Rob is Lead Features Editor at DualShockers, and has been playing games since hijacking his sister's NES in the early 90s. Instead of outgrowing them, decided to make a life out of ranting about them.
In 1983, the arcade cabinet was still king. Kids dunked their quarters into machines we might remember today -- and these ...
After dominating the industry until the video game crash of 1983, the Atari 2600 and its cartridge-based games have become retro collectibles. No, we're not talking about "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial," ...
The three games, Yars’ Return, Aquaventure, and Saboteur, are all unreleased titles from back in the day that never saw publication because of the crash, and are being released as limited edition ...
The '80s were an enormously pivotal decade for the gaming industry, from the explosion of home console and gaming computer availability to the emergence of major companies and franchises. The early ...
Although it may seem hard to believe today, given how popular gaming now is, the industry suffered a crash in 1983 that many people thought it would never recover from. The crash only lasted for two ...
Atari’s follow up to its 2600+ retro console for modern TVs is the Atari 7800+. Just like the console from 1986, it’s backwards compatible with the 2600. Reading time 2 minutes There must be at least ...
Why it matters: If you're a kid of the 1980s pining for those glorious 8-bit days, Atari's got another blast from the past lined up for you. The iconic gaming brand just announced the Atari 7800+, a ...
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