• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Shop

AUSRETROGAMER

The Pop-Culture E-Zine

  • Announcements
  • History
  • Retro Exploring
  • Retro Gaming Culture
  • Reviews
  • Modern Gaming
  • Podcasts
  • Pinball
You are here: Home / Archives for tbt

tbt

Mini Star Wars Arcade Cab – The Force Is Strong With This One

December 21, 2020 By ausretrogamer

Stop the press! What the heck is this dark side of the force creation? We LOVE it!

This mini arcade based on Atari’s seminal Star Wars arcade game was faithfully recreated by Astrodob, using a Raspberry Pi and MAME. Well Astrodob, where do we send our Jedi Bank cheque to?


source: Astrodob

 

Filed Under: Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Arcade, Astrodob, Atari Star Wars, awesome creation, diy, homebrew, Mini Atari Star Wars arcade, Mini Star Wars Arcade, Mini Star Wars Arcade Cab, oldschool, Retro, Retro Gamer, Retro Gaming, Star Wars Arcade, tbt, throwback

Last Minute Retro Gaming Inspired Xmas Gifts

December 15, 2020 By ausretrogamer

Last week we published our Christmas Gift Guide, which we hope that it helped finding that special pressie for that special someone, including yourself.

Well, since then, we have found even more cool retro gaming inspired gifts that are currently on special (30% OFF!), which means it’s a win, win for everyone! So if you need some last minute gifts for your geeky friends or family (or for yourself), then check out these:

Micro Arcade games $17.49 (30% OFF)

Tiny Arcade games up to 30% OFF

Pac-Man Icon Lamp $13.99 (30% OFF)

TMNT Virtual Pinball $17.49 (30% OFF)

 

Filed Under: Announcements, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Arcade, Atari, Christmas, Christmas 2020, Christmas retro gifts, Dig Dug, Galaga, Galaxian, geek gifts, Micro Arcade, Missile Command, Pac-Man, pinball, pong, Q Bert, QBert, Retro, retrogames, Space Invaders, tbt, throwback, Tiny Arcade, TMNT, TMNT Pinball, Xmas gifts

Atari To Make New Gaming Hardware

February 1, 2017 By ausretrogamer

There is nothing more exciting than hearing that one of your favourite video gaming companies from your childhood is about to launch new hardware!

We know that the new Atari is nothing like the old, but hearing that they are teaming up with Gameband to create a new wearable gaming product, we did let out a little squee! With lots of teaser tweets (see below), we are anxiously awaiting further news on this new Atari product that lets you play Atari classic games in a whole new way! We’ll update this post as more news comes to hand.

Just an interesting tidbit – according to the Gameband website, they are launching their Terraria and Atari Edition products via Kickstarter on February 8.

New tech coming soon from @mygameband lets you play Atari classics in a whole new way! #Atari #Gameband #ComingSoonhttps://t.co/t9QNeir2wI pic.twitter.com/eSKJgoHUyx

— atari (@atari) January 13, 2017

We’ve teamed up with @MyGameband on brand new hardware! Click the link for offers & details! #GameBand #Atari #TBT https://t.co/bSMnT6Gdhv pic.twitter.com/u4nKdJARGm

— atari (@atari) January 26, 2017

Sign up for exclusive pre-launch access to product details and limited offers from @MyGameband! #Gameband #Atari 😀https://t.co/hrZJBUKDKQ pic.twitter.com/7MAbAtzlLy

— atari (@atari) January 28, 2017

Sign up at @MyGameband (https://t.co/x2MRL5mLxN) for exclusive pre-launch access! #GameBand #Atari 😍😃 pic.twitter.com/d4eOjPp172

— atari (@atari) January 30, 2017

image source: Atari

 

Filed Under: Announcements, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Atari, Atari classics, Atari Gameband, Atari new hardware, Atari wearable game, ComingSoonhttps, Gameband, Gameband Atari Edition, Mygameband, New Atari Hardware, tbt, wearable gaming

Tempest 2000: Psychedelic Fun On The Jaguar

April 1, 2013 By ausretrogamer

Format: Atari Jaguar
Release Date: April 13, 1994
Publisher: Atari
Developer: Llamasoft (Jeff Minter)

It has been a long time coming. Nineteen years to be exact. It took us nineteen years to finally take Jeff Minter’s game for a proper review spin.

Tempest 2000, the beefed-up remake of Dave Theurer’s 1981 arcade classic, was Atari’s  killer game that helped it shift lots of Jaguar consoles upon its release in 1994. This game was never going to be a straight ‘pretty up’ by Jeff Minter. The great Yak added his usual quirkiness to this seminal favourite. What he produced was nigh on perfection.

You may ask, what is so damn good about Tempest 2000. Well, if you are patient for one second, we will let you know. Yak (Jeff Minter) took a first generation arcade game and injected crisp 3D polygon graphics, an awesome techno soundtrack and oodles of new enemy types and obstacles.

T2K_screenshot3_arg

Don’t think that Tempest 2000 is just an audio visual enhancement to the original – Yak also added 100 varying webs (levels), new opponents, collectable power-ups like the particle-blaster/laser, jumps, and A.I. Droids who destroy anything that gets too close. Thrown in this awesome gaming mix was the new “Melt-O-Vision” transition effect – very psychedelic (very Jeff Minter) indeed. Add the different types of play options – two-player cooperative and competitive play modes, and you got yourself one awesomely gorgeous masterpiece.

T2K_Jaguar_arg

No game, no matter how great it looks and sounds, is complete without a complimentary control system. There is only one way to play Tempest 2000, and that is with a rotary controller. You could use the standard Atari pad, but it just doesn’t do the game justice. The rotary control enhances the enjoyment of the game and it definitely helps in achieving those lucrative high scores.

Tempest 2000 is a an incredibly great title which was released on an incredibly obscure system. This game is the jewel in the Jaguar’s crown. If you haven’t played it, you are missing out big time!

Graphics Superbly crisp 3D polygons that only the Yak can produce. Yes, the Jaguar can handle it.

90%

Sound A perfect techno soundtrack. Light-synthesizer tunes throughout with very meaty sound effects. It is an awesome aural pleasure. Make sure you turn up the volume!

95%

Playability Getting into the game is quiet easy – spin around on the web and blast away the approaching enemies. To truly experience this game you must play it with a rotary controller.

90%

Lastability Considering there are 100 levels to complete, this game will last forever.

91%

Overall Jeff Minter can seriously do no wrong. The Yak knows how to produce brilliant games, and this one is no exception. Even Dave Theurer approves of it (Ed: we made that up)! Get it and play hard.

91%

 

Filed Under: Retro Gaming Culture, Reviews Tagged With: Atari Jaguar, Geek, oldschool, Retro Gamer, Retro Gaming, Review A Great Game Day, tbt, Tempest 2000

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

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5

Primary Sidebar

Follow Us

FacebookInstagramYoutTubeTumblrFollow Us on RSSFollow Us on MastodonFollow Us on BlueskyFollow Us on Threads

Search

Shout Us A Coffee!

Recent Posts

  • Ping Pong + Space Invaders = Bit.Pong
  • Yippee Ki‑Yay! The Ultimate Die Hard Pinball Machine Is Real
  • A Wall of Retro Memories – Curated by the One and Only Ms. Ausretrogamer!
  • Voice Acting in the ‘Arkham Trilogy’
  • ROGUEish Brings Dungeon-Delving Delight to the Commodore 64

Ad

Footer

© 2012 – 2025 – ausretrogamer (The Australian Retro Gamer E-Zine). All rights reserved. Where appropriate, all trademarks and copyrighted materials remain property of their respective owners.

Terms & Conditions | Disclaimer

Advertise | About | Contact | Links

Please see our Privacy Policy for details on how we treat your personal information.

Support This Site

If you like what we do, you can shout us a coffee on Ko-fi :-)

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in