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You are here: Home / Archives for Atari 2600

Atari 2600

Modern Games As Atari 2600 Carts

October 23, 2015 By Ms. ausretrogamer

Have you ever wondered what your favourite modern games would look like as Atari 2600 carts? Well, check out DeviantArtist StarRoivas’ collection and wonder no more (see the whole collection via Lord Arse on Pinterest).

shadow of the collusus

MGS 3

fallout 3

COD

la noire

broken sword

borderlands

god of war

minecraft

silent hill

eternal darkness

Source: StarRoivas on DeviantArt via Lord Arse on Pinterest

If you love retrogaming, follow Lord_Arse on Twitter.

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

msausretrogamerMs. ausretrogamer
Co-founder, editor and writer at ausretrogamer – The Australian Retro Gamer E-Zine. Lover of science fiction, fashion, books, movies and TV. Player of games, old and new.

Follow Ms. ausretrogamer on Twitter

 

 

Filed Under: Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Art, Atari, Atari 2600, Borderlands, Broken Sword, Call of Duty, DeviantArt, Eternal Darkness, Fallout, God of War, LA Noire, Lord Arse, Metal Gear Solid, Minecraft, Modern games as Atari 2600 games, Shadow of the Colossus, Silent Hill, StarRoivas

My Atari Story: Sue Lamport

June 24, 2014 By ausretrogamer

The Atari 2600 is where gaming truly began for me.

The year was 1979, I was five years old. My mum bought the Atari 2600 from Boans in Perth (which is now Myer department store) as an anniversary present for my dad. I’m not sure how much it cost back then but mum reassures me it was ‘a bloody fortune’. I can remember sitting next to this huge box in a nearby cafe just staring at all the little screens pictured on this wonderful box while my mum and grandmother chatted. How I wished it was for me! I just wanted to go home and see it, what was it? Prior to this, all I knew was Pong. My grandmother had Pong on an old black and white TV. It had two paddles that slid up and down, that was it! Don’t laugh, that was fun back then. I can remember we all had a go. But the Atari, just sitting in the box as it was, fascinated me. It was colourful and all the screens on the box had something different going on, not just two white lines and bouncy square.

Sue_AtariBox

From here on I pretty much grew up with the Atari. At first, my time using it was heavily restricted but as time went by I got to use it more often. My parents soon realised they could use it as a potential for punishment, ‘Look, if you don’t behave no Atari!’. I shocked my dad one day who came home from work and saw how well I was doing on Frogger. After I had gone to bed he tried his best to match me, but he couldn’t. I also surprised my uncle when it came to games like Warlords, in how well I could hold my own against the other adults. It became a regular thing on a Saturday for mum and dad to have friends and family over to play. Everyone had to have a go at Combat, my aunty loved Asteroids, my mum’s favourites (even to this very day) are Space Invaders – especially invisible Space Invaders – and Kaboom!; but I loved them all. The first game I ever finished was Defender. I was very sick in bed at the time and mum put the Atari in my room. I guess there is no harm in admitting now that I was in no hurry to get better.

Sue_Atari_Games

I am very pleased to say that the same machine, with all those wonderful memories attached to it, still works and is still in the family today. Mum still has it in its own custom built box. The original box died years ago, so at the time my Dad (a wood machinist by trade) built his own with special compartments for the console, controllers and games. The Atari, for me, isn’t just a console, it’s a family heirloom. I have my own hand-me-down console from my aunty, and although mine is not the ‘woody’ like our original family console, it does the job just fine.

ILoveAtari

I’ve played some of the old games on today’s modern systems, such as the PSP and Xbox 360, but trust me on this; you cannot beat the Atari console itself. Games like Kaboom! and Night Driver are both fine examples of when you must use the paddles! But it’s good to see these games getting the exposure they deserve. And it is certainly something to see my kids play games on my old Atari, and enjoy them just as much as I did.

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
SueLamportSue Lamport
Educator, art lover, gamer. A proud Atarian.

Follow Sue on Twitter

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Atari, Atari 2600, Atari Month, Atarians, Frogger, retrogaming, Space Invaders

Atari: 42 Years Of Fun

June 9, 2014 By ausretrogamer

Atari_42

Atari. Can you believe that they have been rocking our video gaming world in one shape or another since 1972! The video gaming industry would never be the same once Atari entered the fray some 42 years ago. Nolan and Ted’s little enterprise baby grew into an arcade and home gaming entertainment Goliath.

Much has been written (and rewritten) about the history of Atari, but rather than recite every sordid detail, just gaze upon this Atari timeline. A lot has happened since June 1972!

atari_timeline_42source: Atari

Filed Under: History Tagged With: Atari, Atari 2600, Atari Month, Retro Gaming, retrogaming

Portable Atari 2600

November 13, 2013 By ausretrogamer

Atari_VCS_0

Do you have a cool US$1,365.00 burning a hole in your pocket? This portable Atari 2600 recently made an appearance on eBay with a Buy It Now (BIN) price which no one offered the seller from Turkey. If you were to buy this unique item, this is what you would get for your money:

* Play all your NTSC Atari VCS / 2600 cartridges on the go;
* CNC-machined wooden case with CNC artwork;
* 7.4v li-ion battery with a 3 hour battery life;
* Pause function to pause the game whenever needed;
* Dip-switch settings to switch the built-in controller between player 1 and player 2;
* Difficulty switches for each player;
* LED low battery indicator – kicks in when battery has 20 minutes left;
* Composite video and mono headphone out;
* Digital volume and brightness controls;
* Playstation 1 analogue stick converted to play as D-pad with extra trigger function;
* 3.5″ TFT screen;

All this awesomeness in a 200mm x 135mm x 40mm yacht varnished wooden package that weighs 600 grams! What more would you want.

 

Filed Under: Retro Exploring Tagged With: Atari, Atari 2600, portable Atari VCS

Video Games Graveyard

March 18, 2013 By ausretrogamer

Survival of the fittest or just plain bad business decisions. Just as Betamax was left in the wake of the VHS behemoth,  the video games market is strewn with carcasses of systems and games that just never made it.

Jaguar

Some of history’s most spectacular gaming console flops come from two of the industry’s heavy hitters, Atari and Sega. The hardware manufacturing death knell was getting quite loud at Atari – they decided to throw in the towel and quit making games consoles after the Atari Jaguar was caught in the crossfire of the Sega versus Nintendo battle of the 1990s. The Jaguar was rushed to market and suffered the consequences. Selling fewer than 250,000 units just wasn’t going to cut it. Perhaps Atari should have done the math (get it!) before they embarked on the Jaguar.

dreamcast-console_arg

A few years after Atari ceased making hardware, it was Sega’s turn to wave the console making white flag. Once a pillar of the video games console industry, Sega’s Dreamcast was met with initial enthusiasm but Sega also abandoned making consoles after the Dreamcast was smashed by the new kid on the block, Sony’s PlayStation 2.

Atari_ET_arg

As for gaming flops, Atari’s E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial takes the gong. The game was rushed (it took 5 weeks to develop) to retail stores for the 1982 Christmas season but was such a disappointment, that millions of unsold game cartridges ended up in landfill in the New Mexico desert. Atari ordered more E.T. cartridges to be made than there were installed Atari VCS 2600 units! Again, Atari should have DONE THE MATH.




Filed Under: History, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Atari, Atari 2600, Atari ET, Atari Jaguar, Atari VCS, Betamax, Dreamcast, nintendo, oldschool, Retro, Retro Gaming, retrogaming, sega, tbt, throwback, VHS

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