As one of the developers from Parker Brothers who worked on this game, it was so nice to see it again. There are reasons we did what we did with these games that other game mfgrs did not. Thanks for letting me remember simpler times.
That's amazing Rick. Thank you for your comment and your contribution to video game history. What was your role on the game? I'm sure your perspective of it was very different to my one depicted in this video!
At the time, Atari did not make available to other manufacturers how to code for their platform. So, under strict controls we reversed engineered the whole system, chips included. We knew things this system could do and commands available that Atari didn’t know about. We used this information to create a development platform that was truly ahead of its time.
@@DrRRH Fascinating. At the end of the video I mention that I was told that game was doing something special with the scanlines which was causing the vertical hold issue on my old CRT. Any idea what that was? Maybe something to do with the parallax scrolling?
"I'm gonna just, if it's okay, I'm gonna pretend that you were one of my friends when I was 10...and we're playing this game together." That comment right there made me smile so bright. Every one of your videos makes me feel like I was invited to your house, and we were having a playful chat, or we decided to do a project together. You make content that resonates the feeling of welcomeness. I don't know if it's the soothing voice, the gentle music in the background, or the simple editing, but it's something that very few content creators can really do. I love it, and I hope that this vibe never goes away. May the Force be with you.
In my youth, I wrote video games for the Atari 2600... It was a real pain due to the CPU directly controlling the video data output bits for each scan line..
I tripped over the power cord of my light sixer 2600 when I was about ten, and that was it. Felt like losing a friend! I did save it, though. Thirty some years later I finally dug it back out and opened it up. Turns out I cracked the solder on the power jack. One gentle touch with the old soldering pencil and it's back! Sure cleaned up nice, too.I even recovered the penny that I lost through the vents when I was 6 or 7, which is now taped to the top of the case.
Watching the nostalgic satisfaction you got reassured me that my own nostalgic high I get from my vintage computer collection is not just a me thing. Love your videos.
This was one of my favorites as a boy. One tip - the walkers move much more slowly when damaged. A good strategy for higher scores is to knock the lead walker down to the yellow status, slowing the entire column, and then the last one down to yellow as well, slowing the arrival of the new walkers. Then destroy the six between them. By the time you've done that, the last walker will be the lead walker, and you can repeat the process until they finally get you or you have to go to dinner. May the Force be with you!
When I got this game back in the early 80's it was a loose cart with no instructions. Until this video and comment section I had no clue about the walkers slowing down when damaged, the landing your ship to repair it, or the different game variations.
@@homiedclown i had the same experience. To my 10 year old eyes it was a horrid game of repetition with no goal or objective, nothing going on but shooting at an eternal tain of walkers. Sadly it was one of our least played games
I am so amazed! Your patience is "Out of this world!!" I so felt for you I remember seeing this cartridge as a kid, but we never got it (But we had "Space Invaders" & "Pack Man" - Both fab ulous games too) So great to see that happy smile on your face when it all works in the end!
That was lovely to see. You carried that around for all these years and so good that you weren't disappointed when the dream came true. Very sweet. Cheers
Awsome fix - as an amateur radio operator (2E0FWE) I was right away - yep thats Radio Frequency interfering with the video. Its worth investing in some good power strips *only* for your consoles and monitor to run from (Tacima 6 Way Mains Conditioner and Radio Frequency Interference Filter) , the best ones will have a choke filter in them and you done the right thing in putting on some good old ferrites on your power supplies. Amazing rebuild, your persistance and determination are amazing !!
It always surprises me how powerfully nostalgic small things like vendor video game brand packaging, artwork, and logos can transport me instantly right back to 1981 in anticipation and excitement browsing in my local Sears or toy store at all the new Atari hardware and software boxes stacked on display on the store shelves and behind the glass display cases. I can exactly relate to your feelings in this video. Trip back to a better, simpler, happy time. Kids today having instant gratification don’t understand or know the feeling and experience of that long car ride home from the store holding that prized new Atari game cart box, carefully analyzing and reading every word on the box in anticipation of finally getting it home, opening it, and plugging it into the console for days/weeks/months of shared exploration, enjoyment and experiences with friends.
Glad you got to play it even 37 years later. It was my favorite when I was 10. And it still is today. Just played it a couple days ago on the console my lifelong best friend (who passed away in July) left me.
Right with you there at the end when you paused to soak it all in. I have major nostalgia feels for that game. Played the HELL out of it for months. Great game when the world was Star Wars and ESB crazy. I wish I had kept my 2600. Great troubleshooting video... know that must have felt great to get everything resolved. That looked like a lot of work. Nice job!
This absolutely made my day. So impressed that you held on to that cart for all these years. I still own games I received as Christmas presents back in the 80’s, I’m 55 now and could never part with them :-)
Empire Strike Back on 2600 was the very first videogame I ever played at home. :) I was probably 5 or 6 years old around 1986 or 1987 when I found the woody 4-switcher in the original box with a ton of games in the hallway closet, left behind by my older sister and brother who had flown the coup. It was missing the TV/Game RF switch but my twin brother and I got it working through shear force-of-will. :) We literally stripped twist ties from bread bags to make wires that we used to short the RF lead to different screws on the back of our black and white TV set. We had no concept of VHF or UHF but figured out which two of the four screws to connect it to through brute-force troubleshooting. :) We knew we were getting close when we would see the static change if we turned the console on or off, so we kept at it. Suddenly, we heard the Star Wars jingle that Empire Strikes Back plays when you turn it on. We we're lucky we used that one since most Atari games are silent at boot and don't have music even when you start the game... and we didn't own Pitfall II: Lost Caverns. ;) We panicked when something we changed resulted in us losing the audio but we quickly backpedaled until we found ourselves on the right channel and adjusted the fine tuning to get an image. Victory! The problem then was that we had no idea how to play the game. It felt like you just flew around endlessly and could shoot but no amount of shooting seemed to work against the AT-ATs. I know how to play now but, back then, we ended up running to our stingy friend with a Nintendo Entertainment System and told him "You can't play our Atari unless you let us play your Nintendo!" :D That isn't to say we didn't have a lot of fun with the Atari. To my twin bro and me, Slot Racers was the precursor to Mario Kart Battle Modes and Combat was a heck of a lot of fun for two kids figuring out how all the different game modes worked. Figures I'd single those two out since they were the two launch titles that didn't have a single-player mode but, well, they had a special impact on us... being twins. We played and enjoyed Pac-Man with no concept of how inferior it was to the original. We played Pinball and Circus and Tennis and Basketball and so many others. I totally hated Stampede until my sister came to visit and showed me how it was done (I'm still impressed to this day). I know I had at least one other Activision title since I noticed way back then that their carts deliberately slotted together and stacked but I can't recall what it was. I think I played Canyon Bomber at a babysitter's place before that but I suddenly had it at home. :) I recall borrowing Donkey Kong, Congo Bongo, and more from my sister's friends who were still around. A friend at school gave me Demon Attack and I was totally confused by the label mentioning a Sears Telegames console, since I only know of Atari VCS/2600 and Nintendo Entertainment System back then.
"Sears Telegames console" ==I've never heard of that. We have a Colecovision console and it plays the Atari 2600 games. I still don't understand that. Is it because of a crosslicensing deal between Atari and Coleco?
@@louistournas120 The Sears Telegames variant is what he's refurbishing in this video. It isn't actually an Atari 2600 according to the box and badge! ;) The Coleco Gemini console and the 2600-compatible add-on for Colecovision were not authorized by Atari but they didn't actually need to be since Atari didn't have anything unique/proprietary/protected. IIRC, Atari even sued over those or an Intellivision module that played Atari games. It was a wild time! This is exactly why Nintendo put the lock-out chip in the NES.
@@emmettturner9452 Interesting. That is one heck of a mistake. We seem to live in a world where companies encrypt DVD movie discs, blu-ray movie discs, some VHS have an anti-copy thing, Apple doesn't let you download the songs to your PC, I think XBox One and PS4 games need to be signed and do some kind of communication with the CPU, and so on. Atari should have designed their own instruction set for their CPU. Probably a tiny modification would have helped.
Congratulations on achieving a childhood goal. We should never let our dreams end despite our age. I feel your joy, and for me I have ZX Spectrum tapes awaiting the Next batch 2 in 2021. Okay, the tape probably won’t work still, but I will eventually load the game and play it. Spy Hunter.
I hope your tapes work. I know MSX programs were recorded at 1200 baud and that's a pretty robust signal. Depending on the type of tape there's a good chance they still work.
For the Empire Strikes Back: shoot the first Walker until it is yellow (it will be moving at its slowest), then go all the way to the end of the line and do the same to the last one. Then destroy the middle three completely. Then destroy the first Walker. Repeat with the new last one, and keep completely destroying the middle ones. This will keep them from getting to your base.
Your excitement was palpable... and I’m sure every chap watching can see through a ten year old’s eyes, because we never really stop, no matter how old we become!
The movie theater near me showed the empire strikes back a few months ago and I took my kid to see it, that was the first time I have seen it in the theater because I was born a few years after it came out, it was amazing.
This was probably my favorite game on Atari 2600. Lots of memories came back to me watching this. I remember that you could line you're speeder up at the exact right height to hit all the walkers attacks and land as many hits as your thumb could manage before you had to move back and realign your ship. So much fun!
Wow. A few things: * Thank you for taking us with you on this journey! It was a treat from a story perspective, but also seeing the many steps you took that didn't pan out is really encouraging to those of us who find ourselves frustrated by electronics projects that don't work out as easily as they're usually portrayed in RUclips vids. * How did watching someone play an Atari cartridge become such an emotional experience?? Not ashamed to admit I started to get just a little bit misty. * HOW DID I NEVER KNOW THAT YOU CAN LAND AND REPAIR YOUR SNOW SPEEDER?!? I've logged many, many hours in this game since I borrowed the cart from a friend as a kid, through getting my own cart, and also playing in Stella, and I never knew about that feature. Looks like I'll be firing firing up the emulator, at least until I get around to recapping my heavy 6!
My local video shop (VHS & Betamax films) also stocked a whole bunch of Atari VCS games in the early 80s and along with Pitfall, Enduro and Frogger, Empire Strikes Back was almost always out on rental. If I was ever fortunate enough to be in the video shop when it was available for rent I immediately picked it up for a couple of days of compulsive play. Such a great game for its time and something that also holds a special place in my heart. I’m so pleased your journey had been completed satisfactory.
More fun watching you play than playing it myself! You had a nostalgic smile throughout. Parker Brothers had other good Atari 2600 games. Frogger and Spider-Man are two that I had. Cheers!
This is such a wholesome video! I was worried it was going to turn into a length Ship of Thesius thing where you replace every part but the formic "essence" of the VCS still carries some interference haha
Defender like. I can hear the beautiful Atari Space Invaders sound effects as I write. On the other side of the world, in NY, there was a little boy. I was in love with it. I went to see Empire Strikes back for my 11th birthday. 2 friends I was allowed to bring and my Mom snuck in 4 brown bags of popcorn from our “New” air popper.. And went on a great adventure when the world had not fogged my wide eyes yet. Thank you.
There are few things I am ashamed of when I was a child...I will reveal one of them. I had one friend who had an Atari 2600 with over 30 games. I would sleep over at his house...pretend to sleep then just play, play play until dawn...he would then wake thinking I had just woken up myself in the morning...but nope. It would be years before I had my own and the excitement of playing one game after another...the 10 year old me being put in the zone and having night turn to dawn in the blink of an eye all those decades ago...sigh..and yes did tell him years later.
Sigh of relief and joy! Awesome, well done 👍 I never got to play it either 😟 but then Chuckie Egg came along on the Acorn Electron and I was completely engaged with that. 😊
Just happened upon you randomly while at lunch today. Your sense of wonderment was appreciated and reminded me of my younger days of colecovision, vic-20, and PC games. Thank you for making a dreary day more enjoyable
You really have no idea how much I dearly loved watching you get this experience after all these years. I'm a 50 year old OG Star Wars fan who saw it first in '77(turned 7 years old the day I went to see it) in a nearly 100 year old theater. I had so many SW toys and games that I played with, hard, and really wish I still had them to this day for nostalgia and love over their value. I got that Empire game shortly after it first came out and remember paying around $40, maybe closer to $60. I had to mow a lot of yards to get that money. And, I remember first getting it home and playing it all day that Saturday and then telling my friends about it on Sunday they all came over to my house while we relived the movie, played with the game, my Death Start Play set and X-Wing and Tie Fighter. Micheal brought over his Millennium Falcon, Jason brought over his Darth Vader Tie Fighter and we went outside(Yes OUTSIDE) and played Star Wars versions of Cowboys and Indians because we had the Han Solo Pistols and Storm Trooper Rifles and the 2"D" cell flashlights with opaque plastic tubes on them in various colors. Man, I really miss those days. Thanks for flooding my memory for awhile.
Everyone loves a happy ending ❤️ You certainly have a great degree of patience! Great 2-parter, thoroughly enjoyed it. Love your work. Have a great Sunday!
The sound effect when you were doing board level mods/repairs and trying the dog as an outlet had me pissing myself laughing. And the look of joy on your face when you plugged the game in and it fired right up :)
Thank you so much for sharing this moment with us, Chris! Patience is the mother of many virtues, and you finally made it! This brings me loads of tender and emotional memories from my youth, as it must have done to many other chip dippers too -btw here in France we’re more « frite dippers » than « chip dippers » actually :-D
You don't need to transport yourself to that 10-11 years kid from way back. This is the first video I see in your channel, and I could tell that that kid never left you. Your passion and dedication are very inspiring. Here's my two clicks: Thumbs up and subscribe!
How nice. Was on my want list, but then time came and ... now I want to make a tribute somehow (probably programming the game in Phaser 3) ... Thanks. :-)
I did the same mod and had similar interference. I stopped using a cheap you know where from switching power supply and powered it with an old original type linear heavy brick type PSU. Think it came from an Atari Lynx. Now works great... No rolling screen interference bars etc.
Pffffffff, the Atari 2600 PSU is just a transformer and nothing more. It puts AC into the 2600 and the AC is turned into DC inside the machine....what are guys talking about switching power supplies ??
Great work! You really are good at setting the nostalgic mood. I think many of us out there has that missing childhood experience we yearn for, and your visceral descriptions and the hard work you put into ironing out the kinks before finally playing it for the first time was very cathartic. I wonder if any of the PSU's of some of your vintage computers has a failed RIFA capacitor that's introducing noise into your local power circuit. I never would have thought about trying ferrite chokes, so good on you for figuring it out!
Brilliant! Amazing work! You made me realize just how awesome the Hakko desoldering gun is. That looks like it’s worth it’s weight in gold. I guess I’ll have to buy one to accompany my Hakko soldering iron.
I remember playing this game at my brother friend's house. At the time, I thought the game was about killing camels. At some point, one day thinking about old Atari games, I figured: those weren't camels were they? Then I checked and yep, that "camel game" was, in fact, Empire Strike Back. Edit: I recheck the whole thing... I remembered when the camels die, they turn their heads up. In this version they do not. So, there IS a similar game called: "Attack of the Mutant Camels". That's one mystery solved I guess...
You may be able to reduce the number of ferrites you used on your DC adapter by looping the cable around a single ferrite a few times instead. Additionally your 1084 monitor excessive blooming during explosions may point to a B+ regulation issue. As always thanks for the memories!
@@RetroRecipes heh.. if it works no need to try and fix it more! I am however a little worried about your CRT and how the picture seem to jump on sudden brightness changes. (E.g. explosions) This could indicate some failure for drive voltage regulation.
When I was 10 none of that existed and when it did come out it was like magic. Very hard for kids today to understand however all is not lost because my little army of 5 Grand Kids was here recently and I had them playing retro stuff for hours and hours. Just to see them enjoying games from the old Atari 2600 though to the Amiga stuff was totally awesome.
Thank you for sharing that! Took me back to my middle school years sitting and watching someone take a turn on the Atari. Great stuff, good memories! Glad you believed and achieved!
So I also coveted this game, my memories off it were a day home from school sick and my dad phoning me to ask if he could get me something, I asked him to rent me the game from the video shop who started renting Atari games recently, and he duly delivered. Watching your video it brought back a lot of good memories and memories of the manual that I had forgotten about until I saw you flicking through it. Thank you for a lovely memory trip!
never had this particular game, but...boy the memories flooded anyways... Missile Command, Yars Revenge, Space Invaders..etc... such a great and amazing console for it's time...
Apologies if this has already been mentioned, but fun fact: Parker Brothers also hold the IP rights in Ouija Boards. Ouija was itself originally released just as a game. It has all the occult significance of Hungry Hungry Hippos.
Thanks for taking me back with you. :) We're about the same age. I did get to play ESB back then and owned it. Unfortunately, I lost my whole Atari 2600 collection (about 20 games) and console over the years. :(
Only just discovered your channel and love what you do..I'm a 1972 guy with an interest in all this stuff too..my uncle had the Atari 2600 and was my first console experience..we spent hours playing space invaders, pac man, asteroids and my all time favourite centipede..keep up the good work my friend and I'm binging on your vids looking for more..ie zx81, spectrum & Amiga content.. 👍
@@RetroRecipes a lot of mod makers arent aware of twisted shielded pair cable. it would work really well to keep signal noise down in the composite cable
@@ferrumignis twisted pair is for any analog signal. And the only reason i mention it is usually you cant get shielded wire unless it is alsp twisted pair
This was amazing. Was lucky enough to have that same console as a kid and spent many hours playing that exact game. Loved watching you restore the Telegames. Fingers crossed, my will work. Havent turned this on in about 34 yrs, but you vid got me excited to try.
@@RetroRecipes Welp, it didn't work. I still had the PSU it came with and used a F-Type male to RCA Female for tv connect. With Cart in it appears as nothing is happening, no signal. With cart out and Power on, I get do get blk screen and vertical static lines with some audio sound, guessing electrical interference translated as crackling static.
This is officially my new favorite channel/content creators. Well done! We are binge watching to get caught up. Both of you keep up the fantastic work.
Not surprised new stranded wires helped. You could configure them as twisted pairs with an extra ground wire, that should help too. Maybe add bypass caps to the cheap power supply lines.
I've seen other videos where they say the right 2600 PSU is crucial to stop interference on the screen. He had started with a modern cheap switch mode but found the old fashioned transformer style was much better.
Surprisingly touching personal story, quite lovely, actually. I identified strongly with this as I was born in 79 and had an Atari 2600, woodgrain and all. I feel this sort of strong nostalgia when finding and playing classic arcade games that I never got to play as a kid bc we were from a small town. Never did have this game so I'll have to give it a try. Thanks for sharing ☺️ Cheers
Man that gameplay takes me back, and my friends copy had the flashing too, I just thought that was a cool effect to replicate the movies use of flash frames for impact.
Success is great isn't it??..especially after all of the frustration! I love the 35+ year Reminiscing... I do it all the time! That is why we love these old systems so much....pretty simple designs...charming games....and the love for them never ends...! Kudos to the fix! :)
4:03 as all Trekkies (yet another franchise) know since their encounters with the Borg:"Resistance is futile". You can remove R215 safely :) Speaking of franchise, the look&feel of the Imperial Walker in game reminds me of ... the Return/Revenge of the Jedi ?.. no the "Revenge of the mutant camels" on C64. ;)
Hands down the best restoration video I've seen on RUclips. Very thorough and never wanting to give up is a natural trait for tech guys, we know something is able to fix it and we'll keep trying until it is! Loved this game as a kid, played it for hours on our 2600, music was amazing @23:13 love it!!
I don't wanna grow up, I'm a Toys 'R' Us kid, they've got the best for so much less it'll really flip your lid! From planes to trains to video games it's the biggest toy store there is. I don't wanna grow up cause maybe if I did, I wouldn't be a Toys ' R' Us kid!
Your face when you finally got to play it was priceless, you should be an actor, oh you were in Star Wars! As we all know PCB stands for Perfect Channel Bro. Takes me back as well.
Regulation isn't great when a government gets involved but it's often critically important in a power supply. :-) Glad to see clean power solved the problem. It's actually good you didn't try that first as it seems you made a lot of good and important improvements to the circuit you might otherwise have not made. Bravo!
I love watching videos like this because it takes me back to my Navy days modding PS2's in Japan. I haven't messed much with it in the past 20 years, but I enjoy watching. Also my old Gunny HATED wire strippers, he swore they were the cause of like 75% of problems. When I see you using them it always makes me chuckle. Me now would just earn a free trip to the ER, but old me could strip the end of a bundle of wires one handed with a straight razor and not bat an eye.
Dog poo would probably work as a very low amp battery. You could string enough of them together to power a device like that guy who got his graphing calculator to run Doom powered by potatoes.
I love your handywork and your patience. Nice job! I'm glad you managed to finally fix it and that it is working so well! So nice to see you finally play it on the proper machine. Yaaay! :)
Given the capabilities/limitations of the Atari -- designed for Pong and Combat -- they actually made a decent game. Nice colors, shapes, parallax scrolling. I'm not aware of any other game using parallax this early?
I can't believe how much work you put into your videos! They are so very well done! High quality production value for sure and very under appreciated in my opinion! CHEERS!! 🍻😄
I had the same reaction when I played on an Atari after years and years. I never was able to get rid of the interference but I was using an RF to composite adapter. Hated it. Ended up getting an RGB modded console. Great episode!
Brings back alot of good memories. Had that model of vcs and remember playing the ESB game. I also mis that Amiga monitor. I had it for my A500.. Glad you got to play your game.
You mean to tell us you've had the actual same boxed copy of that game ever since you bought it and only now you're able to play it? That's dedication! Does this mean you're going to collect all the Star Wars cartridges for the Atari 2600? You'll need paddles for the Jedi Arena game. You've got 4 more games to collect, with Ewok Adventure being a prototype. I hear it's playable.
awesome video and so much patience but it’s Love ❤️ !! wow these game have such great special effects, never thought this system could do this, i really understand your feelings, such good vibes !!!
Listening to Vader's breathing made me finally realize why the Empire ultimately fell: how could Palpatine control an entire galaxy if he wasn't smart enough to install a 'mute' button on Vader's respirator? Could you imagine how deadly Vader would be if he didn't walk around sounding like a 2m iron lung?
Just as well he didn't have to wear glasses too, as they would mist up every time he breathed. Although he'd always be protected from airborne diseases! Other people might be accused of making fun of the way he breathed though...
Congrats on overcoming what seemed to be an exhaustive set of problems. I quite enjoy your content and have learned a lot about the earlier 8-bit computing era. I had an Apple IIe after my parents (hindsight wisely) chose to not get an ADAM.
I have to admit, totally worth the subscription price, even if I am a pence or two poorer I am shillings more entertained! Now if I could only find the time to clean up my old original vcs that my parents bought...muahhahaha Atari pinball will be match!
This brought back some memories. Thank you. I have both of my Atari's from my parent's house and I am going to relieve some goodtimes. Have to work on getting it to work on a modern TV though.
As one of the developers from Parker Brothers who worked on this game, it was so nice to see it again. There are reasons we did what we did with these games that other game mfgrs did not. Thanks for letting me remember simpler times.
That's amazing Rick. Thank you for your comment and your contribution to video game history. What was your role on the game? I'm sure your perspective of it was very different to my one depicted in this video!
At the time, Atari did not make available to other manufacturers how to code for their platform. So, under strict controls we reversed engineered the whole system, chips included. We knew things this system could do and commands available that Atari didn’t know about. We used this information to create a development platform that was truly ahead of its time.
@@DrRRH Fascinating. At the end of the video I mention that I was told that game was doing something special with the scanlines which was causing the vertical hold issue on my old CRT. Any idea what that was? Maybe something to do with the parallax scrolling?
@@DrRRH Thanks, this was one of my favorites as a kid.
I loved this game. Amazing!
"I'm gonna just, if it's okay, I'm gonna pretend that you were one of my friends when I was 10...and we're playing this game together." That comment right there made me smile so bright. Every one of your videos makes me feel like I was invited to your house, and we were having a playful chat, or we decided to do a project together. You make content that resonates the feeling of welcomeness. I don't know if it's the soothing voice, the gentle music in the background, or the simple editing, but it's something that very few content creators can really do. I love it, and I hope that this vibe never goes away.
May the Force be with you.
Thank you for joining me. We had fun!
In my youth, I wrote video games for the Atari 2600... It was a real pain due to the CPU directly controlling the video data output bits for each scan line..
You have a place in history. I enjoyed reading your comment
I tripped over the power cord of my light sixer 2600 when I was about ten, and that was it. Felt like losing a friend! I did save it, though. Thirty some years later I finally dug it back out and opened it up. Turns out I cracked the solder on the power jack. One gentle touch with the old soldering pencil and it's back! Sure cleaned up nice, too.I even recovered the penny that I lost through the vents when I was 6 or 7, which is now taped to the top of the case.
Well done!! It was a battle but you won, it looks great. A fantastic 2 part video :-)
Watching the nostalgic satisfaction you got reassured me that my own nostalgic high I get from my vintage computer collection is not just a me thing. Love your videos.
This was one of my favorites as a boy. One tip - the walkers move much more slowly when damaged. A good strategy for higher scores is to knock the lead walker down to the yellow status, slowing the entire column, and then the last one down to yellow as well, slowing the arrival of the new walkers. Then destroy the six between them. By the time you've done that, the last walker will be the lead walker, and you can repeat the process until they finally get you or you have to go to dinner. May the Force be with you!
When I got this game back in the early 80's it was a loose cart with no instructions. Until this video and comment section I had no clue about the walkers slowing down when damaged, the landing your ship to repair it, or the different game variations.
@@homiedclown i had the same experience. To my 10 year old eyes it was a horrid game of repetition with no goal or objective, nothing going on but shooting at an eternal tain of walkers. Sadly it was one of our least played games
I'm impressed with your passion and devotion to keep retro alive. You're clearly a very talented guy.
I am so amazed! Your patience is "Out of this world!!" I so felt for you I remember seeing this cartridge as a kid, but we never got it (But we had "Space Invaders" & "Pack Man" - Both fab ulous games too) So great to see that happy smile on your face when it all works in the end!
That was lovely to see. You carried that around for all these years and so good that you weren't disappointed when the dream came true. Very sweet. Cheers
Awsome fix - as an amateur radio operator (2E0FWE) I was right away - yep thats Radio Frequency interfering with the video. Its worth investing in some good power strips *only* for your consoles and monitor to run from (Tacima 6 Way Mains Conditioner and Radio Frequency Interference Filter) , the best ones will have a choke filter in them and you done the right thing in putting on some good old ferrites on your power supplies. Amazing rebuild, your persistance and determination are amazing !!
It always surprises me how powerfully nostalgic small things like vendor video game brand packaging, artwork, and logos can transport me instantly right back to 1981 in anticipation and excitement browsing in my local Sears or toy store at all the new Atari hardware and software boxes stacked on display on the store shelves and behind the glass display cases. I can exactly relate to your feelings in this video. Trip back to a better, simpler, happy time. Kids today having instant gratification don’t understand or know the feeling and experience of that long car ride home from the store holding that prized new Atari game cart box, carefully analyzing and reading every word on the box in anticipation of finally getting it home, opening it, and plugging it into the console for days/weeks/months of shared exploration, enjoyment and experiences with friends.
Glad you got to play it even 37 years later. It was my favorite when I was 10. And it still is today. Just played it a couple days ago on the console my lifelong best friend (who passed away in July) left me.
Right with you there at the end when you paused to soak it all in. I have major nostalgia feels for that game. Played the HELL out of it for months. Great game when the world was Star Wars and ESB crazy. I wish I had kept my 2600. Great troubleshooting video... know that must have felt great to get everything resolved. That looked like a lot of work. Nice job!
This absolutely made my day. So impressed that you held on to that cart for all these years. I still own games I received as Christmas presents back in the 80’s, I’m 55 now and could never part with them :-)
Empire Strike Back on 2600 was the very first videogame I ever played at home. :) I was probably 5 or 6 years old around 1986 or 1987 when I found the woody 4-switcher in the original box with a ton of games in the hallway closet, left behind by my older sister and brother who had flown the coup. It was missing the TV/Game RF switch but my twin brother and I got it working through shear force-of-will. :) We literally stripped twist ties from bread bags to make wires that we used to short the RF lead to different screws on the back of our black and white TV set. We had no concept of VHF or UHF but figured out which two of the four screws to connect it to through brute-force troubleshooting. :) We knew we were getting close when we would see the static change if we turned the console on or off, so we kept at it. Suddenly, we heard the Star Wars jingle that Empire Strikes Back plays when you turn it on. We we're lucky we used that one since most Atari games are silent at boot and don't have music even when you start the game... and we didn't own Pitfall II: Lost Caverns. ;) We panicked when something we changed resulted in us losing the audio but we quickly backpedaled until we found ourselves on the right channel and adjusted the fine tuning to get an image. Victory!
The problem then was that we had no idea how to play the game. It felt like you just flew around endlessly and could shoot but no amount of shooting seemed to work against the AT-ATs. I know how to play now but, back then, we ended up running to our stingy friend with a Nintendo Entertainment System and told him "You can't play our Atari unless you let us play your Nintendo!" :D That isn't to say we didn't have a lot of fun with the Atari. To my twin bro and me, Slot Racers was the precursor to Mario Kart Battle Modes and Combat was a heck of a lot of fun for two kids figuring out how all the different game modes worked. Figures I'd single those two out since they were the two launch titles that didn't have a single-player mode but, well, they had a special impact on us... being twins.
We played and enjoyed Pac-Man with no concept of how inferior it was to the original. We played Pinball and Circus and Tennis and Basketball and so many others. I totally hated Stampede until my sister came to visit and showed me how it was done (I'm still impressed to this day). I know I had at least one other Activision title since I noticed way back then that their carts deliberately slotted together and stacked but I can't recall what it was.
I think I played Canyon Bomber at a babysitter's place before that but I suddenly had it at home. :) I recall borrowing Donkey Kong, Congo Bongo, and more from my sister's friends who were still around. A friend at school gave me Demon Attack and I was totally confused by the label mentioning a Sears Telegames console, since I only know of Atari VCS/2600 and Nintendo Entertainment System back then.
*coop
"Sears Telegames console"
==I've never heard of that. We have a Colecovision console and it plays the Atari 2600 games. I still don't understand that. Is it because of a crosslicensing deal between Atari and Coleco?
@@louistournas120 The Sears Telegames variant is what he's refurbishing in this video. It isn't actually an Atari 2600 according to the box and badge! ;)
The Coleco Gemini console and the 2600-compatible add-on for Colecovision were not authorized by Atari but they didn't actually need to be since Atari didn't have anything unique/proprietary/protected. IIRC, Atari even sued over those or an Intellivision module that played Atari games. It was a wild time! This is exactly why Nintendo put the lock-out chip in the NES.
@@emmettturner9452
Interesting. That is one heck of a mistake. We seem to live in a world where companies encrypt DVD movie discs, blu-ray movie discs, some VHS have an anti-copy thing, Apple doesn't let you download the songs to your PC, I think XBox One and PS4 games need to be signed and do some kind of communication with the CPU, and so on.
Atari should have designed their own instruction set for their CPU. Probably a tiny modification would have helped.
Loved this post! 😁
Congratulations on achieving a childhood goal. We should never let our dreams end despite our age. I feel your joy, and for me I have ZX Spectrum tapes awaiting the Next batch 2 in 2021. Okay, the tape probably won’t work still, but I will eventually load the game and play it.
Spy Hunter.
Oh I loved that one! Good luck!
I hope your tapes work. I know MSX programs were recorded at 1200 baud and that's a pretty robust signal. Depending on the type of tape there's a good chance they still work.
@@RetroRecipes I loved the C64 version back in the 80s, and the NES and GBC ports years later.
I agree, I bought the 70s Tin Can Alley and Electronic Battleships that I used to drool over on Crackerjack
still play the NES version
For the Empire Strikes Back: shoot the first Walker until it is yellow (it will be moving at its slowest), then go all the way to the end of the line and do the same to the last one. Then destroy the middle three completely. Then destroy the first Walker. Repeat with the new last one, and keep completely destroying the middle ones. This will keep them from getting to your base.
This was so much fun but soo hard, especially when you turned up difficulty and released the smart bombs.
Your excitement was palpable... and I’m sure every chap watching can see through a ten year old’s eyes, because we never really stop, no matter how old we become!
His excitement was palpatine-able
The movie theater near me showed the empire strikes back a few months ago and I took my kid to see it, that was the first time I have seen it in the theater because I was born a few years after it came out, it was amazing.
So much emotion. I think this one is my favourite video you've made so far.
This was probably my favorite game on Atari 2600. Lots of memories came back to me watching this. I remember that you could line you're speeder up at the exact right height to hit all the walkers attacks and land as many hits as your thumb could manage before you had to move back and realign your ship.
So much fun!
Wow. A few things:
* Thank you for taking us with you on this journey! It was a treat from a story perspective, but also seeing the many steps you took that didn't pan out is really encouraging to those of us who find ourselves frustrated by electronics projects that don't work out as easily as they're usually portrayed in RUclips vids.
* How did watching someone play an Atari cartridge become such an emotional experience?? Not ashamed to admit I started to get just a little bit misty.
* HOW DID I NEVER KNOW THAT YOU CAN LAND AND REPAIR YOUR SNOW SPEEDER?!? I've logged many, many hours in this game since I borrowed the cart from a friend as a kid, through getting my own cart, and also playing in Stella, and I never knew about that feature. Looks like I'll be firing firing up the emulator, at least until I get around to recapping my heavy 6!
My local video shop (VHS & Betamax films) also stocked a whole bunch of Atari VCS games in the early 80s and along with Pitfall, Enduro and Frogger, Empire Strikes Back was almost always out on rental. If I was ever fortunate enough to be in the video shop when it was available for rent I immediately picked it up for a couple of days of compulsive play. Such a great game for its time and something that also holds a special place in my heart. I’m so pleased your journey had been completed satisfactory.
More fun watching you play than playing it myself! You had a nostalgic smile throughout. Parker Brothers had other good Atari 2600 games. Frogger and Spider-Man are two that I had. Cheers!
That dust shield is wildly effective. That TIA chip looked brand new.
This is such a wholesome video! I was worried it was going to turn into a length Ship of Thesius thing where you replace every part but the formic "essence" of the VCS still carries some interference haha
I found this video quite touching. Thank you for the time and effort you put into it.
Thank you for your kind words! Means a lot 👍🕹️
Defender like. I can hear the beautiful Atari Space Invaders sound effects as I write. On the other side of the world, in NY, there was a little boy. I was in love with it. I went to see Empire Strikes back for my 11th birthday. 2 friends I was allowed to bring and my Mom snuck in 4 brown bags of popcorn from our “New” air popper.. And went on a great adventure when the world had not fogged my wide eyes yet. Thank you.
Your joy here genuinely moves me - thank you for sharing this with us. ❤
This must have been the most emotional retro gaming video I ever watched. Glad to see you rejoyce on the game!
It was so awesome seeing you working so hard to get this to work and then seeing your joy at your success. Bravo!
There are few things I am ashamed of when I was a child...I will reveal one of them. I had one friend who had an Atari 2600 with over 30 games. I would sleep over at his house...pretend to sleep then just play, play play until dawn...he would then wake thinking I had just woken up myself in the morning...but nope.
It would be years before I had my own and the excitement of playing one game after another...the 10 year old me being put in the zone and having night turn to dawn in the blink of an eye all those decades ago...sigh..and yes did tell him years later.
Sigh of relief and joy! Awesome, well done 👍 I never got to play it either 😟 but then Chuckie Egg came along on the Acorn Electron and I was completely engaged with that. 😊
So many 2600 memories as a child. We never had this, but loved playing Haunted Mansion on my dad’s console when we were allowed
Just happened upon you randomly while at lunch today. Your sense of wonderment was appreciated and reminded me of my younger days of colecovision, vic-20, and PC games. Thank you for making a dreary day more enjoyable
Thank you for your kind words! Means a lot 👍🕹️
Oh my god, you put in Darth Vader's "Noooo" and then reversed it when you put the chip back "oooooon". I see you. 👌
Good ear
You really have no idea how much I dearly loved watching you get this experience after all these years. I'm a 50 year old OG Star Wars fan who saw it first in '77(turned 7 years old the day I went to see it) in a nearly 100 year old theater. I had so many SW toys and games that I played with, hard, and really wish I still had them to this day for nostalgia and love over their value. I got that Empire game shortly after it first came out and remember paying around $40, maybe closer to $60. I had to mow a lot of yards to get that money. And, I remember first getting it home and playing it all day that Saturday and then telling my friends about it on Sunday they all came over to my house while we relived the movie, played with the game, my Death Start Play set and X-Wing and Tie Fighter. Micheal brought over his Millennium Falcon, Jason brought over his Darth Vader Tie Fighter and we went outside(Yes OUTSIDE) and played Star Wars versions of Cowboys and Indians because we had the Han Solo Pistols and Storm Trooper Rifles and the 2"D" cell flashlights with opaque plastic tubes on them in various colors. Man, I really miss those days. Thanks for flooding my memory for awhile.
Thank you for your kind words! Means a lot 👍🕹️ And you are welcome young Padawan
the footage of you when you were a kid was surprisingly high quality.
Everyone loves a happy ending ❤️
You certainly have a great degree of patience!
Great 2-parter, thoroughly enjoyed it. Love your work.
Have a great Sunday!
The sound effect when you were doing board level mods/repairs and trying the dog as an outlet had me pissing myself laughing. And the look of joy on your face when you plugged the game in and it fired right up :)
What a great video!! This channel deserves 200k more subscribers at least!! come on RUclips algorithm!!!
Thank you for your kind words! Means a lot 👍🕹️
Thank you so much for sharing this moment with us, Chris!
Patience is the mother of many virtues, and you finally made it!
This brings me loads of tender and emotional memories from my youth, as it must have done to many other chip dippers too -btw here in France we’re more « frite dippers » than « chip dippers » actually :-D
Haha true. Merci!
The Force is strong with you both.. I Wanted to play the same game back then :)
You don't need to transport yourself to that 10-11 years kid from way back. This is the first video I see in your channel, and I could tell that that kid never left you. Your passion and dedication are very inspiring. Here's my two clicks: Thumbs up and subscribe!
Thank you for your kind words! Means a lot 👍🕹️
How nice. Was on my want list, but then time came and ... now I want to make a tribute somehow (probably programming the game in Phaser 3) ... Thanks. :-)
I did the same mod and had similar interference. I stopped using a cheap you know where from switching power supply and powered it with an old original type linear heavy brick type PSU. Think it came from an Atari Lynx. Now works great... No rolling screen interference bars etc.
very Atari product i've ever owend had tons of interference.
It's ok to say China makes inferior garbage. I doubt there is anything that comes out of China that is both of high quality, and with originality.
You have good new power supplies too. The current triads goes for beeing very good on the retro community
Pffffffff, the Atari 2600 PSU is just a transformer and nothing more. It puts AC into the 2600 and the AC is turned into DC inside the machine....what are guys talking about switching power supplies ??
Great work! You really are good at setting the nostalgic mood. I think many of us out there has that missing childhood experience we yearn for, and your visceral descriptions and the hard work you put into ironing out the kinks before finally playing it for the first time was very cathartic.
I wonder if any of the PSU's of some of your vintage computers has a failed RIFA capacitor that's introducing noise into your local power circuit. I never would have thought about trying ferrite chokes, so good on you for figuring it out!
Thank you for your kind words! Means a lot 👍🕹️
Man that takes me back to the 80s. This was one of my first Video Games. May the force be with you my Friend.
Brilliant! Amazing work! You made me realize just how awesome the Hakko desoldering gun is. That looks like it’s worth it’s weight in gold. I guess I’ll have to buy one to accompany my Hakko soldering iron.
I remember playing this game at my brother friend's house. At the time, I thought the game was about killing camels.
At some point, one day thinking about old Atari games, I figured: those weren't camels were they? Then I checked and yep, that "camel game" was, in fact, Empire Strike Back.
Edit: I recheck the whole thing... I remembered when the camels die, they turn their heads up. In this version they do not. So, there IS a similar game called: "Attack of the Mutant Camels". That's one mystery solved I guess...
You may be able to reduce the number of ferrites you used on your DC adapter by looping the cable around a single ferrite a few times instead. Additionally your 1084 monitor excessive blooming during explosions may point to a B+ regulation issue. As always thanks for the memories!
Yeah weirdly looping 2 wasn't as good as 3, and the cable was a bit too big inside the core when I did.
@@RetroRecipes heh.. if it works no need to try and fix it more! I am however a little worried about your CRT and how the picture seem to jump on sudden brightness changes. (E.g. explosions) This could indicate some failure for drive voltage regulation.
When I was 10 none of that existed and when it did come out it was like magic. Very hard for kids today to understand however all is not lost because my little army of 5 Grand Kids was here recently and I had them playing retro stuff for hours and hours. Just to see them enjoying games from the old Atari 2600 though to the Amiga stuff was totally awesome.
Thank you for sharing that! Took me back to my middle school years sitting and watching someone take a turn on the Atari. Great stuff, good memories! Glad you believed and achieved!
So I also coveted this game, my memories off it were a day home from school sick and my dad phoning me to ask if he could get me something, I asked him to rent me the game from the video shop who started renting Atari games recently, and he duly delivered. Watching your video it brought back a lot of good memories and memories of the manual that I had forgotten about until I saw you flicking through it. Thank you for a lovely memory trip!
I'm happy for you my friend. 51 years here as of 10-24-2020. Star Wars along with Atari!!! felt your feels man. great job.
My mate pissed himself laughing when you tried the dog as an outlet lol
Same here 🤣🤣🤣
Would be interesting to know how many Amps you could pull from that hole 🤣
@@nemoex Wild guess would be number 2 Amps.
It would never work. Dogs are so high energy they must be 3 phase.
Should have cut to the game working at that moment.. ;-)
never had this particular game, but...boy the memories flooded anyways... Missile Command, Yars Revenge, Space Invaders..etc... such a great and amazing console for it's time...
Apologies if this has already been mentioned, but fun fact: Parker Brothers also hold the IP rights in Ouija Boards. Ouija was itself originally released just as a game. It has all the occult significance of Hungry Hungry Hippos.
I dunno, those hippos look pretty evil to me...
Look up the Aqua Teen Hunger Force episode called Video Ouija. ;)
The Board James episode on the Parker Brothers Ouija Board was... dark.
Thanks for taking me back with you. :)
We're about the same age. I did get to play ESB back then and owned it. Unfortunately, I lost my whole Atari 2600 collection (about 20 games) and console over the years. :(
I can verify as someone who played this game extensively in 1983 at ten, the experience was exactly how you imagined it.
Only just discovered your channel and love what you do..I'm a 1972 guy with an interest in all this stuff too..my uncle had the Atari 2600 and was my first console experience..we spent hours playing space invaders, pac man, asteroids and my all time favourite centipede..keep up the good work my friend and I'm binging on your vids looking for more..ie zx81, spectrum & Amiga content.. 👍
Should use screened cable for the composite mod, not individual wires.
I'm using what was provided by the seller ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@@RetroRecipes a lot of mod makers arent aware of twisted shielded pair cable. it would work really well to keep signal noise down in the composite cable
@@electrohacker Twisted pair is for differential signalling (e.g. ethernet). Composite video requires 75 ohm coax.
@@ferrumignis twisted pair is for any analog signal. And the only reason i mention it is usually you cant get shielded wire unless it is alsp twisted pair
@@ferrumignis also, all signals are differential signals since there is a positive and negative run
This was amazing. Was lucky enough to have that same console as a kid and spent many hours playing that exact game. Loved watching you restore the Telegames. Fingers crossed, my will work. Havent turned this on in about 34 yrs, but you vid got me excited to try.
Good luck!
@@RetroRecipes Welp, it didn't work. I still had the PSU it came with and used a F-Type male to RCA Female for tv connect. With Cart in it appears as nothing is happening, no signal. With cart out and Power on, I get do get blk screen and vertical static lines with some audio sound, guessing electrical interference translated as crackling static.
They could have called this game Bird versus camel and no one would have argued with you
Ooh-ooh, ooh!
Hahaha thats truely funny 😂😀😊
This is officially my new favorite channel/content creators. Well done! We are binge watching to get caught up. Both of you keep up the fantastic work.
Thank you for your kind words! Means a lot 👍🕹️
Not surprised new stranded wires helped. You could configure them as twisted pairs with an extra ground wire, that should help too. Maybe add bypass caps to the cheap power supply lines.
I've seen other videos where they say the right 2600 PSU is crucial to stop interference on the screen. He had started with a modern cheap switch mode but found the old fashioned transformer style was much better.
Surprisingly touching personal story, quite lovely, actually. I identified strongly with this as I was born in 79 and had an Atari 2600, woodgrain and all. I feel this sort of strong nostalgia when finding and playing classic arcade games that I never got to play as a kid bc we were from a small town. Never did have this game so I'll have to give it a try. Thanks for sharing ☺️ Cheers
Man that gameplay takes me back, and my friends copy had the flashing too, I just thought that was a cool effect to replicate the movies use of flash frames for impact.
Success is great isn't it??..especially after all of the frustration! I love the 35+ year Reminiscing... I do it all the time! That is why we love these old systems so much....pretty simple designs...charming games....and the love for them never ends...! Kudos to the fix! :)
Wait, did you call Lady Fractic 7 of 9? That is epic. So glad you got the old girl (The Atari) working at long last!
So glad you got it working and actually played Empire. I’ve got a sealed Palitoy version, so it’s nice to see someone enjoying it.
remarkable he managed to fix all those faults in just 17 minutes.
My goodness this takes me waaaaaaaaaaaay back. Thanks for the upload
4:03 as all Trekkies (yet another franchise) know since their encounters with the Borg:"Resistance is futile". You can remove R215 safely :)
Speaking of franchise, the look&feel of the Imperial Walker in game reminds me of ... the Return/Revenge of the Jedi ?.. no the "Revenge of the mutant camels" on C64. ;)
Hands down the best restoration video I've seen on RUclips. Very thorough and never wanting to give up is a natural trait for tech guys, we know something is able to fix it and we'll keep trying until it is! Loved this game as a kid, played it for hours on our 2600, music was amazing @23:13 love it!!
Thank you for your kind words! Means a lot 👍🕹️
It was a pleasure to watch a great vid, and to watch a genuine reaction to retro gaming nostalgia, which is something I can relate to! 👍
We're Gen X and we will NEVER grow up. So there.
so true..... I'll leave the growing up to the gen z'ers :)
I don't wanna grow up, I'm a Toys 'R' Us kid, they've got the best for so much less it'll really flip your lid! From planes to trains to video games it's the biggest toy store there is. I don't wanna grow up cause maybe if I did, I wouldn't be a Toys ' R' Us kid!
That was ..HEAVY!!
I'm gen X.
Never surrender to something silly like aging.
I was almost as happy as you when your hard work finally paid off. Thanks for the trip back to a long time ago to a galaxy far, far, away.
I spent so long playing this game as a kid that I got blisters on my hand from the brick shaped atari joystick. So good (for the time!).
Your face when you finally got to play it was priceless, you should be an actor, oh you were in Star Wars! As we all know PCB stands for Perfect Channel Bro. Takes me back as well.
Haha good one!
Regulation isn't great when a government gets involved but it's often critically important in a power supply. :-) Glad to see clean power solved the problem. It's actually good you didn't try that first as it seems you made a lot of good and important improvements to the circuit you might otherwise have not made. Bravo!
I love watching videos like this because it takes me back to my Navy days modding PS2's in Japan. I haven't messed much with it in the past 20 years, but I enjoy watching. Also my old Gunny HATED wire strippers, he swore they were the cause of like 75% of problems. When I see you using them it always makes me chuckle. Me now would just earn a free trip to the ER, but old me could strip the end of a bundle of wires one handed with a straight razor and not bat an eye.
You made a 44 yr old cry actual tears, i felt every moment of this along with you Sir. Highly entertaining, thank-you 😊
Thank you and sorry 😉
Lol
I remember playing this as a kid and loving this game. It was truly one of my favorites on this console. Nice video.
I was surprised that dog didn't work as an electrical outlet.
That requires 2 kitties in series as outlet. 🤔😼😼😼😼🌈
Dog poo would probably work as a very low amp battery. You could string enough of them together to power a device like that guy who got his graphing calculator to run Doom powered by potatoes.
They shield interference the best, like a good boy should.
It actually did, but a little extra "force" was needed, but monetization was not worth the extra force.
In that case, it would've been a poower-outlet... 🤦
I love your handywork and your patience. Nice job! I'm glad you managed to finally fix it and that it is working so well! So nice to see you finally play it on the proper machine. Yaaay! :)
Given the capabilities/limitations of the Atari -- designed for Pong and Combat -- they actually made a decent game. Nice colors, shapes, parallax scrolling. I'm not aware of any other game using parallax this early?
Moon Patrol did and came out about the same time. And I agree that it is an amazing use of the hardware.
I can't believe how much work you put into your videos! They are so very well done! High quality production value for sure and very under appreciated in my opinion! CHEERS!! 🍻😄
Thank you for your kind words! Means a lot 👍🕹️
I remember I never liked how the game looked in the screen shots and never bothered until I got a copy in a lot buy. I wound up loving the game.
I had the same reaction when I played on an Atari after years and years. I never was able to get rid of the interference but I was using an RF to composite adapter. Hated it. Ended up getting an RGB modded console. Great episode!
Time for my weekly appointment with the Fractics. Missed you last week
Had this game for Christmas 82. Happy times playing Christmas morning. Thanks for sharing
It's always emotional to see people get emotional. You can tell when it's true.
Brings back alot of good memories. Had that model of vcs and remember playing the ESB game. I also mis that Amiga monitor. I had it for my A500.. Glad you got to play your game.
You mean to tell us you've had the actual same boxed copy of that game ever since you bought it and only now you're able to play it? That's dedication!
Does this mean you're going to collect all the Star Wars cartridges for the Atari 2600? You'll need paddles for the Jedi Arena game.
You've got 4 more games to collect, with Ewok Adventure being a prototype. I hear it's playable.
Cool thanks for sharing!
awesome video and so much patience but it’s Love ❤️ !! wow these game have such great special effects, never thought this system could do this, i really understand your feelings, such good vibes !!!
Listening to Vader's breathing made me finally realize why the Empire ultimately fell: how could Palpatine control an entire galaxy if he wasn't smart enough to install a 'mute' button on Vader's respirator? Could you imagine how deadly Vader would be if he didn't walk around sounding like a 2m iron lung?
Kitty Vader is entirely different, Kitty Vader first shows cat videos then the force of the cats will make you watch more cat videos. 🥺
@@mrkitty777 LOL! 😁
Just as well he didn't have to wear glasses too, as they would mist up every time he breathed. Although he'd always be protected from airborne diseases! Other people might be accused of making fun of the way he breathed though...
@@plan7a Howabout Rick Moranis' character in "Spaceballs"?
Congrats on overcoming what seemed to be an exhaustive set of problems. I quite enjoy your content and have learned a lot about the earlier 8-bit computing era. I had an Apple IIe after my parents (hindsight wisely) chose to not get an ADAM.
I have to admit, totally worth the subscription price, even if I am a pence or two poorer I am shillings more entertained! Now if I could only find the time to clean up my old original vcs that my parents bought...muahhahaha Atari pinball will be match!
Thank you so much for your support! It really does help the content continue. Glad you liked this one! 👍🕹️
This brought back some memories. Thank you. I have both of my Atari's from my parent's house and I am going to relieve some goodtimes. Have to work on getting it to work on a modern TV though.