It it’s Monday, it must be another video game retromeme:
via Cheezburger
This is a holy-rolling TV spot from 1993 for id Software’s seminal FPS game Doom, which I’m sure Atari had pinned as a system-selling port for their 64-bit Jaguar console. I don’t think you’d get away with selling a video game with such imagery these days:
This tickles me. It’s a gallery that presents some popular video games and re-imagines them as book covers in the style of Penguin classics. They have the wonderfully abstract yet impactful feeling of the 60’s. Here’s a taste, see if you can guess the classic third-person shooter it represents:
From its modern incarnation with the advent of the flipper after WWII, pinball enjoyed a long run as the go-to electronic amusement pastime. It lasted until the 70’s, when the shimmering graphics and bloop and bleep siren call of video games lured players away from mechanical playgrounds to ephemeral worlds comprised of phosphors on a screen.
Pinball limped along, the market steadily shrinking until a few old warhorse manufacturers remained, companies like Williams, who attempted to resurrect the genre with a daring video/pinball hybrid system in 1999 called Pinball 2000. As detailed in the excellent documentary TILT: The Battle to Save Pinball (Two-Disc Set), this gambled failed, Williams moved to the more lucrative slot machine market, and so pinball has languished as a niche collector’s market.
But now former arcade operator and online pinball machine retailer “Jersey” Jack Guarieri has hopes to propel the silver ball back into public consciousness with a new machine of his own design, based on a slightly dated property… The Wizard of Oz. Guarieri’s sense of timing might be spot on though, riding the buzz of the upcoming Disney prequel to Wizard, Oz: The Great and Powerful. Only time will tell if Guarieri is truly the wizard who can save pinball.
Talk about putting in your two cents! Out of Sweden comes Insert Coin, a 4:27 minute short stop-motion video of coins being moved around to create retro-game images. It is done by the A/V performance team Rymdreglage aka Ninja Moped, comprised of Daniel Larsson and Tomas Redigh.
The short is startlingly good, with a nifty chiptunes soundtrack. Their YouTube channel has over a couple hundred other uploaded videos to enjoy as well.
digthatbox.com has a compilation page featuring a plethora of links to video game ads featuring celebrity spokespersons. Everything from Carol Channel shilling Atari to William Shatner hawking the VIC-20 computer. There’s quite a few “before they were famous” moments, with Christian Bale dancing to Pac-Man cereal, and Jack Black espousing the daring tales of Pitfall Harry.
You can check them out here:
via N4G.com
If it’s Monday, it must be another video game retromeme:
With the 27th anniversary of the proper launch of the Atari 7800 this month, here is a little retrospective on the console.
While the Atari 7800 might be historically viewed as a misfire on Atari’s part, we can at least appreciate the console for what it is. The console was intended to get a headstart on the NES as Nintendo had already approached Atari and asked them if they wanted to handle distribution rights in North America for the console for them. While in retrospect this was a boneheaded move times were different and Atari was a self sufficient company who wanted to remain that way.
After some legal tussling the proper launch of the console was delayed until 1986 and in a somewhat questionable strategic move the 7800 launched with games that were developed 2 years before and as such seemed dated.
What about the console itself? It’s an interesting beast being capable of playing 2600 software in addition to 7800 games. The hardware was similar to Atari’s earlier systems in that it rendered in between scanlines. The audio hardware was also identical to the 2600 in the console itself but developers could include a POKEY sound chip in the cartridge to enhance the soundtrack of a game. The POKEY was a flexible chip that could be used for a few different things but was mostly used for music generation in the Atari 8-bit family.
What about the games? Unfortunately due to limited developer support the 7800 library pales in comparison to the Master System and NES. That isn’t to say the console doesn’t have its fair share of great games though! The console featured a brilliant conversion of Commando which used the POKEY chip to enhance the sound. This game really stands out as one of the best on the console.
Screenshot of Commando. |
Another great game that used the POKEY was Ballblazer which was a fast paced 3D tank shooter with a great soundtrack.
This doesn’t look like much here but it’s actually quite amazing. |
Other beloved games in the Atari 7800 library include the brilliant Ninja Golf which incorporates ninja combat into a traditional game of golf, Midnight Mutants, Desert Falcon and even Xevious!
Ninja Golf being both brilliant and incoherent. |
The Atari 7800 really is a great little console. It’s sleek, has a well designed controller and for collectors the library of games is definitely one that is within the realm of completing. The games themselves are fun to play as well with Atari staples like Joust and Centipede rounding out some great third party efforts. In honour of this somewhat forgotten gem from gaming past I highly recommend you pick one up on eBay as the 7800 really deserves another play for its birthday.
Any Atariphiles out there want to weigh in on the 7800? It’d be great to hear memories from when you were younger or just some nice thoughts about the console!