List of video game museums

This list of video game museums shows video game museums in the world.

Video game museums

MuseumLocationWebsite
International Arcade Museum LibraryPasadena, CA, USAWebsite home
Museum of Soviet Arcade MachinesMoscow, RussiaWebsite home
Computerspielmuseum BerlinBerlin, GermanyWebsite home
Centre for Computing History - Accredited and interactive museum with over 12,500 video games catalogues and storedCambridge, UKWebsite home
Videogames and technology Museum NostalgicaOeiras, PortugalWebsite home
Museum of Art and Digital EntertainmentOakland, CA, USAWebsite home
Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI)Melbourne, AustraliaWebsite home
Video Game Museum of RomeRome, ItalyWebsite home
Digital Game MuseumCalifornia, USAWebsite home
The Nostalgia BoxPerth, AustraliaWebsite home
National Videogame MuseumFrisco, TX, USAWebsite home
National Videogame MuseumSheffield, EnglandWebsite home
Huis Ten Bosch Game Museum - Small Exhibit within the Huis Ten Bosch theme parkKyoshu Nagasaki Sasebo, JapanWebsite home
Museum of Pop Culture - Permanent exhibit entitled Indie Game RevolutionSeattle, WA, USAWebsite home
Retro Video Game Museum - small permanent exhibit area inside of The Gamesmen Computer game storeSydney, AustraliaWebsite home
The Strong National Museum of Play - houses the International Center for the History of Electronic Games and the World Video Game Hall of FameRochester, NY, USAWebsite home
BINARIUM, the german museum of digital culture/BINARIUM, Deutsches Museum der digitalen KulturDortmund, GermanyWebsite home
Finnish Museum of GamesTampere, FinlandWebsite home
LVLup! Interactive Video Game MuseumTallinn, EstoniaWebsite home
Nexon Computer MuseumJeju-do, South KoreaWebsite home
National Videogame MuseumZoetermeer, the NetherlandsWebsite home
Montreal Video Game Museum / Musée du jeu vidéo de Montréal Montreal, CanadaWebsite home
Software & Computer MuseumKharkiv, Kiev, UkraineWebsite home

Online

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gollark: People are fine at a few "physics" things they encounter frequently and *have* to know, but don't know general mechanisms and are bad at modelling other situations.
gollark: This actually works even for people who have studied physics a bit who get a question without convenient numbers; they fall back to Aristotlean mechanics a lot of the time.
gollark: People doing physics intuitively are *really bad* at it.
gollark: I don't agree.

See also

References

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