Monday, 28 April 2014
Old School Atari Games Unearthed
Over the weekend copies of Atari's disastrous 1982 E.T game
adaptation were excavated from a landfill in New Mexico. The
long-rumored cache of trash contained copies of the game, promotional
materials, and other games, according to published reports. A documentary team accompanied by senior figures at Microsoft were on
hand, as were several media outlets who spent the Saturday enjoying the
fragrance and ambience that only a landfill can provide. The idea that Atari dumped huge quantities of its financially
disastrous 1982 game had long been rumored to exists. The excavation was
the result of investigative work by a team of filmmakers who are
creating a documentary about the rise and fall of Atari - and inevitably
the video games industry as it was way back in 1982. Microsoft's Larry "Major Nelson" Hryb and social media director Jeff
Rubenstein were present for excavation, and both tweeted pictures of
their success to a waiting world. The moment was filmed for the
documentary backed by Microsoft, Fuel Entertainment and Lightbox
Entertainment as well.
While the excavation does indeed prove that Atari dumped some
materials in this particular landfill, it is unclear just how many
copies of E.T were unearthed. Rumors over the years estimated that Atari
dumped thousands and even millions of cartridges. How many are actually
in the New Mexico desert landfill remains to be seen.
Labels:
Gaming
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