A new indie game called Retro Rewind turns the mundane job of working at a video rental store into surprisingly addictive entertainment. Players stock shelves, help customers find movies, and deal with late fees just like employees did at Blockbuster in the 1990s.
The game taps into nostalgia for an era when picking a movie meant walking through aisles of VHS tapes and DVDs. It’s part of a growing trend of games that turn boring real-world jobs into fun virtual experiences.
Simple Tasks, Surprisingly Fun
Retro Rewind doesn’t try to be complex. You scan returned movies, put them back on shelves, and recommend films to picky customers. The graphics look deliberately old-school, complete with chunky computer monitors and neon store lighting that screams 1990s.
What makes it work is the same reason people loved working at video stores back then. There’s something satisfying about organizing movies, discovering hidden gems, and helping someone find the perfect Friday night rental.
The game captures small details that will make anyone who lived through the era smile. Customers argue about late fees. Popular new releases are always checked out. And you get to be the person who actually knows where to find that weird foreign film someone heard about.
What’s Next
Retro Rewind joins other games that celebrate mundane jobs, from farming simulators to coffee shop management. It shows how nostalgia can make even the most repetitive work feel meaningful when it’s tied to a time and place people remember fondly.




