Nostalgia & Retro Culture — 2026-04-20
The week delivered a bounty of retro delights: SNK's iconic NEOGEO console is officially making a comeback as the NEOGEO AES+, the hit indie video store simulator *Retro Rewind* continues charming players with its lovingly recreated 1990s drudgery, and the *Scrubs* reboot is driving fresh conversation about how millennial nostalgia is reshaping television. Meanwhile, Y2K's retro-futurist wave keeps cresting into 2026, blending low-rise jeans and butterfly clips with a sophisticated new aesthetic vision.
Nostalgia & Retro Culture — 2026-04-20
Flashbacks
The NEOGEO AES+ Has Arrived — And It Takes Cartridges
Just three days ago, SNK and publishing partner PLAION REPLAI officially announced pre-orders for the NEOGEO AES+, a full modern revival of the legendary 1990s home console. The machine launches with 10 confirmed titles and — crucially — maintains full compatibility with original NEOGEO cartridges, meaning decades of library time are instantly accessible.

Pre-orders opened simultaneously, with essential-japan.com noting the hardware features "major upgrades" while retaining the soul of the original AES architecture that made titles like Metal Slug and The King of Fighters legendary.

The Retro Rewind Video Store Sim Is a Phenomenon
Published approximately one week ago, Ars Technica's review of Retro Rewind describes the game as a recreation of "the glorious drudgery of working a '90s video store" — and notes that what it lacks in mechanical complexity it more than compensates for in "repetitive charm."

The game has spawned a thriving modding community almost immediately. A Nexus Mods release titled Be Kind. Rewind: The Revival replaces the game's placeholder titles with over 13,000 real films spanning 1940 to 2025, adds 20 custom '90s-style New Releases, and recreates authentic Blockbuster VHS cases.
Scrubs Is Back — And Millennial Nostalgia Is Why
Published four days ago, The Print reports that the Scrubs reboot is part of a broader "millennial nostalgia" wave reshaping American television. Entertainment lawyer Peter Kaufman explains the math simply: adults who grew up watching network shows like Malcolm in the Middle are now cable and streaming subscribers, and studios are following the money.

The Australian Women's Weekly, writing in March 2026, also rounded up the full slate of 2026 reboots — including a Bewitched remake alongside the Scrubs return.

Deep Cut
Time Extension's Retro Recap (April 19, 2026)
If you're not already reading Time Extension's weekly Retro Recap, this week's edition — published just yesterday — is a perfect entry point. The column rounds up the best classic gaming news of the past seven days, and this week's edition spotlights the NEOGEO AES+ announcement alongside Polymega news and Zelda coverage, serving as both a news digest and a love letter to the era when cartridges ruled.

For anyone who's fallen off the retro gaming beat, this weekly feature is the antidote — a curated snapshot of a community that never stopped caring about the games that shaped them.
Then & Now
Y2K Goes Retro-Futurist
The Y2K aesthetic is in the middle of a genuine evolution. While the original wave of early-2000s nostalgia leaned heavily on literal reproduction — the butterfly clips, the low-rise jeans, the flip phones — a newer reading of the moment is emerging in 2026. Accio.com describes it as a shift from "simple nostalgic revival into a sophisticated, retro-futurist movement," with 2026 designers using the iconography of the early millennium as raw material for something genuinely new.
The podcasting sphere is taking notice too. A February 2026 Spreaker episode dedicated to the Y2K return points to a movement that "celebrates everything from low-rise jeans and butterfly clips to flip phones and vintage computer aesthetics that defined a generation" — now being reinterpreted rather than simply recreated.
Marie Claire's recent feature "How I Style 2026's Top Throwback Trends With Only Vintage Clothes" by Lydia Okello tracks how three distinct waves — Y2K, '80s power dressing, and Indie Sleaze — are all simultaneously dominant right now, and explores how each can be built entirely from secondhand and vintage finds.

The through-line across all of it: the past isn't just being consumed — it's being renegotiated. Whether it's a 1990s video game console launching with backward compatibility in 2026, a video store sim that makes restocking VHS tapes feel meaningful, or fashion designers treating Y2K as a jumping-off point rather than a destination, the retro moment we're living through is less about recreation than reinvention.
This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.