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  • Film crew to dig up Atari landfill site

    Film crew to dig up Atari landfill site, maybe score 3.5 million copies of E.T.

    Alamaogordo, NM city council to allow excavation to settle gaming's top urban legend.

    By Kyle Orland

    A documentary crew has received approval to dig up the New Mexico desert site where Atari supposedly buried millions of unsold pieces of Atari 2600 software and hardware. The crew hopes to finally confirm or refute one of gaming's most enduring urban legends once and for all.

    The city council in Alamogordo, New Mexico granted approval this week for Ottawa-based multimedia and marketing firm Fuel Industries to excavate the site some time in the next six months for a documentary it's filming, local news site KRQE reports. This year also marks what will be the 30 year anniversary of the assumed September 1983 burial, which came during the height of the great video game crash. That sudden market reversal supposedly left Atari with millions of unsold and unsalable cartridges and systems, which were dumped in an Alamogordo landfill and later covered in concrete.

    While at least one Atari employee has cast doubts on the plausibility of the story, the dumping was reported in contemporaneous reports in the Alamogordo Daily News and The New York Times. The former paper got confirmation from the garbage disposal company that was used for the burial, and the latter got confirmation from an Atari spokesperson, so it's pretty unlikely the production company is walking into an Al Capone's vault-type situation.

    Still, there are questions that remain unanswered. While the 3.5 million unsold copies of E.T. are most commonly cited as the likely bulk of the burial, reports suggest the dump may also contain unsold consoles, PCs, and even prototypes of the Atari Mindlink controller. There's significant disagreement as to how much material was dumped in the landfill, with reports ranging from 9 to 20 full dump trucks.

    Personally, we're hoping Fuel Industries decides to chip away portions of the massive dumping and sell them off to collectors, Berlin Wall-style. After all, who wouldn't love to own a piece of gaming history that can also serve as a paperweight?
    The Hackmaster

  • #2
    Atari game burial mystery gets XBox documentary

    Filming starts in January for broadcast via XBox Live.

    By Philippa Warr, wired.co.uk Dec 21 2013, 10:20 A.M. EST


    The venerable Atari 2600.
    Association WDA

    Xbox Entertainment Studios has announced that it is producing an original documentary series, starting with an investigation into the original Atari company.

    The series is part of Xbox's "we want to be the most important thing in your living room" drive—something that has also seen the company commissioning original television series as well as working on partnerships for other entertainment content.

    The first film in the series focuses on the Atari video game burial of 1983 when, lumbered with millions of unsold game cartridges after commercial flops like its adaptation of E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, the company was reported to have crushed and buried said cartridges in the landfill of Alamogordo, New Mexico.

    The programs will be the work of Lightbox—the media company of Academy award-winning producer Simon Chinn and Emmy award-winning producer Jonathan Chinn.

    "Jonathan and Simon Chinn are the perfect team to spearhead this series for Xbox," said Xbox Entertainment Studios President Nancy Tellem. "They are consummate storytellers and they plan to match their creative sensibility with the best talent in the industry. These stories will expose how the digital revolution created a global democracy of information, entertainment and commerce, and how it impacts our lives every day."

    Filming will start in January and the shows will air, as you might expect, exclusively via Xbox Live.

    This story originally appeared on Wired UK.
    The Hackmaster

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    • #3
      Project To Find Atari's Hidden Treasure Put On Hold By Authorities

      By Simon Reed

      Remember the news last year that a group of film makers were aiming to dig up a landfill site in New Mexico hoping to find the many Atari 2600 games rumored to be buried there - ‘worst game ever made’ E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial among them?

      Well it sadly looks as if the kibosh has been put on this dream to dig up the truly terrible treasure for the time being, with environmental regulators from the area blocking the proposed excavation earlier this week.

      For those unaware with the truly amazing tale, Atari bet everything on E.T. on the Atari 2600 back in 1982 – but when a significant number of the 5 million copies produced were returned or unsold the company had to cut it's losses, and fast.

      This meant that consoles, various equipment, and copies of both Pac-Man and E.T. were allegedly buried in an American landfill in Almogardo, New Mexico.

      The aforementioned group of filmmakers’ plan was to confirm or disprove these fabled item’s existence, but New Mexico environment department spokesman Jim Winchester has said that an approved waste excavation plan (WEP) is needed before any dig can begin.

      So the dream is on hold, for now at least. We’ll be sure to keep an eye on this news though and let you know of developments if and when they occur!

      Source
      The Hackmaster

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      • #4
        If the rumors of the ill-fabled "Atari dump site" are true, then it would mean that the film crew would stumble across the single largest cache of video game merchandise in the world. Very few warehouses are large enough to store more than 4 million Atari 2600s, E.T. and Pac-Man cartridges (this is just an educated guess, based on how badly E.T. sold).

        There have only been two other games that NEARLY qualify as being "E.T. bad": Superman 64 (N64, of course), and Aquaman on the GameCube. I've played the former VERY briefly (mainly the multiplayer mode, which isn't REALLY bad, but it still sucked), but not the latter.
        Tempus fugit, ergo, carpe diem.

        Time flies, therefore, seize the day.

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        • #5
          Superman 64 is comically bad. I couldn't get out of the 1st level, another bad game is Mission Impossible
          The Hackmaster

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          • #6
            this is tha firstimes i saw whats atari looks like:P, anyho i dunt read tha engrish typo, so please count mine quote as off heh
            dood
            dood! im a uniter, not a divider dood

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            • #7
              Filmakers Project To Literally Dig Up Atari's E.T. Past Back On Track

              By Simon Reed

              Despondent about the news last month that an attempt to dig up the rumored hidden Atari ‘treasure’ for a documentary was put on hold by authorities? Well fear not - the excavation will now happen in two weeks time.

              The aforementioned treasure is part of a long-term gaming urban legend, which allegedly saw Atari bury a significant number of games and accessories it had foolishly overproduced for its home consoles. And yes, one of those titles was oft quoted ‘worst game ever made’ E.T: The Extra Terrestrial for the Atari 2600.

              You might be surprised to learn that it is Microsoft who has helped revive this digging up of the American landfill in Almogardo, New Mexico too.

              The computer software and hardware giant revealed through Xbox Wire that it has teamed with the Fuel Entertainment (the group of film makers behind the documentary) to make this exhumation of gaming history a public event.

              History will be made – one way or another – on the 26th of April, and if you live in the vicinity of Almogardo I'd definitely check it out.
              The Hackmaster

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              • #8
                Urban legend confirmed! #Atari #ET cartridges found!

                Urban legend confirmed! #Atari #ET cartridges found!

                http://instagram.com/p/nQ5qDbsTFR/#
                Not taking any requests at this time.

                Bored? Watch some of my hacks here.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Abystus View Post
                  Urban legend confirmed! #Atari #ET cartridges found!

                  http://instagram.com/p/nQ5qDbsTFR/#
                  This needs to be merged with this thread.
                  The Hackmaster

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                  • #10
                    Merged.
                    I only bother with things that interest me.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      How Obsessed Fans Finally Exhumed Atari's Secret Game Graveyard
                      The Hackmaster

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                      • #12
                        The Atari Landfill Myth - The Gaming Historian
                        lee4 Does Not Accept Codes Requests !
                        When lee4 asks a question it does not mean lee4 will look at your game
                        *How to create and use SegaCD codes >click here<*
                        >)

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                        • #13
                          E.T Excavation Documentary 'Atari: Game Over' Official Trailer

                          Back in April a documentary crew unburied Atari's garbage, and their documentary Atari: Game Over releases exclusively on XBox’s this fall.

                          The Hackmaster

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                          • #14
                            Unearthed Atari E.T. Cartridges Go Up for Sale on eBay

                            By Chris Kohler


                            One of the unearthed E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial games from the Alamogordo burial up for sale on eBay.
                            Tularosa Basin Historical Society/eBay

                            Now you can own a dirty piece of gaming history.

                            Remember that trove of discarded Atari games that was excavated from a dump in Alamogordo, New Mexico earlier this year? The Tularosa Basin Historical Society of Alamogordo has started selling some of them, including copies of the infamous Atari 2600 version of E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial, on eBay. Each game includes a certificate of authenticity.

                            About 100 games, including Atari 2600 hits like Centipede and Defender, are currently up for grabs. Auctions begin at between $50 and $100. Some of them have no bids at the moment, but the nicest copy (“nice” being a relative term) of E.T. is currently commanding more than $400. The auctions close November 13th.
                            The Hackmaster

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                            • #15
                              Atari: Game Over Documentary Will Premiere Later This Month Exclusively On Xbox Devices, Free For Xbox Live Members


                              E.T. wasn't the only thing that Atari buried in that landfill. (taylorhatmaker on Wikimedia Commons)

                              The Hackmaster

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