From what I have been able to determine it appears that
there are only two locations remaining that still operate with Intersphere
laser tag equipment so it was especially cool that I had the opportunity to
play at one of them in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
When I arrived at Westdale Bowling Center I met up with
owners BJ and Kim who told me about how
they purchased their Intersphere packs 20 years ago and have been able to
maintain that original equipment all this time with the help of a skillful
engineer. BJ told me that years ago when they were first looking at systems to
purchase he knew that two engineers from a well known manufacturing company
were also starting their tag business and he figured if they were choosing the
Intersphere system that it spoke well to the system being a solid choice.
Apparently so as it really is remarkable that the packs have held up for all
this time!
They have mostly the O packs that I understand were
manufactured in Holland and then they have two additional X packs (made in
Iowa) that were acquired later from another site.
They referred to them as the hard shell versus the soft
shell as the vest on the O packs was a more rigid design...
...and the X packs had a canvas type of vest.
The phaser was unusual in shape, but very comfortable to use. You can shoot it one handed, but two hands keep it stable.
I was appreciative to get a chance to play with both,
although there appeared to be no significant difference between them that I
could see while playing the game.
It's interesting to note that in the mid-'90s Intersphere
USA filed for a trademark on the name "Laser X" which was apparently
the name of a corporate owned site at the Merle Hay Mall in Des Moines, Iowa
(the city where Intersphere was based) and it makes me wonder if they were the
original system at the Laser X locations that I've had the chance to visit in
Ft. Wayne, Indiana and Sacramento, California. My guess would be yes (since
they all seem to share similar branding elements), but I can't say for certain.
So, back to my visit to this still active site in Iowa. They
showed me into the vesting room just to the left of their bowling alley.
About 20 years ago they removed several bowling lanes in
order to construct the arena (which I am told Intersphere designed). At some point
So if you go there to bowl you will see things begin with lane 5 at the edge of
the arena.
Inside the arena is small (about 2200 sq. ft) and pretty
much split lengthwise down the middle. There's a space age industrial theme with lots of "galactic contamination"
barrels augmenting the playing area.
And there was a base station where you could activate it
for various power-ups.
I'm told that at one point they had two, but somewhere
along the lines the second one had been removed. I looked forward to trying
this system out.
And it's always kind of cool to see scoring done on older
software.
Comments or Questions?
Contact: tivia@tiviachickloveslasertag.com
Websites: www.tiviachickloveslasertag.com and
www.photonforever.com
Good to see Lazer X memories live on. I grew up in Texas and got to play at Photon and Star Laser Force, then later Lazer X in Iowa (plus dozens more in the US and Canada as I travelled for a job I had). Hard to even find someone these days that knows what laser tag was/is.
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