On 8/31/2015 12:56 PM, et...@757.org wrote:
"3.5 million of the 4 million produced were sent back to the company as unsold inventory or customer returns. Despite sales figures, the quantity of unsold merchandise, coupled with the expensive movie license and the large amount of returns, made E.T. a major financial failure for Atari" Thats not good for Atari, but that doesn't make it the worst game ever. I agree with those who say Pac Man... I mean it looked nothing like the Arcade and it sounded like they sampled a rubber band.
Not a good game at all.

But it was the Atari 2600, at that day and age I don't think there was an expectation that the game on the home system would look like the arcade? It was from the era of tennis tv games and such? It had a mouth, and a pass thru, and ghosts and dots.

Colecovision and others started to change expectations. I guess it wasn't too long after ColecoVision that Atari 8 bit computers and that brought with it pretty good ports of Arcade titles -- I was probably late to the 8bit atari (800XL here) I guess the people with the 400/800 were first to have arcade-ish gameplay. The 8bit computers still isn't as same as playing the real arcade PCB though. Just closer.

That day I got the NES..... I think I hit reset 100 times over and over just to hear the intro music from the Gyromite cart. It had clear drumbeats! And multiple part music. It was so good. The reset button felt nice and quality even.


--
Ethan O'Toole


You're right re the expectations of that time. It's very difficult to put oneself back in that naive mindset, to remember how things *first* struck us.

That said, however, I'm still quite happy playing with my Bally Arcade... ;-)

- J.

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