Video Game History Month: Atari
We take a look at the first successful console and how it started the home video game market.
We take a look at the first successful console and how it started the home video game market.
Online auctions for E.T. and others found in a New Mexico landfill bring in thousands for a New Mexico community.
Museum of American History receives a copy of E.T. for its collection; Museum director explains why it belongs.
Creator Howard Scott Warshaw smoked pot on his first day of work at Atari, and more revealed in just-released Atari: Game Over film.
Initial auction of 100 games raises $37,000 for the city of Alamogordo.
Film will be available across Xbox 360, Xbox One, and PC on November 20 free for everyone.
Copies of the failed Atari 2600 game dug out of a landfill are fetching huge prices on eBay.
Owning a piece of history will cost you.
Microsoft's Atari and E.T. dig documentary releases November 20.
Soon you can own a piece of gaming history.
Coming this fall, the movie will explain how copies of E.T.: The Extra Terrestrial for the Atari 2600 ended up buried in a landfill in Alamogordo, New Mexico.
It's GameSpot international team-up week on Random Encounter. First up, Martin and Tom dig up a land-fill and play the Atari 2600 abomination ET.
700 of the 1,300 copies of E.T. recovered during recent landfill excavation will be sold at a New Mexico museum.
James Heller talks about being tasked with burying hundreds of thousands of game cartridges.
Rumored burial site for millions of copies of the failed video game will finally be excavated on April 26 and you're invited to attend.
State agency waits for documentary to revise plan for excavating landfill where thousands of copies of E.T. for the Atari 2600 are rumored to be buried.
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