of the Houston school district, superintendent Reagan, endorsed Photon?)
Electrifying Fantasy
Eric Gerber
Houston Post
February 2, 1986When I was about 8 years old, I would put a colander on my head, use a raggedy bath towel for a cape and go flying about the house blasting space monsters with a rotary eggbeater — uh, ray gun.
And here I am today, nearly three decades later, more or less in the same situation.
The colander's been replaced by a high-tech space helmet that would turn Darth Vader black with envy. Instead of an egg beater, I've got a phaser, a sleek light-beam weapon. I'm also wearing a control module over my chest, and a 13-pound battery pack is cinched around my waist.I'm not exactly flying — and the targets this morning aren't space monsters but other people wearing this space-age gear.
Thursday, June 20, 2013
"At least it doesn't make you bleed"
Let's start with this editorial by David Westheimer. published in the Houston Post back on September 24, 1986.
Click to read.
"I understand kids whose parents have the wherewithal to buy the latest weapons needn't argue about who got whom first these days. They wear sensors at head and heart that glow when hit by a beam from the opponent's gun."Westheimer briefly mentions both laser tag and paintball in this essay about playing with guns, and how different generations react to this new trend. There's a lot of food for thought here. How much have people of my generation, and those following, been changed by increasingly realistic entertainment?
Click to read.
Further research
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Vintage Houston Yellow Pages. From the author's personal collection. There's Photon, accidentally listed as Synchro Management! |
To put that into perspective, though, in those same papers I found zero coverage of video games, either home or arcade, in an era where both dominated the amusement sphere of a large chunk of the next generation - kids, teens, and up. The people who edited the paper did not foresee the significance of games in the culture, and only those who beat the publicity drum in the right way could expect to be noticed. Movies were well represented in the entertainment sections; amusement parks were reliable news generators as well. As for laser tag, well, they didn't even have a name for it at first. Still, when Photon showed up, I imagine it was played up as the amusement park of the future, based on various accounts. In the next few posts, I'll document the response of the press here in Houston to the curious newcomer, Photon.
While on this trip I also visited the delightful Texas Room where a collection of local ephemera and documents of all kinds awaits the determined researcher. They pulled the entertainment file for me, and it was fascinating seeing what was meant to be fun throughout the past 100 years. There wasn't anything about SLF there either, sorry to say, but I enjoyed seeing first-hand entertainment ads for the defunct Busch Gardens Houston, which I had never heard of; wrestling, sports events, and much more.
Sunday, November 4, 2012
The Star Laser Force T-shirt
If so, would you consider donating it to the Laser Tag Museum? I'll be glad to pick it up from you if you're in the Houston area.
Sunday, July 1, 2012
What was Star Laser Force like?
Here is your virtual nickel tour of
Star Laser Force, adapted from my original posting on a
Yahoo group in 2009.
Star Laser Force was the first commercial laser tag venture in Houston, Texas. The facility had one indoor arena.
The building was a double sheet metal
warehouse. Initially you could walk in the front door, and the
waiting room was up front; later a much larger waiting area was
finished and I think there may have been picnic tables for parties.
When you came in the back door from the parking at the rear you
passed through a dark tunnel and through the Stargate, a “chamfered”
science-fiction doorway illuminated from within... well, really it
was a black wooden channel with aluminum foil and Christmas lights.
The whole of the interior of the
building except bathrooms and employee areas was painted flat black.
There were some benches for people to wait for their turn. They
always had a few arcade video games. I
remember an old Space Wars early on, and later,
in the large waiting area, there were titles such as Gauntlet and Bomb Jack.
You had to fill out the one-sheet sign
up form to play. It had a brief and barely adequate legal
disclaimer. They made cheap laminated photo IDs. You'd pay your $3.00 to
play (initial price at opening), and games were initially 7 or 8 minutes as I recall. If you paid in
advance (and you really had to), your receipt would get you into your
game's time slot, and if you were serious about playing the game your
team would sit together and work out strategy while waiting for your
chance.
Star Laser Force Brochure/Mailer
Imagine it's 1985... you're in high school or college... you're hoping for something fun to do during summer. Then you see this flyer promising real, live battles, "Star Wars" style. Just about every boy in town would try it out given a chance. If nothing else it would get you out of the Houston heat for a while. In the end, though, you might get just as drenched in sweat playing inside as if you'd been jogging in Memorial Park.
The park isn't packed with people trying to take you down, though. That's laser tag... and the adrenaline rush never seems to get old.
(Click to enlarge.)
This image is the same brochure now on display in the awesome Laser Tag Museum in Kentucky.
If you actually got one of these in the mail, I might just have to envy you.
The park isn't packed with people trying to take you down, though. That's laser tag... and the adrenaline rush never seems to get old.
(Click to enlarge.)
This image is the same brochure now on display in the awesome Laser Tag Museum in Kentucky.
If you actually got one of these in the mail, I might just have to envy you.
Saturday, April 7, 2012
1986 Magazine Article - Star Laser Force vs. Photon in Houston
Here is one of the very few magazine articles ever to be written about Star Laser Force. Written after the Houston Photon field opened, it describes both facilities fairly well.
Personally, I found Photon in its early days to be more like a theme park ride (complete with the long lines) and preferred the laid back Star Laser Force atmosphere.
Edit: This article has been transcribed here.
Personally, I found Photon in its early days to be more like a theme park ride (complete with the long lines) and preferred the laid back Star Laser Force atmosphere.
Edit: This article has been transcribed here.
Promotional Photo
This is, as I recollect, a photocopy of a photocopy of an official promotional photo for Star Laser Force.
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