Archive for the 'Video Games' Category



Video Arcade Footage, 1981

Very cool stuff via The Retroist via atarigames1/YouTube. Watch the kid put his quarter on the Defender machine (1:04), say something to the kid playing (i.e. “Are you any good?”), then take the quarter down again. Intimidation was a foundational ingredient of early arcade culture.

The game sights and sounds (especially Defender), the wall art close-ups, the braces, the Nikes, the bemused mom handing out quarters—it’s a complete, high quality time capsule. I found another video at the same channel that’s shorter but equally fascinating.

It’s a 7-11 in the same year, 1981. Those dudes are us.

Toy Aisle Zen (1983): Atari

toy aisle atari 1983

toy aisle atari 1983-2

toy aisle atari 1983-3

toy aisle atari 1983-4

Toys “R” Us, Sunnyvale, CA, 1983. The 5200 is listed at $160.00. The Atari 800 (back shelf, far right) is $500 (it was $1000 in 1980). A snapshot of the crash.

(Images via Computer History Museum)

Summer Camp, 1986

Kids at Camp 1986

The Everglades, April 6, 1986. (Photo: Miami Herald)

Hiking? What’s that?

(Image via Vintage Photos 2012)

Defend the Frontier Against Xur and the Ko-dan Armada

Starfighter Cabinet

Starfighter Screen

Oh yeah. Rogue Synapse is working on a “functioning Starfighter cabinet” that will play like the one in the nerdtastic ’80s classic, The Last Starfighter. You can actually download and play the final version of the game here. I’ll be all over this when the kid goes to sleep tonight.

Thanks to Wil Wheaton for the heads up.

Happy Friday.

Arcade Cabinets: Asteroids (1979) and Asteroids Deluxe (1981)

Asteroids cabinet

asteroids side art

asteroids side art-2

AD Marquee

AD control panel

AD side art

AD cabinet

AD cabinet-2

AD flyer

(Images via Giant Bomb, The Artwork Doctor, Game on Grafix, aaarpinball.comvidiotarcade.com, Emu Paradise, The Arcade Flyer Project)

Arcade Zen (1981 – 1982)

Arcade 1981

1981 (photo source unknown)

What a line-up. That’s Asteroids Deluxe on the right. (Click to enlarge.)

Arcade 1982

January 27, 1982. (Ann E. Yow/Seattle Times)

That’s a lot of hair! And what’s with the guy wearing a jacket but no shirt?

(Photos via Vintage Photos 2012 and Seattle Washington Archive)

Atari Christmas Ads (1983): We Want Software and Hardware, Not Underwear

Atari Ad 1983

Clever, although our parents already knew how desperately we wanted an Atari and all the games we could play. It reminds me of the scene in A Christmas Story where Ralphie puts the Red Ryder ad in the middle of his mom’s magazine.

This VCS (Video Computer System) Cartridge Adapter sounds interesting. According to the back of the box, “just insert the Adaptor into your 5200 SuperSystem console, plug in your 2600 cartridge and 2600 controllers, and you’re ready to go!” If you had 2600 carts and controllers, wouldn’t you also have the 2600 itself?

Atari Ad 1983-2

We’ve also got some game reviews from the same TV Guide. Frostbite gets a 5, but Moon Patrol “is proof that space is becoming a creative vacuum in the video-game industry.” I was terrible at Time Pilot, but it had a great concept and I loved flying around in that infinite sky.

A $30 cartridge, according to my handy inflation calculator, comes out to about $70 today.

(Images via eBay/Randy Rodman)

Christmas Morning, 1983: ColecoVision

Christmas Morning ColecoVision 1983

Score. Coleco Vision came with Donkey Kong, and I see a Donkey Kong Jr. cartridge as well. Word Yahtzee? Please. That box was “lost” before the day was over.

We’ve got a G.I. Joe box, but I can’t tell what it is. Bigfoot is a monster truck toy from Playskool. You turned it on with a key and it had forward and reverse gears.

(Photo via colorcritical/Flickr)

(Video via RetroTY/YouTube)

Atari Christmas Commercial (1983): Santa in Space!

The combination of space, “Twas the Night Before Christmas,” and video games is genius, and it must have cost a pretty penny to make back in the day. The spaceship looks great, and I love how everything is cold (how about those miserable but sleek-looking sleeping quarters?) and drab until Santa shows up and starts playing all those beautiful games.

This is the first and longest version of the spot. The second version is here, and the third version is here. All of them are from ’83.

(All videos via MYSATURDAYMORNINGS/YouTube)

And You Shall Know the Atari 400 by the Awkwardness of Its Keyboard: Special Christmas Home Video Edition

Christmas, 1980. Short but classic video via Earl J. Woods/YouTube. Watch for the stuffed E.T. at the end.


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