
I was going to suggest that you go on ebay and pick yourself up an Amstrad CPC464 with a couple of hundred games for £20....but to be honest, if you're used to modern computers, you'd hate it on soooo many levels. ie.
1. waiting for 20 minutes to see if a game has loaded. If not, rewind, adjust volume by a millimetre and try again. Some days I spent 5 or 6 hours trying to get my favourite games to load - and then play them for half an hour.
2. sound consists of *blip*, *beeep*, *ppppoooo*, *paaah*, *ppeeeuuuw*, *pppcosh* and thats about it

3. graphics had 2-64 colours, 2 being the most common, but 64 on some big budget high end games

4. save game? naah you won't be wanting that!! save game is for wusses.
and so on and so forth

I preferred the arcades as they were though - there was only one of each type of game usually - one shooting game (Operation Wolf usually), one dual player beat-em-up (Double Dragon), one big budget wow-I've-never-seen-that-before-but-it-costs-a-pound-a-go-so-I-won't-bother (afterburner or dragons lair), one four player adventure (Gauntlet) and then a variety of space games, such as the original Star Wars vector based game, which was ace
