Good game, no rematch A life made of video games

Mike Drucker

Book - 2025

"At the ripe age of three, Mike Drucker got his very first Nintendo console--the Nintendo Entertainment System--and he was hooked. Every video game felt like a new chapter was opening in his life, expanding his world for the better and--sometimes--for worse. Final Fantasy VII, for example, helped him navigate the pitfalls of an early crush. And Dance Dance Revolution taught him how to almost, kinda move his body appropriately to music. Mike split his career between gaming and comedy, landing an internship with Saturday Night Live, playing Wii Sports with the cast and crew, and then a job at Nintendo, where he named an iconic character in the Legend of Zelda series. Then he returned to comedy with a job writing for The Tonight Show, nev...er forgetting the video games that brought him there. In this fond and joyful memoir, Drucker combines ridiculous personal stories and fascinating gaming history to explore the poignant ways that electronic entertainment can save us from ourselves. Good Game, No Rematch is a love letter to video games and the people who play them, from a very nerdy voice in the world of comedy." --Provided by Publisher.

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794.8092/Drucker
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 794.8092/Drucker (NEW SHELF) Due May 22, 2025
Subjects
Genres
humor
Autobiographies
Biographies
Humor
Published
Toronto, Ontario : Hanover Square Press [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Mike Drucker (author)
Physical Description
303 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781335012692
  • Section 1. Your Sad Electric Son
  • Falling in Love with a Plumber
  • Now You're Playing with Portable Power
  • Video Game Manuals by Decade
  • Accessories to Pain
  • Your Sad Electric Son
  • King Graham and the Queen of Computer Games
  • My Father, the Street Fighter
  • Mortal Monday
  • The Fall of Bigfoot's Arcade
  • Bookstore Boy
  • Section 2. Dance Dance Teen Romance
  • A Two-Hour Line for Three Dimensions
  • Aerith Gainsborough and Ms. Red
  • Good Game, No Rematch
  • What Your Favorite Classic Arcade Game Says about You
  • I'll Never Have a Real Fake Family
  • The Great StarCraft Conspiracy
  • Dance Dance Teen Romance
  • Section 3. The Former Nintendo Employee
  • Tom Nook University
  • Saturday Night Wii
  • Never Have a Video Game-Themed Wedding
  • The Former Nintendo Employee
  • How to Prepare for a Solo Pen-and-Paper Role-Playing Night
  • Dungeons & Dragons & Doofuses
  • Every Steam Review Ever
  • The Imagine Games Network
  • Section 4. Nier and Far
  • The Legend of Late Night
  • A List of Structures I've Built in Minecraft
  • Confessions of a Gaming Hoarder
  • Nier and Far
  • Andrew Ryan's Helpful Q&A for Moving to Rapture
  • The Return of Bigfoot's Arcade
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Booklist Review

In 1986, at age three, Drucker began his foray into video games by playing Duck Hunt on the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES). Little did he know that his singular obsession with video games would lead him to a successful career in writing and comedy. He chronicles his life, intertwining the history of video games with his awkward childhood, complete with self-deprecating humor and genuine surprise at his own success. Drucker details playing Wii games with the Saturday Night Live cast, writing for The Tonight Show, and creating content for Nintendo and other platforms. Breaking up the narrative are several humorous interludes including "Video Game Manuals by Decade" and "What your Favorite Video Game Says About You". Drucker's stream-of-consciousness writing style is entertaining and filled with video game minutia, but it does get bogged down at times with detailed accounts of game playing and strategies. This quirky memoir will appeal to aspiring comedy writers and comedians, as well as video game aficionados interested in the evolution of one of America's favorite pastimes.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this raucous trip through mushroom kingdoms and final fantasies, Tonight Show writer Drucker reflects on a life spent playing video games. "I would love to say that I was born with a controller in my hands, but that would've ultimately meant a horrifying injury for my mother," Drucker writes in the opening essay, setting the tone for a collection that offsets dorky deep-cuts with an underlying sweetness. "Dance Dance Teen Romance" follows Drucker's adolescent dalliances with Dance Dance Revolution, which made him feel like he'd "finally transform into the handsome, godlike man that existed nowhere in my genetic family history." In "I'll Never Have a Real Fake Family," Drucker jokes that his horrific track record of keeping his virtual family safe on The Sims is the main reason, aside from "the abject sadness genes in my blood," that he'll never have children. The narrative through line is thin, with passages about Drucker's earliest stand-up gigs and his first writing jobs only occasionally appearing amid odes to King's Quest and NFL Blitz. Though there's little here to appeal to readers who've never picked up a controller, even casual gamers will find this a hilarious treat. Agent: Dan Milaschewsky, UTA. (Apr.)

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