Product description
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Relive Video Game History! / For Playstation Memory Card
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For those of you with fond memories of the Atari
2600--the granddaddy of home video game systems--this retro
collection of first-rate titles from Activision is a must-have.
This comprehensive disc features a whopping 30 games, including
hits such as Pitfall, one of the best games ever made for the
Atari 2600, and lesser-known (with good reason) titles such as
Cosmic Commuter. As an added bonus, you can listen to audio CDs
during gameplay. We recommend music from the early 1980s for the
full "turn back the clock" effect.
But if your video gaming experience doesn't date back to the
early Reagan era, you should probably take a pass on A Collection
of Activision Classic Games for the Atari 2600. By today's
standards, the Atari 2600 is about as technologically dated as
you can get, and the rudimentary gameplay and primitive graphics
and sounds of its games aren't likely to win over any new fans.
--Joe Hon
Pros:
* Comprehensive collection of first-rate Atari 2600 games
* Ability to listen to audio CDs while playing games
Cons:* Little to no appeal outside of older fans of video games
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Review
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Everyone's seemingly jumping on the bandwagon to bring
back the classics, from those who've never abandoned them and are
maintaining mailing lists and newsletters to the newer patrons
buying up flea market cartridges and racing to be the first in
line to pick up any of the serial PlayStation and Saturn releases
that have come out in the last couple years such as Midway's
Atari Collections and Namco's Museum lineup. Now Activision, an
obvious contender in classic titles, has entered the nostalgia
ring with A Collection of Activision Classic Games for the Atari
2600. If this Activision collection does anything, it outnumbers
the quantity of other compilations by including 30 Atari VCS
games: Atlantis, Barnstorming, Boxing, Chopper Command, Cosmic
Commuter, Crackpots, Dolphin, Dragster, Enduro, Fishing Derby,
Freeway, Frostbite, Grand Prix, HERO, Ice Hockey, Kaboom!,
Keystone Kapers, Laser Blast, Megamania, Pitfall, Plaque Attack,
River Raid, River Raid 2, Sea Quest, Skiing, Sky Jinks, Spider
Fighter, Stampede, Starmaster, and Tennis. While this is a fairly
extensive collection, there are really only a few games you'll
likely get a lot of replay out of. Those, of course, being
Pitfall, River Raid, Keystone Kapers, and Megamania. However, the
other games offer the same value as any other retro product
(insert name here), allowing you to boil in your instant
re of and anticipation for the games you liked as a kid,
and quickly simmer upon the realization that some of these games
weren't really that much fun to begin with. I hated Dolphin in
the early '80s, and I still hate it now. Some games seem fairly
different today, however. For example, Cosmic Commuter has a
whole new meaning being an adult who drives to work each day as
sed to a kid who walks. But outside of generating a few
sparks off the sentimental value, you'll probably only
occasionally return to most of these titles after the first time
you check them out. Another point is that as a compilation from
Activision, you'd expect a better conversion. They are not direct
ports, and many of the games are slower - showing signs of lag in
the gameplay that didn't exist in the originals. In Keystone
Kapers, for example, I had the timing down to a science years
ago. But in this version, the cop runs a tiny bit slower, with
short little bursts in his step. With some minor adjustments to
my gameplay, I was up to speed in no time, but it was frustrating
at first. The load times, game menus, and interface were a bit
frustrating as well. I liked the graphic on the menu screen that
showed an illustration of the original cartridge being placed in
an Atari system on top of a graphical TV, but that wasn't cute
enough to make me forget that you have to exit the game and go
back to the front end and select a new variation (they thought to
put a color/b&w button on the controller but stupidly forgot to
put game select and game reset buttons?) In Freeway, for example,
you could start out on any one of a handful of variations, each
with different difficulties. However, if you wanted to play "Game
2," you'd have to exit the game (complete with load time) and
reselect Freeway and the new level you want. Perhaps the best way
to approach this collection is to consider what Activision has
written on the back of the box: "At about a buck a game...."
Considering you can pick up many playable 2600 cartridges at flea
markets for about one dollar or so, if you just want to
occasionally play some of your favorite old titles, without the
commitment of collecting or even hooking up your 2600, this
collection is worth it. But if you're a purist, looking for a
2600 experience that is unmarred by modern production, you might
want to dust off your Atari VCS, because this collection is
pretty fun, but it ain't nothing like the real thing,
baby.--Lauren Fielder--Copyright © 1998 GameSpot Inc. All rights
reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium
without express written permission of GameSpot is prohibited. --
GameSpot Review
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- A collection of Activision Classic Games for the Atari 2600.
- At about a buck a game, this baby's fully loaded with 30 of your all-time video game favorites.
- In the first and largest arcade collection of its kind, Activision Classics gives you all the gameplay of the Original Atari 2600.
- It's serious old-school fun.
- 1 or 2 player fun.