Dragster shone in '83 as an example of gameplay-over-graphics. Just outstanding.
I don’t have a 2600 today, but I do have a solitary cart of Dragster. Be ready.
I spent so much time with this thing. Moon Patrol was my jam.
Huh, I thought this form factor only came in faux wood grain.
This is the 80s black model.
So, real talk? Most 2600 games are rough, and barring personal nostalgia, there’s little reason to play most of them in the age of emulation, especially arcade conversions, which sometimes nail the gameplay (but often don’t), and generally have to perform acts of violence on the visuals to make them work with the system and the business realities around their development (i.e. staffing, timeline, budget for ROM chips, etc.).
Some worthwhile ones that come to mind:
- Combat (multiplayer only)
- Warlords (multiplayer only)
- Pitfall
- River Raid
- Pitfall II
- Space Invaders
- The Empire Strikes Back
It’s not that so many more weren’t fun, or even still aren’t in isolation, but it’s like we’re all the rich fat kid from Pee-Wee’s big adventure and have access to every single game on every single system, at least up until the end of the 90s. There’s no reason to play the nice port of Berzerk that looks like it does, or play the flickery Pac-Man mess, or even (I’ll say it) fight with the groundbreaking but still primitive and abstracted gameplay of Adventure.
Most of the emulators get the sounds wrong. I still have my original 2600 and a TV to run it on. Someday it’ll make it back out of storage.
Burn the heretic !
You’ve listed the most basic games when there were many 3rd titles from Parker Bros , Spectra Video, Imagic etc.
I liked Gorf, Starwars , Atlantis … there were loads more
Combat and Gorf are amazing. I may feel that way about Combat because it was the first one I remember playing. However, Gorf is like three games in one so you got a lot of bang for your buck in playtime.
I wouldn’t presume to have even 20% of the 2600 games that bring something different and good to the table, it’s just (to misquote Samuel Johnson), for so many of them the good parts are not different and the different parts are not good.
And again, that’s completely apart from a personal nostalgia (god knows I indulge in that) or to propose that they’re simply not fun in a binary sense. If I’m 12 and I get 2600 Venture I enjoy the hell out of it, but if I’m a middle aged man in 2024, at the bare minimum I’m going for this.
I think OP just want to show the console, not if the game library hold ups
Fair, and maybe I’m stepping in it a bit, but thought a post about a 4-switch Vader 2600 might attract a lively crowd.
The Degenatron gaming system plays three exciting games, including Defender of the Faith, where you save the green dots with your fantastic flying red square.
My parents went down the home computer route, and I ended up with an 800 XE.
It was beautiful. The detachable keyboard, the IBM-grey sleek housing, the pastel console buttons, and satisfying “chi-chuunnnggg” of the spring loaded power button.
I felt like I had the future under the palms of my hand.
That is so cool. I’ve yet to collect one of those.
That’s much later though
It was, but as Atari was known for, was just a fancy new shell on eight year old hardware not too dissimilar to the 2600 or VCS or whatever your region calls it.
the 800xe was roughly equivalent to a commodore 64.
Anyone for a quick game of ET?!
NO
One of the most iconic and best-looking games consoles of all time.
those joysticks gave blisters in places nothing else could ever touch.
We had the Sears version. Just not as cool
I think the branding is interchangeable.
I almost got a Sears version myself.
I’ve always considered the six switch variant more iconic, but my six switch one is also the one I’ve got that doesn’t work. So there’s that.
Got one in the loft. Sometimes I look at my sons PS5 and cry quietly for what could have been
Something I haven’t touched since grade school