I love a good mystery, and internet-based mysteries are among my favourite types. Of course Moth Man, the Mary Celeste and the tale of Springheel Jack are cool things to read up on, but the ubiquitous nature of the internet means we can all be cyber sleuths without ever leaving our living rooms. And just to compound what I'm yapping about, stuff that was actually spawned by the internet itself (such as Cicada 3301, Unfavourable Semicircle and Webdriver Torso) is every bit as fascinating to me as 'real world' mysteries are.
That's not to say the more mundane aspects of the online world are any less wondrous - the very nature of the internet means that stuff written long ago can still be found online and still be read today, either because the hosting service still exists or the Way Back Machine allows us to glimpse into the past and recover the information contained on those garish (and often embarrassing) GeoCities/MySpace pages of yore.
It's this errant sentence that seems to have spawned one of the enduring mysteries of the Dreamcast community - did defunct games retailer Electronics Boutique offer a special edition Dreamcast via it's American online store in the early 2000s? If it did, why are there no images of it anywhere and why is every mention of the system on forums shot down within a few replies?
Even sites whose whole reason for existing is to cover the various special editions of certain games consoles offer scant details; they all make reference to this blue NTSC-U Electronics Boutique Dreamcast but they all show a generic image of a Dreamcast in an after market shell. Finally, the substantiation against such a system ever being produced rests with Sega Retro, where there is no reference whatsoever to this fantastical machine. The evidence is pretty damning once you lay it all out. To me at least it looks like an incorrect sentence was placed into a Wikipedia entry by persons unknown for their own amusement and an urban myth (albeit one that only found popularity in the darkest recesses of long abandoned Dreamcast forums) was born.
Case closed, right?
He bought it as part of a job lot from another Dreamcast collector in 2007 and was told it was rare, and that was it. The current owner knows no more about it and only recently discovered the story of the EB system, so that's where my investigations began. The proof looked pretty water tight - the blue body marked with official Sega and Windows CE logs, the clear lid with official Dreamcast codes moulded into the plastic. I have no reason to believe the current owner had anything but similar excitement about this system as I had, and I was pretty stoked to be looking at an exclusive expose for the Junkyard. But - and it's a big but - upon researching further it appears that this system could well be a standard Dreamcast with an official translucent blue top fitted with an official translucent lid.
So, it's quite probable that the Dreamcast pictured above is little more than a very cool-looking mod and not a fabled EB Dreamcast. But that's not really the point of this whole meandering diatribe. The point is this: do you know if there is any truth to the tale of the Electronics Boutique Dreamcast? How and why did the rumour begin? Why do several sites list such a thing as existing if it doesn't? If it was always fake, why did somebody feel the need to insert it into a Wikipedia entry? Is this all an elaborate hoax designed to make me look like a stupid c*nt (wouldn't be the first time, to be honest)?
Short of trying to contact somebody from EB Games who worked there between 1999 and 2000, we're looking to you - the community - to help to solve or debunk this fascinating tale. I suppose it doesn't really matter in all truth - that such mysteries still exist in the world of Dreamcast only goes to show why I love this system more than any other (even the Jaguar!).
Folklore, or folk fact? Let's find out...
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Fuck...I was only trying to play Doom. |
As a person with an unhealthy obsession with all things Dreamcast-related, It probably won't surprise you to learn that I do spend an inordinate amount of time perusing these ghost sites in the hunt for obscure references to cool stuff that never saw the light of day; and the good old Way Back Machine has helped me verify a story more times than I care to remember.
The reason I'm blathering on about all this will become apparent soon enough, but before I continue on this path to self destruction, I need you to do something for me. Open another browser window on your desktop or phone or whatever contraption you're using to read this shit and search for 'Electronics Boutique Blue Dreamcast.' Have a scroll through the results and you'll come across an old archived Reddit thread, a couple of posts to a Racketboy forum thread and about a hundred reproduced passages from a defunct Wikipedia entry:
The reason I'm blathering on about all this will become apparent soon enough, but before I continue on this path to self destruction, I need you to do something for me. Open another browser window on your desktop or phone or whatever contraption you're using to read this shit and search for 'Electronics Boutique Blue Dreamcast.' Have a scroll through the results and you'll come across an old archived Reddit thread, a couple of posts to a Racketboy forum thread and about a hundred reproduced passages from a defunct Wikipedia entry:
"Some special Dreamcast models were released in certain regions. In North America, a limited edition black Dreamcast was released with a Sega Sports logo below the Dreamcast logo on the lid, along with matching Sega Sports-branded black controllers. Electronics Boutique offered a blue Dreamcast through its website."
Read that last bit again. Electronics Boutique offered a blue Dreamcast through its website. What?!
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The generic 'blue dreamcast' image used when referring to the EB Dreamcast. |
Now, that sentence doesn't appear in the current Dreamcast page on Wikipedia and by using a combination of Wikipedia's own change-tracking protocols and the Way Back Machine, I've managed to ascertain that the reference was removed some time after 2011. I've also used the Way Back Machine to thoroughly comb what remains of the old Electronics Boutique US website and I can find no mention of a special edition console created just for pre-orderers or early adopters. Indeed, there is no reference to such a system in any of the magazines or pre-release materials I have at my disposal from my own collection of old magazines.
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Reference of 'Dreamcast Blue' from consolecolors.com |
Case closed, right?
Well yes and no. The whole reason for this post is that I recently received an email from somebody speculating that they may actually own one of these mythical systems...and they provided some photographic evidence to back up their claims:
Upon first inspection, I was convinced that these images may indeed prove the existence of this fabled machine. Maybe it had been produced but so few people had managed to procure them that their existence had passed into myth, been forgotten and ultimately turned into a fairy tale. I wanted to believe that we'd found some thing truly incredible. Naturally, the ability to verify whether this was indeed an EB special edition was impossible due to there being no images online, and at first I was pretty confident that my US-based contact had provided something pretty special. NTSC-U: check. Blue: Check. Official Sega and Windows logos? Check.
He bought it as part of a job lot from another Dreamcast collector in 2007 and was told it was rare, and that was it. The current owner knows no more about it and only recently discovered the story of the EB system, so that's where my investigations began. The proof looked pretty water tight - the blue body marked with official Sega and Windows CE logs, the clear lid with official Dreamcast codes moulded into the plastic. I have no reason to believe the current owner had anything but similar excitement about this system as I had, and I was pretty stoked to be looking at an exclusive expose for the Junkyard. But - and it's a big but - upon researching further it appears that this system could well be a standard Dreamcast with an official translucent blue top fitted with an official translucent lid.
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This... |
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...combined with this? |
Short of trying to contact somebody from EB Games who worked there between 1999 and 2000, we're looking to you - the community - to help to solve or debunk this fascinating tale. I suppose it doesn't really matter in all truth - that such mysteries still exist in the world of Dreamcast only goes to show why I love this system more than any other (even the Jaguar!).
Folklore, or folk fact? Let's find out...