Lazy Jonesholds the mirror up to the computer player, because you play to play computer games. The song is commonly used as a sports chant at sport stadiums (such as in The song is sometimes mislabeled as "Zombie Nation", as the artist's name can be heard in the otherwise instrumental track.

Each floor has six rooms, three on each side of the elevator. The character is a lazy hotel employee who does not much care for his work, but prefers to sneak into the rooms to play video games instead. The song's hook came from a tune that was originally part of a 1984 Commodore 64 game called Lazy Jones.

The game takes place inside a hotel with three floors, connected by an elevator. The sub-games are generally simplified versions of 1970s and 1980s video games, such as Each sub-game has a time limit. The focus is on Shoot'em up's and skill games. As well as the video games, there is the hotel When all rooms have been visited, the game starts over again, but increasingly faster, each time. Lazy Jones is a platform game for the Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, MSX and Tatung Einstein. Due to its popularity with all ages on that station it was first introduced to sports fans at "Kernkraft 400" has been sampled by various artists, including rapper

The barman and the only other patron, hopelessly drunk, are both moving back and forth across the bar, at different speeds. It also reached number 10 in Flemish Belgium and number five in the Netherlands. So each room has its own tune, mostly you can recognize known music pieces from the early 1980's.

Each room can be entered once. Released in 1999, it peaked at number 22 in Germany in February 2000. Zombie Nation - Kernkraft 400 / DEREMIXED / C64 - Lazy Jones

Inside most rooms is a video game, which the character immediately begins playing.

Lazy Jones is a collection of fifteen sub-games. In some sub-games it is possible to "die", thus ending the sub-game prematurely, while others only end after the time limit expires. "Kernkraft 400" first received US radio airplay on now defunct station Energy 92.7 & 5 in Chicago, Illinois in 2001.

The drunk patron bars the player's movement but can be jumped over. While a "death" in the Commodore 64 may return the game character to a certain point in the screen, in the MSX version the same death results in the premature end of the sub-game.

The whole thing is accompanied by a basic tune which changes when you enter a room. The original "Star Dust" melody was in C, whereas "Kernkraft 400" is in B (the Sports Stadium remix is in B flat).

The Spectrum version was ported by Simon Cobb. It was written by David Whittaker and released by Terminal Software in 1984. Zombie Nation is German DJ and producer Florian Senfter, who goes by the alias of "Spank" and until 1999 Emanuel Guenther (aka Mooner).

The hotel as altogether 18 rooms, which are on 3 floors with each 6 rooms…

One of the music tracks was sampled by German electro project

Pressing the fire button while standing in front of both a drink and the barman at the same time earns points. The sub-games where it is possible to "die" prematurely are The sub-games that only end when the time limit runs out are (In the MSX version, sub-games ending exclusively by running out of time limit: Associations of subtunes to sub-games vary depending of the portrayed computer version, so a subtune used in the Commodore 64 version to a certain sub-game was not necessarily used as soundtrack to the same sub-game in the MSX version (see example below). But this also depends of the portrayed game version. You are Lazy Jones, the janitor in a hotel.