Hosted on MSN
Atari is Making a New Intellivision Console. What’s Next? Nintendo Making a New Sega Console?
Atari’s acquisition of the Intellivision brand has led to the announcement of the new Intellivision Sprint console, reviving a piece of 1980s gaming history with modern updates for today’s players.
Matti Robinson is a veteran of the industry originally from Finland, with nearly 20 years of writing and editing experience. His love for gaming started with the Commodore 64 and grew with each ...
After spending time with the Atari-themed retro console, here is a look at some of the pros and cons.
TL;DR: The Atari 2600+ PAC-MAN Edition, launching in 2025, revives the classic console with modern features like HDMI output and wireless joysticks. Priced at $169.99, it includes a 2-in-1 PAC-MAN ...
In a nutshell: Atari is teaming up with retro gaming company My Arcade on one of the most peculiar handheld game systems in recent memory. The Gamestation Go, teased in an X post ahead of CES, is all ...
This Atari 7800+ gaming console includes a wireless controller for a modern revamp. It can connect to modern TVs with an HDMI cable so you can play your favorite retro games with all of the ...
TL;DR: Atari acquired the Intellivision brand in 2024 and is releasing the Intellivision Sprint, a $150 retro console featuring 45 built-in classic games, HDMI output, wireless controllers, and new ...
This new device might fill the need that Atari 50 on modern platforms can’t. Modern day Atari is certainly an interesting beast. To sum up a story that we perhaps take too long to tell, the first two ...
We’re on the ground at CES in Las Vegas all week to sift through the hype and find the products that should actually be worth your money this year. Check out our guide to CES 2025 for our latest hands ...
Atari’s Intellivision Sprint isn’t retro cosplay. It’s a preservation-focused console built to recreate the feel of the ...
Before the NES, home consoles were a burned market in the US. Nintendo reversed that narrative with games that turned consoles into a global industry again.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results