Journey Escape. Jungle Hunt. Junior Pac Man. Keystone Kapers. King Kong. Kool Aid Man. Krokodile Cartridge. Kung Fu Superkicks. Lady Bug. Lady In Wading. Laser Blast.
Laser Gates. Laser Volley. Lock N Chase. London Blitz. Lost Luggage. Marble Craze. Marine Wars. Master Builder. Masters Of The Universe. Math Gran Prix. Maze Craze. Medieval Mayhem. Mega Force. Mental Kombat. Midnight Magic. Miner er. Miner er 2. Mines Of Minos.
Miniature Golf. Missile Control. Mission Mission Survive. Mogul Maniac. Montezumas Revenge. Moon Patrol. Moto Rodeo. Motocross Racer. Mountain King. Mouse Trap. Mr DO. Mr DOs Castle. Ms Pac Man. Music Machine. My Golf. Name This Game. Night Driver. Night Stalker. No Escape. Ocean City Defender. Off The Wall. Off Your Rocker. Okie Dokie. Omega Race. Open Sesame. Oscars Trash Race. Out Of Control. Outer Space. Pac Kong. Pac Man.
Peek A Boo. Peles Championship Soccer. Pete Rose Baseball. Phantom II. Phantom Panzer. Philly Flasher Cathouse Blues. Pick N Pile. Pick Up. Piece O Cake. Pigs In Space. Pitfall 2. Planet Patrol. Plaque Attack.
Poker Plus. Poker Squares. Pole Position. Pressure Cooker. Pressure Gauge. Private Eye. Quest For Quintana Roo. Quick Step. Rabbit Transit. Radar Lock. Raft Rider. Raiders Of The Lost Ark. Rainbow Invaders. Raster Fahndung. Realsports Baseball. Realsports Basketball. Realsports Boxing. ET the Extra Terrestrial. Red Sea Crossing. Atari System. Air Raid. Swordquest Waterworld. Atari System [Heavy Sixer]. Star Wars Ewok Adventure Prototype.
Donkey Kong. Space Invaders. Mario Bros. While there are several games that are very rare, they were at least available to the general public, usually only via mail order. However, even if included, the final number would not significantly change. Two issues with a list of North American Atari games is that games only released in PAL territories must be weeded out.
Prototypes and reproductions should also be filtered out. The final number is focused on games released during the console's lifespan, so homebrew games are not counted. What games were released in North America is mostly well-known, but when you go to the many European countries, South America and Taiwan, the titles really start to become difficult to manage. If pirate cartridges are considered, the PAL territories probably had more games released than the U.
Finally, games released by pirate labels, which frequently only rename the game, should also be left out unless that has been confirmed as the only a game found a North American release.
The arcade version came out in , but the port for the Atari was released in , the same year as the infamous video game crash. The poor sales due to the crash is seen as a major reason for its rarity. This simple shoot 'em up is worth well over 30 thousand dollars with the complete package.
This is partly due to the curious T-shape design of the cartridge. Even in an incomplete state, just the cartridge itself has been known to sell for about three thousand dollars. Less than five transactions of this game have taken place, making it the veritable holy grail for collectors looking for truly valuable Atari games. The story behind this game is as mysterious and magical as the biblical event that inspired it. Only one hundred copies were made, and they all disappeared without a trace.
Only within the past ten years have copies popped up, often selling for exorbitant sums. The real kicker is the coloring book that accompanies the game. If the two were sold together, the value would be exponentially higher. Do not confuse this one for the infamous video game adaptation of E. This game was made by a small family who wanted to take advantage of the video game craze, but came in just a little too late. Production was finished by the programmer after the market had crashed as a result of the aforementioned adaptation.
To try and salvage their money, the game was reportedly sold door to door locally, with only one hundred copies produced. This game and its rarity did not come to light again until , and now it is worth 80 thousand dollars. However, the most expensive copy bought went for sixteen thousand. The idea of Birthday Mania involved people sending money to the company and receiving a personalized copy of it for either themselves or the birthday person.
0コメント