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Atari 50: The Anniversary Celebration Expanded Edition announced for PS5, Xbox Series, PS4, Xbox One, Switch, and PC (due out on October 25)

Thick Thighs Save Lives

NeoGAF's Physical Games Advocate Extraordinaire
Atari-50-Expanded-Ann_06-25-24_001-768x432.jpg


Publisher Atari and developer Digital Eclipse have announced Atari 50: The Anniversary Celebration Expanded Edition for PlayStation 5, Xbox Series, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Switch, and PC (Steam). It will launch on October 25. Users who own Atari 50: The Anniversary Collection will be able to access the new content as downloadable content later in 2024.

A physical standard edition will be available for PlayStation 5 and Switch for $39.99, and a physical SteelBook edition will be available for Switch for $49.99. The latter will include Atari 2600 art cards, miniature arcade marquee signs, an Al Alcorn Replica Syzygy Co. business card, and a SteelBook case.

Atari-50-Expanded-Ann_06-25-24_002.jpg


Here is an overview of the collection, via Atari:
Atari 50: The Anniversary Celebration Expanded Edition adds two new timelines and 39 games to the playable Atari retrospective that is Atari 50: The Anniversary Collection.

The Wider World of Atari timeline, which includes 19 playable games and eight video segments, takes a series of deep dives into stories from Atari history, showing how Atari continued to influence creators and fans over the decades. New interviews, vintage ads, historical artifacts, and more have all been researched and presented with Digital Eclipse’s signature style. Highlights from the new timeline include a deep dive into Stern Electronics’ robot-blasting Berzerk; unusual and underappreciated innovations and hidden gems from the late 1980s; a spotlight on the artist Evelyn Seto, who helped create the iconic “Fuji” Atari logo; Pong creator Al Alcorn explaining the birth of Breakout; and an exploration of the fan base’s role in discovering unreleased prototypes, creating “homebrew” games, and preserving Atari history.

The First Console War timeline, which includes 20 playable games and half-dozen video segments, tells the story of the first major console war in the gaming industry between the Atari 2600 and Mattel’s Intellivision. The team at Digital Eclipse curates an exploration of the rivalry, including Mattel’s quixotic decision to create games for the competing Atari 2600. Highlights include a selection of M Network games, including some fan-favorites; a mix of Atari and M Network sports games, and some rare Atari 2600 and 5200 prototypes. New interview features include former Intellivision game director Don Daglow, M Network programmer Jane Terjung, Activision‘s David Crane and Garry Kitchen, homebrew programmer Dennis Debro, and historians Leonard Herman and Mike Mika.

The new timelines and games will be offered to owners of the original Atari 50: The Anniversary Collection release as downloadable content later this year.

Source - Gematsu
 

El Muerto

Gold Member
Just bought the an Atari 50 steam key on Eneba for $5.32. Didnt know lynx/jaguar games were included along with videos. But i still go back and play my atari 2600 with hundreds of roms loaded on my Harmony cart.
 

Havoc2049

Member
Question: Are Star Raiders and Rampart included? (Any maybe Gauntlet?)
Star Raiders is in the collection. It's a slightly enhanced version with a title screen and intro tune, functioning 16x9 border and has been overclocked to get rid of the slowdown while in combat.

There is a Gauntlet type co-op dungeon crawler ARPG game in the collection called Dark Chambers.
 
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Hudo

Member
Star Raiders is in the collection. It's a slightly enhanced version with a title screen and intro tune, functioning 16x9 border and has been overclocked to get rid of the slowdown while in combat.

There is a Gauntlet type co-op dungeon crawler ARPG game in the collection called Dark Chambers.
Ah, Ok. Thanks!

I hope that in this expanded edition, they'll include Rampart as well. It's a good game.
 
Looking into my magic crystal balls, I see:
1. A slow menu when rotating between games.
2. Bad music that is chopped up with short samples from each game when we select it.
3. Extremely expensive DLC.
 

consoul

Member
So the Atari fans who bought the original get 39 fewer games than people who come late to the party.

For the same price.

Something about this feels wrong. I get it, a relaunched expanded edition of a game is not unusual, but in this specific case, where the target audience were the fans of Atari and game history, fucking over the people who supported it feels especially shitty.
 

Agent X

Member
So the Atari fans who bought the original get 39 fewer games than people who come late to the party.

For the same price.

Something about this feels wrong.

The original Atari 50 package will be almost 2 years old by the time the Expanded Edition is released. The fans who bought it at release will have had all that extra time to play and enjoy it.

This is no different than numerous other games that get "Deluxe" or "Game of the Year" editions with one or more DLC packs thrown in, all for the same price as the base game a year or two earlier. It's a regular practice in this industry. I don't have any complaints here.

I'm much more annoyed by the fact that the "Collector's Edition" with the added physical trinkets is only being released on one platform (Switch). They did the same thing with the original release of this product. Atari should at least let PS4/PS5 and Xbox One/Xbox Series X fans purchase the "steelbook" case and trinkets directly from their Web site, if they don't want to bother releasing an actual retail package for those systems.
 

Northeastmonk

Gold Member
It's 39 games. Even if it's $20 that's $0.50 a game, plus all the videos. I doubt it would be more than that. Most of their new releases cap at $30 or $20, like Jeff Minter / Making of Karateka.
How is the Llamasoft collection? I’ve been wanting to learn more. I own a handful of Atari collections and the 50th Anniversary is the best one of them all.
 

Punished Miku

Human Rights Subscription Service
How is the Llamasoft collection? I’ve been wanting to learn more. I own a handful of Atari collections and the 50th Anniversary is the best one of them all.
Thats the only one I dont have. I think theyre all very similar. Same layout and everything.
 

Daniel Thomas MacInnes

GAF's Resident Saturn Omnibus
All Atari arcade games starting with Marble Madness were developed by Atari Games (later Midway West, now WB Games), which is a completely different IP holder than the current Atari that owns all the consoles IPs and Atari computers catalog.


This is your reminder that in 1984, Atari Inc was split into two halves. The arcade division stayed with Warner Bros & Namco (they held a controlling stake for a short while) called Atari Games. The home consumer division was sold to Jack Tramiel, founder of Commodore, who rechristened it Atari Corp.

Atari Games was later renamed Time Warner Interactive before being sold to Williams Midway, who held the rights until they went under.

Atari Corp was sold to JTS, a disc drive manufacturer, in a 1996 reverse merger. Then it was sold to Hasbro, then Infogrames, and now the current owners. The Atari assets were bought and sold several times over, which makes archiving or rebuilding the brand somewhat challenging.
 
How is the Llamasoft collection? I’ve been wanting to learn more. I own a handful of Atari collections and the 50th Anniversary is the best one of them all.

The Llamasoft collection focuses on Jeff Minter, so there's not much in the way of Atari games given most of his early work was on Commodore, tho it does end with Tempest 2000 on Jaguar (outside of a revamped Grid Runner). Its layout is the same as Atari 50 with timelines, goes from the late 70's to early 90's, and is packed with plenty to see, hear & play - there's even handwritten design documents for a lot of the games. If Jeff Minter or the UK's 80's gaming scene, focused on ol' home computers instead of consoles, is of interest, then the collection is a no-brainer.
 
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