The Borneo Post

‘Total art’: Inside France’s vast video game archive

- Yassine Khiri

The video game can be regarded as total art, because it combines graphic art, narrative art and a narrative structure.

Laurent Duplouy

PARIS: In the bowels of an imposing modernist tower in Paris, Laurent Duplouy carefully handles a pristine copy of ‘Tomb Raider’ before slotting it back on the shelf alongside thousands of other classic video games.

Duplouy oversees a huge archive of games at France’s National Library (BNF), one of the longest-running efforts to preserve a part of global heritage that is often overlooked by cultural institutio­ns.

“The video game can be regarded as total art, because it combines graphic art, narrative art and a narrative structure,” Duplouy told AFP.

The 1990s glass and steel structure, a short hop from the banks of the River Seine, houses room upon room of archived books, where researcher­s and students quietly go about their business.

But Duplouy is adamant the video game collection is not out of place in the august surroundin­gs.

“For the BNF, video games are as precious as the other documents deposited here,” he said.

“We pay the same attention to them. It is cultural heritage in its own right.”

The treasured collection now holds some 20,000 titles in all possible formats, from cartridges to diskettes and CD-ROM, and adds a further 2,000 samples each year.

A team of 20 looks after the collection, empowered by a 1992 law on the preservati­on of multimedia documents.

While the law did not mention video games specifical­ly, its wording is wide enough to be interprete­d that way, making it one of the oldest pieces of legislatio­n of its kind anywhere in the world.

The US Library of Congress only began its efforts to preserve digital media in 2000, and there are many other initiative­s led by enthusiast­s across the world.

Emulator hunt

The video games are stored on darkened shelves at a constant temperatur­e of 19 degrees to protect them from humidity. A few floors above, there is also an enviable collection of vintage gaming consoles – from the earliest examples such as the rare Magnavox Odyssey from the early 1970s, to the Atari Lynx and Sega Saturn, all the way to the Nintendo Game Boy, the ultimate 1990s icon.

“We are keeping these consoles to give future researcher­s, decades or even hundreds of years from now, an understand­ing of how to play these video games, what hardware was used,” said Duplouy.

While the consoles and physical games can be stored on shelves and behind glass, there are huge challenges with many games that can no longer be found in physical form.

For these, the library relies on communitie­s of enthusiast­s who re-create old games on modern computers.

“We have two engineers in the multimedia department who are constantly monitoring these issues to find emulators, make them work and make them compatible with our collection­s,” said Duplouy.

The archivists also face a problem that many games are now played in the cloud and never exist in physical form.

Duplouy said the library was locked in negotiatio­ns with publishers and platforms to find a workaround.

Ultimately, he said, the ambition is to hold the largest collection in the world.

“It would be great for French heritage,” he said.

 ?? — AFP photos ?? The Sony home video game console PlayStatio­n 1 belonging to the Charles Cros collection exposed at the Francois-Mitterrand National Library of France in Paris.
— AFP photos The Sony home video game console PlayStatio­n 1 belonging to the Charles Cros collection exposed at the Francois-Mitterrand National Library of France in Paris.
 ?? ?? The home video game console Hanimex 7771 belonging to the Charles Cros collection.
The home video game console Hanimex 7771 belonging to the Charles Cros collection.
 ?? ?? The home video game console Odyssey belonging to the Charles Cros collection.
The home video game console Odyssey belonging to the Charles Cros collection.
 ?? ?? The video games Puchi Carat (left) and Stunt GP belonging to the Charles Cros collection.
The video games Puchi Carat (left) and Stunt GP belonging to the Charles Cros collection.
 ?? ?? The educationa­l video game Adiboo belonging to the Charles Cros collection.
The educationa­l video game Adiboo belonging to the Charles Cros collection.
 ?? ?? The video game Tomb Raider II belonging to the Charles Cros collection.
The video game Tomb Raider II belonging to the Charles Cros collection.

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