Nintendo’s Sky Skipper Proves You Can’t Force Nostalgia

The word “classic” gets tossed around too easily today. If something’s old, it’s called a classic, regardless of its quality or importance. This is especially true with videogames, where anything you might’ve played at an Aladdin’s Castle once in 1985 gets treated like a timeless pillar of the medium. As with movies, toys, TV shows, and so much other flotsam from the Reagan era, nostalgia makes almost every 1980s game seem more significant than it is.
No game studio benefits more from nostalgia than Nintendo. Much of it is justified—the company’s major games from the 1980s are like a foundational text for the very notion of the videogame, from Donkey Kong to Super Mario Bros. to The Legend of Zelda. It’s why Nintendo can rerelease the same old games every few years and get people to pay for them once again—its most important games are legitimate classics on an incomparable level, and even its lesser works from the era tend to have a significant amount of charm.
And then there’s Sky Skipper. Made in 1981, this cartoonish tale of a pilot trying to rescue animals and playing card people from angry gorillas was supposed to be Nintendo’s follow-up to the smash Donkey Kong. Instead it bombed in Japanese arcades and tested so poorly in America that it was never even released over here. Most of the ten (some sources say 12) American test units were converted to play Popeye, which was a hit for Nintendo, and Sky Skipper itself was quickly forgotten by all but the most dedicated of Nintendo fans.
It would’ve stayed that way, if some of those fans hadn’t discovered a few old printed circuit boards from the game earlier this decade and mounted a campaign to get the game officially restored and released. Their efforts eventually took them to Nintendo of America’s office in Redmond, Wash., where the only known existing Sky Skipper machine has resided since 1981, and where they were able to scan the machine’s artwork (which was drawn by Shigeru Miyamoto). With the code restored from those PCBs, and the art from Nintendo’s cabinet, the Sky Skipper Project successfully built a modern recreation of this old arcade cabinet, and took it on tour to gaming conventions throughout 2017. (Paste played it extensively at the Southern Fried Gaming Expo in 2017, which is how it wound up on our list of the best games Nintendo designed in the 1980s.)