Wednesday, July 19, 2017

The Mysterious Case Of Menticide For The Atari VCS Part One (An Atari Ninja Investigation)

Menticide was an allegedly unreleased game for the Atari 2600. Supposedly it was programed by Howard Eldritch and if the game really did exist, it would be the only game that Eldritch ever actually made. According to the rumors that I've heard and read over the years the game was so disturbing that Howard Eldritch was immediately fired after he presented the prototype version to his boss at Atari.

Howard's boss at the time was none other than Nolan Bushnell, the actual founder of Atari, and eventually Chuck E. Cheese's Pizza too. Many have called Mr. Bushnell the godfather of video gaming and I think he really does deserve that title. Supposedly Howard Eldritch's career at Atari ended before Bushnell left the company, so he must have been among the original group of programmers, because Nolan Bushnell left Atari towards the end of 1978, and the Atari VCS was commercially launched on 09/11/77, the day before my fifth birthday (and some of you have actually wondered why I have such an obsession with the Atari 2600).

The name of this strange game; Menticide, is an actual word. According to Dictionary.com, the word refers to the systematic effort to undermine, and destroy a person's values and beliefs. To use intense interrogation methods, drugs, and torture to induce radically different ideas into someone's mind. In some ways, the word kind of refers to brainwashing, or just completely destroying a person's mental identity, or their psyche.

Very little is known about the actual contents of this video game called Menticide short of the fact that supposedly the game's graphics were of the typically crude variety. I say 'typically crude' because a great many of the early games for the Atari Video Computer System were quite simplistic, even a lot of the good ones too. But, the graphics of the game-play weren't the disturbing part. The truly disturbing element of the game allegedly involved subliminal images, or perhaps messages that were implanted into the graphics. These basically invisible subliminal elements would leave people feeling queasy, or generally psychologically disturbed, and in some cases it was known to trigger hallucinations. These hallucinations were supposedly very realistic and were allegedly known to cause very frightening flashbacks that could occur anytime after even a single viewing of the game actually being played.

Of course, none of this can be confirmed, and the very existence of the game is really just a rumor. But, I need to know the truth, and I've devoted a great deal of my time over the last couple of years to uncovering any information that I can about Menticide. And I swear, eventually I will get to the bottom of the whole saga of this elusive video game.

-Jay

Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Alternate Controllers For The Atari VCS (An Atari Ninja Article)


This is less of a review and more of an article about the various alternatives to the standard Atari Joystick for the Video Computer System. There are many options out there and here a few that I personally have had some experience with.

I'm going to start with my personal favorite, it's a third party joystick that I had as a kid, and when I saw it at my local retro game shop, I had to own it again. The Pointmaster was made by Discwasher, a company that was best known for making cleaning supplies for vinyl records, CDs, and VCRs. Considering that my grandfather was a big audiophile and collector of both classical vinyl and later classical CDs too, I am pretty sure I know exactly why I ended up with this particular premium styled joystick when I was a little kid.


It enabled the user to control both the movement and the firing functions in a game with just one hand and I thought it had the feel of a jet-fighter control. It also looked pretty cool too and the grip was far more comfortable than a standard Atari brand joystick.

A similar joystick is the Gemini. I wasn't too familiar with this controller when I picked one up for a few bucks at a local thrift store this past weekend. Interestingly enough, this was the same store that I bought my Atari Video Computer System at too. I tend to visit this place every weekend and I never walk out empty-handed.


The Gemini functions similarly to the Pointmaster, but it has a second fire button on the base, much like the original Atari joystick. It also has a more comfortable grip, just like the Pointmaster too. I could say that it is a step up from the Pointmaster, but for me the Pointmaster earns extra points for sentimental reasons. As regular readers might have noticed, I can be a very sentimental guy. From a purely functional perspective, the Gemini is a real winner. It also has a very nice look to it as well, so it's an aesthetic winner too.

An even odder alternative to the original Atari controller is the Sega Genesis controller. Yes, believe it or not, any Sega Genesis controller can be used with an Atari 2600. And, some people really like using them because they are essentially a far more modern controller than the ones that were actually designed to work with the Atari VCS. That modern feel may very well be why I do not particularly enjoy using them with my 2600, it just kind of takes away from that overall retro-nostalgic look and feel. But, if it sounds good to you, give it a try.


 Also, there is an additional benefit to using a couple of these Sega Genesis controllers. It's one that many people might not even think about. I've noticed that Sega Genesis controllers are far more common in my area than the old Atari controllers. So, they are definitely worth considering for that reason alone, you might just have an easier time finding one.


One controller that I cannot speak of from a practical, or technical perspective, because I've never actually owned one, and I never even had a chance to try one out. But, I really want one, and someday I will obtain it. Because, this is a thing of beauty, and it was brought to us by M Network as a tie-in with one of my all-time favorite movies.


Yes, M Network, the people behind the Intellivision console did make a few games for the Atari VCS, and they made this nifty joystick too. Among those games that they made for both the Atari 2600 and the Intellivision were two Tron games. And, if you bought both games together you could get your hands on this free joystick too. To be absolutely technical, M Network was actually Mattel, a toy company that was better known for Barbie than anything else. But hey, they were also the company behind Masters Of The Universe, and of course the Intellivision too, so that makes them way cooler than just the Barbie company.

-Jay






Tuesday, July 11, 2017

Video Checkers For The Atari VCS


It is kind of surprising to think that Activision felt the need to release their version of Checkers for the Atari Video Computer System in 1981, when Atari themselves had already delivered Video Checkers to the store shelves a year earlier. But, now that I have played it, I can certainly explain why. Because, believe it or not, the Activision game is actually mildly worth playing, where as Video Checkers is a real hunk of junk. Despite having that typically lovely box art that is true for most official Atari VCS games.

Now, you might be wondering why I would own both Video Checkers, and the Activision version of Checkers too. The reason is very simple, when I first got into retro gaming for the Atari 2600 I consciously decided that I would go out of my way to try and obtain every single game for the system. Which is basically an impossible task, I didn't realize that at the time, but I do now. But, because I still want to try my best to get all of the games that I can, I do buy anything for the VCS that I do not yet own, as long as the price is cheap enough. This includes buying Backgammon, which is a game that I do not even know how to play. 

That said, Video Checkers is a pretty lousy version of Checkers, it doesn't look as good, or play as well as the Activision version. So, if you absolutely have to have a Checkers game for your Atari Video Computer System, buy the other one, not Video Checkers. Neither are very good, but this one is the worst of the two.
The two versions play very similar, but I think that the graphics look better on the Activision version, and the interface is a little more enjoyable. Both games have that weird quirk where the screen goes blank while the computer thinks of its move. Oddly enough, that blank screen doesn't seem to last as long on Video Checkers, but that is not enough for me to recommend it over the other game. I do not recommend buying either one of these games necessarily. Unless, like I said earlier, you really want a Checkers game for your Atari VCS. Or, if you're as ridiculous as me, and you actually think that you might be able to collect every Atari 2600 game. Good luck with that, but do remember that you have competition out there, and one of those competitors is a guy who calls himself the Atari Ninja and he is just crazy enough to attempt this impossible feat.

-Jay


Monday, July 10, 2017

Tron (Movie Review)


Yesterday (07/09/2017) marked the thirty-fifth anniversary of the theatrical release of the movie Tron, a film that I am not even slightly embarrassed to proclaim as one of my all-time favorites. A truly imaginative and spectacular looking science-fiction movie that has proven to be far ahead its time and perhaps more influential than most people would think.

The story is about a young software engineer who was pushed out of his job with a major computer and technology company after a less talented designer stole a number of video game programs from him. Flynn, the talented young engineer, has been repeatedly hacking into the system in an attempt to prove that Dillinger, the other programmer, committed theft when he presented the video games to the company that he is now running. Flynn eventually breaks into the corporate headquarters of his former employer as a last-ditch effort to uncover the proof that he needs, but Dillinger's Master Control Program (an all-powerful computer program which seems to possess both artificial intelligence and a stronger desire for power than even Dillinger himself) catches Flynn, and digitizes the young man sending him into the virtually reality world that exists within the computer realm. In this world the Master Control Program (AKA the MCP) is just that, the master of everything, and the MCP has enslaved tons of programs that are forced to physically play video games until they actually die playing. Flynn join forces with another program named Tron and together they attempt to defeat the MCP.


Jeff Bridges' performance as Flynn does nothing to hide the obvious amount of fun that the actor was having. David Warner in the dual role of both Dillinger and the program Sark is appropriately menacing and evil. Honestly Warner is the kind of actor that could play these roles in his sleep. Bruce Boxleitner plays both Tron and his human counterpart the programmer Alan Bradley, as Alan, Boxleitner is fine, but as Tron he is far more stoic, and appropriately heroic.

The direction by Steven Lisberger is tight and visually stunning. It's hard to believe that his only directorial efforts before this film was an animated television movie called Animalympics and a single short from the early 1970s. It's even more shocking to find out that Lisberger only directed two more movies after Tron.

If you've never seen Tron and this review has mildly piqued your interest, do yourself a favor, and seek it out. In that summer of 1982, the nine year old me must have gone to the cinema a dozen times to see this film. And, I've probably watched it dozens more times over the last thirty-five years. 

-Jay



Happy Birthday...

On September 11, 1977 the Atari Video Computer System was released to store shelves and the hearts of children everywhere. The Atari VCS, o...