Tengen: Atari Games vs. Nintendo

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  • Опубликовано: 17 май 2024
  • In the late 80's, Tengen (a subsidiary of Atari Games) decided to challenge Nintendo over their strict policies on 3rd party licensing. How? By suing them and releasing unlicensed video games. Learn the history behind it all.
    CHAPTERS
    00:00 - Introduction
    00:57 - Part 1: Origin of Heaven
    07:49 - Part 2: The Rabbit
    12:42 - Part 3: The Tiger
    18:44 - Part 4: Impact
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  • ИгрыИгры

Комментарии • 3,6 тыс.

  • @GamingHistorian
    @GamingHistorian  9 лет назад +3292

    This is, personally, my favorite video I have ever done. It took about a month to make, but it was worth it. Hope you enjoy!

    • @rabidduck22
      @rabidduck22 9 лет назад +15

      ***** 26 min! i can see why that would take a month. great vid btw

    • @reggie3819
      @reggie3819 9 лет назад +33

      ***** Your story telling ability is well thought out and written. Please release more content like this!

    • @Faneezy
      @Faneezy 9 лет назад +9

      ***** Easily one of your best Norm!

    • @caseymiles7486
      @caseymiles7486 9 лет назад +7

      ***** Excellent video! I knew some of this story, but not some of the finer points. I really appreciate the work you put into these videos, so little of gaming history is well documented.

    • @jwt4810
      @jwt4810 9 лет назад +3

      ***** I think this your best video so far, & that's saying a lot because all of your content is well produced. You obviously had to do a great deal of research to obtain this amount information on the subject. It's also presented extremely well. I knew some of the Tegen history & lawsuits, but not nearly as much as I thought. I agree the battle between Nintendo & Atari/Tegen helped to shape the video game industry. Thanks for bringing this story to light.

  • @LGR
    @LGR 9 лет назад +1221

    This video is just top-notch!

    • @raafmaat
      @raafmaat 9 лет назад +9

      Lazy Game Reviews ahh man, cool to see you here! :)

    • @mrcoolguy32
      @mrcoolguy32 9 лет назад +2

      Lazy Game Reviews hello :)

    • @Exarian
      @Exarian 9 лет назад +1

      Lazy Game Reviews ah man I just watched your retrospective on Dell computers, then soon as I was done I saw this thing uploaded.

    • @RiasGremoryIsLife
      @RiasGremoryIsLife 9 лет назад +2

      Thanks for bringing me here, LGR!

    • @sergio7D
      @sergio7D 9 лет назад +4

      Lazy Game Reviews I read your message with your voice :D

  • @boodro2122
    @boodro2122 4 года назад +336

    Judge
    "You guys will not interfere with each others customers"
    Nintendo & Atari
    "But we want to"
    Judge
    "Well, ok"

    • @UnethicalVoxel
      @UnethicalVoxel 3 года назад +20

      Ace Attorney judge moment

    • @steinmaniac7920
      @steinmaniac7920 3 года назад +2

      @@UnethicalVoxel I love that senile, old weirdo.

    • @Dowlphin
      @Dowlphin 3 года назад +1

      @@steinmaniac7920 I despise him with a vengeance because I was personally on the receiving end of two of that caliber. Created years of frustration and rage and vast monetary losses and then an insider told me that stuff is happening every day.
      www.deviantart.com/dowlphin/art/Judge-This-450967861

    • @danek_hren
      @danek_hren Год назад

      Small brain moment

    • @raafmaat
      @raafmaat Месяц назад

      i wanted to find out what your post was about, finally at 18:00 it is explained in the video :)

  • @neoasura
    @neoasura 4 года назад +332

    Crazy, I remember renting these Tengen games at the video store many times in the late 80s. I just figured they were trying to be cool looking with the black cartridges. I didn't know anything as a kid at the time.

    • @at1212b
      @at1212b 4 года назад +13

      Yea they had a different feel too. More authentic and 'dark'.

    • @WrestlingfansareCLOWNS
      @WrestlingfansareCLOWNS 3 года назад +3

      i knew what was going on...i knew about it all along

    • @AltCTRLF8
      @AltCTRLF8 2 года назад +7

      @@WrestlingfansareCLOWNS i was the one who told you about it.

    • @hightidekraken
      @hightidekraken 2 года назад +1

      @@WrestlingfansareCLOWNS for sure man

    • @WrestlingfansareCLOWNS
      @WrestlingfansareCLOWNS 2 года назад +3

      @@AltCTRLF8 you told me about it but i already knew bro...i already knew

  • @851852093114208513
    @851852093114208513 8 лет назад +513

    They should have called their own chip the 10gen

  • @Zeroroute
    @Zeroroute 7 лет назад +387

    Had no clue that's where the name "Namco" came from

    • @WebVManReturns
      @WebVManReturns 6 лет назад +16

      Namco isn't even their original company name. It was NAMCOT.

    • @saysoun752
      @saysoun752 5 лет назад +33

      @@WebVManReturns No it wasn't. It was always Namco but they used both Namco and Namcot to distinguish arcade games and console games. Namco stands for Nakamura Manufacturing Company and as you can see, there's no "t" on the actual name of the company.
      Taken from Wikipedia.
      Namco's first original video game was Gee Bee (1978).[9] It was Pac-Man (1980), however, that would become definitive of Namco's legacy, going on to become a fixture in popular culture.[10] Galaga (1981), a follow-up to Galaxian, was one of the most successful sequels of the era.[11] Dig Dug (1982), Xevious (1982), and Pole Position (1982) continued Namco's success in establishing iconic franchises during the Golden Age. During this period, Namco published video games for home consoles and personal computer under the Namcot brand name.[

    • @jlindsey241
      @jlindsey241 5 лет назад +1

      I did not know that either!!!!

    • @robw5741
      @robw5741 4 года назад +2

      @@saysoun752 3:54 he says otherwise

    • @user-ql2re2es9y
      @user-ql2re2es9y 4 года назад

      @@WebVManReturns Namcot is Namcotek (Namco Technologies). Namco and Namcot is the same...

  • @altrock86
    @altrock86 5 лет назад +276

    After burner by tengen. A sega game made by atari on nintendo crazy.

    • @timandshannon03
      @timandshannon03 5 лет назад +6

      I want to play it now! I didn't even know it existed!

    • @corrosyon
      @corrosyon 4 года назад +5

      And Shinobi.

    • @figment1988
      @figment1988 4 года назад +2

      Aside from After Burner, there was Shinobi, Fantasy Zone and Alien Syndrome (which unlike the master system port, the NES port had 2 player co-op gameplay like the arcade game)

    • @ricky-sanchez
      @ricky-sanchez 4 года назад +1

      @@figment1988 Looks like tengen was in a world of their own, stealing from sega.....
      The whole point of licensing is to appropriate licenses. Either sounds like 2+2, or legalese.

    • @edwarddeguzman3258
      @edwarddeguzman3258 3 года назад +1

      There is also a port of Altered Beast for the Famicom out there

  • @Bladeslingerplays
    @Bladeslingerplays Год назад +111

    I always heard a story that Rare managed to beat the lockout chip fair and square but rather than produce unliscenced games, they instead used their findings to just create an NES dev kit and then submitted the games to Nintendo for approval. Nintendo gave them freedom to produce as many games as they wanted to, either because they were impressed or because they feared Rare would share their secrets with the world.

    • @Rabbitlord108
      @Rabbitlord108 11 месяцев назад +8

      That's actually legitimately interesting.

    • @joshnickerson83
      @joshnickerson83 10 месяцев назад +8

      But then again, Rare was a developer, not a publisher, so there really was no limit on how many games they could work on. They were also worked with Nintendo early on, Rare developed Slalom for them, so they already had dev kits early on.

    • @TheNuje
      @TheNuje 6 месяцев назад +1

      I don't know if they ever defeated the lockout chip, as the devkit they made from reverse engineering was for the original Nintendo Family Computer (apparently modifying a RAM adapter board from the system to allow them to inject their own code). Nintendo were simply confident that the Family Computer wasn't possible to reverse-engineer on its own, and were impressed when Rare had shown them their findings. As a result, they brought Rare on-board to make games.

  • @wondermomo282
    @wondermomo282 9 лет назад +1570

    Well done Norman. As you know, I worked at both Nintendo and Atari Games during many of the years this epic battle took place. Listening to your recount of the events had me feel like it happened yesterday.
    I’m glad that you presented Hide not only as a Nintendo “villain”, but as someone brave enough to challenge the stranglehold that Nintendo had on the console industry. What he did took major cajones. At the time, I personally questioned the judgment of taking on Nintendo. I knew what Howard Lincoln was capable of.
    Events like this have shaped the industry into what it is today. The history of this great industry has to be documented accurately. It’s not just fun and games. As you know, several popular books are littered with inaccuracies and omissions over events and people. You’re right about Tetris being a story for another time. I look forward to that one.
    And last but not least, I am equally impressed (like other viewers) in the production quality of this video. Once I started watching, I got a cup of coffee and buckled in through its entirety. I’ve gone back to look at certain pictures, read the newspaper clippings, hanging on your every word. Your voice over's, tone and timing has the precision of Ken Burns. But delivered with your own style.
    Excellent work Norman.

    • @GamingHistorian
      @GamingHistorian  9 лет назад +216

      Jerry Momoda Thanks so much, Jerry. After all my research / readings, I thought Nakajima was very bold for what he did, and a good leader.

    • @Watcher3223
      @Watcher3223 9 лет назад +56

      Jerry Momoda _"I knew what Howard Lincoln was capable of."_
      Indeed, considering how Mr. Lincoln helped Nintendo with their first rather major legal challenge: Music Corporation of America.
      And that is another great story that I wonder if the Gaming Historian has covered...
      UPDATE: Yep, he did! "Donkey Kong" and Universal vs. Nintendo.

    • @TheShadow9380
      @TheShadow9380 8 лет назад +13

      What did you do in both company's?

    • @rdubayoo
      @rdubayoo 8 лет назад +36

      +Jerry Momoda Nintendo certainly wasn't nice to its third-party developers but Atari should have known better than to break the law in order to reverse-engineer the Code 10 chip. They had some good arguments on their side, but they ultimately compromised their position by their actions.

    • @Watcher3223
      @Watcher3223 8 лет назад +33

      rdubayoo
      And the biggest mistake Atari made in their effort to defeat 10NES was getting patent information about it from the Federal Government under false pretenses.
      Obviously, the judge would not be amused with Atari.

  • @SenelsChannel
    @SenelsChannel 6 лет назад +323

    R.I.P. Masaya Nakamura
    December 24, 1925 - January 22, 2017

  • @hurdyb1
    @hurdyb1 5 лет назад +158

    I have been a gamer for almost 35 years of my soon to be 40 year old life. This video was sooooooo informative. Great job!

    • @stuffsonanimation4262
      @stuffsonanimation4262 2 года назад +4

      *TRU GAMR*

    • @lucasoheyze4597
      @lucasoheyze4597 Год назад

      Imagine how much more information you would have if you had read books instead.

    • @hurdyb1
      @hurdyb1 Год назад

      @Lucas O'heyze - Try again. I'm always reading magazines and books. Been reading since i was five to now. Probably have read more than you and I'm sure much more educated than you as well as more traveled. Try again cause it seems like you have low self esteem and need a life.

    • @WakanaGojoAE86
      @WakanaGojoAE86 2 месяца назад

      ​@@lucasoheyze4597imagine being an ass hole for no reason

  • @Matthewsavant
    @Matthewsavant 5 лет назад +44

    In the days of “Hey RUclips, it’s your boy” Your delivery and tone is refreshing and professional. It’s nice to actually enjoy watching stuff like this again while I learn about the stuff I love

    • @jamesbevan4479
      @jamesbevan4479 Месяц назад

      This rings so true, even now 5 years later. "Hey guys it's ya boi (insert Chad youtuber here)"

  • @NSFSponsor
    @NSFSponsor 7 лет назад +279

    Atari was on that real spy shit back then. Finessed Nintendo out that chip.

    • @Sparklyboiii2009_2
      @Sparklyboiii2009_2 21 день назад

      Surprisingly no the most criminal game company of the time, that would be sega

  • @DrHotelMario
    @DrHotelMario 8 лет назад +140

    This story would make a damn good movie. This is some Wallstreet level shit lol

  • @erichhudson2090
    @erichhudson2090 4 года назад +91

    This is one of the best documentaries I've seen. Excellent explanations from every point of view. Legal, commercial, customer, etc. We'll done!

  • @stuporspoon
    @stuporspoon 4 года назад +26

    I doubt anyone has the answer for me, but I'll throw it out into the cosmos:
    When the attorneys concocted the scheme to obtain the chip's copyrighted blueprint, they knew that the chip had to be the subject of a lawsuit that they had a claim in in order for that particular document to become available to them. Why did they choose to lie and say that they were defendants against Nintendo in a non-existent lawsuit?
    It just confused me because it sounds like they could have gotten it without getting themselves into trouble: File the lawsuit, obtain the blueprint in discovery or whatever, and go from there. Hell, apparently, they could have done both of those things on the same day, since the copyright office was willing to take people at face value instead of independently verifying their claims. Why didn't they take this route? Were they worried about being blocked or going through protracted delay during discovery? Did Atari's lawyers think that the company did not have a valid claim to the material?

    • @louisantonio2462
      @louisantonio2462 3 года назад +13

      While your idea makes sense, I believe this is because Atari's lawyers did not want to draw any attention from Nintendo preemptively and wanted to gain the blueprints first and develop the Rabbit chip before actively pursuing their lawsuit. Besides, if they were to look at the blueprints through discovery, surely it would be more likely for Atari to be filed a preminilary injunction if they were to use the materials during their trial period. Furthermore, Nintendo would only find out about the fradulent lawsuit a bit later, knowing that it would become a sore spot for them.

    • @richard5X5
      @richard5X5 2 года назад +2

      Technically speaking if you have a case against someone you are supposed to have enough evidence against them before discovery. If your entire case rests on finding something in discovery, your lawsuit should be thrown out because it wasn't worth having to begin with. That's how it's supposed to go anyway. Finding additional info is what discovery is for, but the keyword being additional, not crucial to having a case to begin with.
      It's the reason the GOP is in trouble across the US right now for their frivilous election cases. Most of these people will lose, or have their licenses suspended because of this. Rightfully so just based on how the law process is supposed to work.

    • @theyeeter5171
      @theyeeter5171 2 года назад

      Atari:"Hey, can i want a Piraty Chip please?"
      Copyright:"OK"
      Nintendo:"I CALL THE POLICE"
      SEGA:"HE STOLE MY GAMES TO NINTENDO!"

  • @CartoonHangout
    @CartoonHangout 7 лет назад +580

    Dang, that should be turned into a movie.

    • @AdmiralBison
      @AdmiralBison 7 лет назад +21

      it is.
      The book 'Console Wars' chronicles the video games in the early 90s in particular Sega vs Nintendo, but the book also chronicles what was in the video as well.
      It's coming as a documentary and film coming soon......the film being done by Sony
      :\
      I strongly suggest you get the book, I definitely see things different now compared to how I saw Sega and Nintendo when I was little kid.

    • @CartoonHangout
      @CartoonHangout 7 лет назад +5

      Duane Locsin I'll definitely add it to my wishlist of things I can't afford right now.

    • @diggy5884
      @diggy5884 6 лет назад +1

      yes

    • @EbenezerScroogeMcDuck
      @EbenezerScroogeMcDuck 6 лет назад +1

      don't forget cameos of video games on screen like in The Wizard xD

    • @dariohc6898
      @dariohc6898 6 лет назад +5

      With sex scenes

  • @ChrisLeeW00
    @ChrisLeeW00 9 лет назад +58

    Nintendo having a problem with supplying? Can't make enough products to meet demand? Now where have I heard that before...

    • @jesusramirezromo2037
      @jesusramirezromo2037 9 лет назад +1

      Before everyone had a problem with suply-demand, now its just that nintendo

  • @jayhawker03
    @jayhawker03 5 лет назад +336

    It's odd how Nintendo took things so seriously with the seal of quality yet shows like Angry Video Game Nerd have tons of content on the bad apples in the library.

    • @locke103
      @locke103 4 года назад +35

      quality control was dubious, suffice to say.

    • @axiorsomethin130
      @axiorsomethin130 3 года назад +4

      Mackenzie McIntyre all of them

    • @DuelmasterX3
      @DuelmasterX3 3 года назад +41

      @@axiorsomethin130 Not all of them. Most of the Bible Games sure weren't licensed. Not to mention games like Menace Beach, Raid 2020, Secret Scout, Little Red Hood, etc weren't licensed as well.

    • @axiorsomethin130
      @axiorsomethin130 3 года назад +2

      SmugBob-Omb cool

    • @TobyCowles
      @TobyCowles 3 года назад +73

      According to the NES encyclopedia the seal of quality basically just meant that the game's code was not clearly broken, that the game was family friendly, and that the company had bought atleast 10,000 genuine cartridges which could not be returned if they didn't sell, which assured that the publisher was willing to put real money behind the game

  • @Albert-lj5jb
    @Albert-lj5jb 5 лет назад +35

    I like how Atari's plan to loosen Nintendo's stranglehold of the industry at the time, was for their own benefit, but in actuality really ended up benefiting SEGA much more and allowed the Mega Drive/Genesis to gain a massive stake in the industry. I'm sure Sony benefited from this as well later on, but really, that whole deal with the PlayStation ever becoming a thing was of Nintendo's own doing, shooting themselves in the foot, in a mad scramble to come up with something to compete with the SEGA Mega CD. Both situations were shit for Nintendo, but at least (us) the consumers won.

    • @AltairEgo1
      @AltairEgo1 9 месяцев назад +6

      Nintendo would have in the longrun lost on that deal. The bulk of the profits for IPs would have been siphoned to Sony. Ultimately Nintendo would no longer be able to develop consoles under the deal, as their funds for development would be in Sony's hands.
      The result would, in the end, be a duopoly between Sony and Microsoft, if Sega even survived in that scenario (doubtful).
      The consumers did end up winning, because we got a choice between Sony, Nintendo, for a time Sega, and then Microsoft, rather than an empire simply owned by two gigantic megaconglomerates competing for who can make the most powerful machine.
      Nintendo sacrificed third party support for autonomy, and for a time, lost out to Sony. In the longrun they gained huge profit margins with their handheld division, and made a killing on Wii. Currently they're the market leader with Switch.
      I imagine if they did take that deal, Nintendo would have shrunk to a smalltime developer, existing as a third party. I don't see them making hardware in that timeline.
      They definitely did shoot themselves in the foot with Phillips CD though. That was a terrible idea.

  • @timcrouch2415
    @timcrouch2415 7 лет назад +171

    There is another extremely important lawsuit in the video game industry that I think would make a great video: Capcom vs. Data East, over Data East's "Fighter's History" game. It is quickly being forgotten, so it may be hard to dig up info on it. But it essentially provided the precedent that video games include scenes a faire, which lead to the video game industry being able to almost copy other games exactly, provided they changed protectable names.

  • @bageltoo
    @bageltoo 6 лет назад +141

    I love how unbiased your content is. It's just the simple story with only the facts

  • @BeeHatGuy
    @BeeHatGuy 6 лет назад +473

    I see that everyone defends Atari here, but it's pretty obvious that what they did was illegal as hell.

    • @ShaDisNX255
      @ShaDisNX255 6 лет назад +174

      People hate Nintendo for being this strict at the time (and still are somewhat tbh) but what they don't remember is that the video game market had just crashed! If Atari had won, it would have prompted a whole other video game crash possibly. They say that the more games there are, the better for consumers. But that's exactly the same mind set they had with the crash of 83. The video game industry would probably not have survived another crash after just emerging from another one.

    • @solarstrike33
      @solarstrike33 5 лет назад +41

      Weird. I'm seeing a lot of pro-Nintendo comments in this section.

    • @Kylora2112
      @Kylora2112 5 лет назад +58

      I mean, Nintendo is why there is still a video game market in the US. And the NES has one of the better classic:trash ratios of any console.

    • @kristophertower3476
      @kristophertower3476 5 лет назад +52

      trolling the patent office to get your hands on someone elses property seems pretty unethical to me......but then again business is business

    • @tsaotsaotherebel
      @tsaotsaotherebel 5 лет назад +18

      I agree. Nintendo was unaffordable as hell to. Now that I know they had monoplisitic practices, it makes sense.

  • @Changetheling
    @Changetheling 5 лет назад +223

    Tetris (Tengen) is still the superior NES version.
    Co-op modes, the arcade music and colours...
    Facts.

    • @Savannah_Simpson
      @Savannah_Simpson 4 года назад +11

      You say that as though you are the first person to ever make that observation. It’s not something anyone disputes.

    • @pokehybridtrainer
      @pokehybridtrainer 4 года назад +4

      I mean... The arcade ports are pretty damn solid, especially for the time.

    • @DarkKent234
      @DarkKent234 4 года назад +4

      @@Savannah_Simpson did you stretch before that reach?

    • @noteveryoneiscutout
      @noteveryoneiscutout 4 года назад +5

      easily the best tetris i've ever played

    • @notaidan405
      @notaidan405 4 года назад +3

      I think the Nintendo version is better but the Tengen version is pretty good

  • @bradnimbus4836
    @bradnimbus4836 9 лет назад +155

    I wish I could express how impressed I am with your production value. I'm not exaggerating when I say that this could easily stand along side any biography I've seen in years. You have a real talent homie!
    You can have all of my likes.

    • @rasr666
      @rasr666 9 лет назад +2

      nintendo

    • @Junedude433
      @Junedude433 9 лет назад +6

      jaden salazar How is that a valid response?

    • @rasr666
      @rasr666 9 лет назад

      from my yes Junedude433

    • @rasr666
      @rasr666 9 лет назад

      ntc *****

    • @rasr666
      @rasr666 9 лет назад

      ;)*****

  • @ConnerTheWaffle
    @ConnerTheWaffle 9 лет назад +56

    Absolutely fantastic, so much information! Great job Norm, it's obvious how many hours and parts of your soul went into this ^_^

  • @shottysteve
    @shottysteve Год назад +2

    wow. that was so cool. to imagine this only happened less than 40 years ago

  • @gamerex9378
    @gamerex9378 5 лет назад +22

    23:44 my goodness, I want that snes storage center.

    • @forkyfork
      @forkyfork 2 года назад

      Right? Look how handy it is!

  • @RippahRooJizah
    @RippahRooJizah 8 лет назад +133

    Kinda funny to think that Nintendo technically invented timed exclusivity for video games

    • @Keithustus
      @Keithustus 3 года назад +2

      Did they? Or did Magnavox? Or Atari? Or for Colecovision?

    • @AltairEgo1
      @AltairEgo1 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@KeithustusNintendo was the start of all evils in the industry, remember that. They're the boogeyman

  • @MustangDrifter
    @MustangDrifter 9 лет назад +60

    Very professional!
    When using somebody else to do the voiceover on quotes, it really felt like a true documentary style video; something that I would watch on PBS.
    The month's effort really showed in this video, great job!
    BTW, I love watching PBS documentaries so keep those videos coming!

    • @GamingHistorian
      @GamingHistorian  9 лет назад +15

      MustangDrifter Thanks! I also love PBS documentaries, they are a big influence (clearly)

    • @Swonke
      @Swonke 9 лет назад +2

      ***** I've been watching a PBS documentary on WW2. The parallels in style of this video and those are awesome. Great work, really good video.

    • @danielbeaston
      @danielbeaston 9 лет назад +2

      ***** thank you for making these they are not many channels that go deep into history keep up the nice work :)

    • @holdmybeer
      @holdmybeer 9 лет назад +1

      Rimone Media I hope you have your playlist on "public" cause I'm definitely checking it out.

    • @gluserty
      @gluserty 9 лет назад +1

      MustangDrifter Very true; while I was watching & listening, I was thinking, "PBS".

  • @BBQ_Jackfruit
    @BBQ_Jackfruit 2 года назад +3

    Tengen should have filed the lawsuit against Nintendo and then gone to the copyright office. Then they could have copied the software code since they were legitimately involved in litigation

  • @jrmj
    @jrmj 5 лет назад +10

    This was unexpectedly FASCINATING. I remember the black cartridges from my youth but never gave them much consideration since. Thanks for putting this together. You did an excellent job!

  • @starilie
    @starilie 7 лет назад +334

    How is this not a movie or a mini-series?? It's a great story

    • @Marco-wp9kw
      @Marco-wp9kw 7 лет назад +25

      don't worry, it's too brilliant to not be made into a major motion picture within the next 20 years.

    • @SmaMan
      @SmaMan 7 лет назад +16

      In the early days of talks over the Tetris movie (that's now going to be a trilogy about who knows what) one of the ideas that gained traction was making a docu-drama, similar in style to "The Social Network," about the creation of the game, and how its creator fought for nearly decades to actually get profit on the concept (tying into a bit of the Tetris drama that Norman brought up). They could just as easily do that here!

    • @romerorosewood5846
      @romerorosewood5846 7 лет назад

      starilie your cute

    • @sirMAXX77
      @sirMAXX77 7 лет назад +13

      Yeah, this would make a great movie, though Nintendo would probably not want this kind of movie made since it would put them in a pretty negative light.

    • @Cosmalano
      @Cosmalano 7 лет назад +9

      Romero Rosewood such a pointless comment

  • @TheRealLazerBlazer22
    @TheRealLazerBlazer22 6 лет назад +83

    I'm genuinely very sad over Hideyuki Nakajima's death. While some of his practices aren't exactly ethical, what he strove to do, and the people he strove to protect, and how he didn't give up and got to the top is downright inspirational. Live On Hide. Live On.

    • @alexandreb.1101
      @alexandreb.1101 2 года назад +6

      @Orkhiss if anything, Nintendo trying to forcefully bulld a monopoly was unethical

    • @BendApparatus
      @BendApparatus 2 года назад +6

      @Orkhiss flat out lying to obtain the 10 program from copyright...
      That's pretty much it.
      Obtaining information from the other guy with ulterior motives was fair game...

    • @mrborif4245
      @mrborif4245 2 года назад +3

      @@BendApparatus fair game isn’t always ethical lmao, I totally agree with what he was doing though

    • @BendApparatus
      @BendApparatus 2 года назад

      @@mrborif4245 so basically you agree...lol

    • @mrborif4245
      @mrborif4245 2 года назад

      @@BendApparatus yeah essentially

  • @TheEmery223
    @TheEmery223 3 года назад +12

    No matter how many of Norman's videos I really, really like and thoroughly enjoy, I always find myself gravitating back to this one, without fail. Definitely my absolute favorite. It's a hell of a case study on Nintendo's prior business practices and Tengen's ingenuity for trying to circumvent them. Such an engrossing and masterfully crafted video on a crucial turning point of what would become the gaming industry as we now know it. *chef kiss*

  • @jannebengtsson7338
    @jannebengtsson7338 Год назад +10

    Wow. I had no idea that they basically we're the Robin hood of console gaming. Wish I had known this back in the 90s. Thank you for as super interesting video!

  • @anthonytomb8857
    @anthonytomb8857 8 лет назад +65

    they should make this story into a movie

    • @julianswayze5961
      @julianswayze5961 8 лет назад +1

      That would be awesome.

    • @L1701
      @L1701 8 лет назад +5

      Considering I have heard about a movie in the works about the Console Wars, this would be an interesting piece of video game history to see on the screen.

  • @MissAshley42
    @MissAshley42 6 лет назад +13

    This and the story of Tetris are my two favorite bits of video game history. I never get tired of hearing about them.

  • @stevenhayes4292
    @stevenhayes4292 5 лет назад +31

    Wow just incredible content quality. Your voice flows so smoothly with the information and just kept me wanting to hear more and more and learn more and more. Amazing job!

  • @kurtg5405
    @kurtg5405 4 года назад +45

    I always shed a tear when someone passes away in your stories :'(
    Keep up the good work, your channel is seriously one of the very best in RUclips or anywhere really. Even your earlier vids with much smaller budgets still tell a story in such an immense way, it's not hard to see why you've endured for so many years. :)

  • @jesseanderson7502
    @jesseanderson7502 7 лет назад +22

    I love this video. While my son (6), who found your history documentaries on Kids RUclips, showed me the channel, I was the one who ultimately fell in love with it (while he will likely have the same love as he grows in historical understanding.) My friend gave me a copy of Rolling Thunder for my birthday (Tengen edition), and my son began to ask me "Why does this look different?" Lo-and-behold, you made a documentary. This was very well done, and I very much appreciate the work you do. It not only has brought my son and I closer together, but it has explained the questions I had as a child about the games I would find in the rental shop. I love your commitment to your craft. This definitely is one of the best, and one of my favorite historical vignettes on corporate titans whose creations inadvertently structured my youth.

  • @senseihEnRY16
    @senseihEnRY16 8 лет назад +25

    wow, this is actually a very interesting story and you tell it professionally. i would love to see a movie based on this event

  • @chibi25
    @chibi25 5 лет назад +7

    This is a game changer in you video quality. Way to go these look completely professional and something I'd expect to find on PBS or some other documentary channel.

  • @pepitopacquiao
    @pepitopacquiao 3 года назад +5

    Satoru Iwata and Hal Laboratory also converted 3 Atari Games into the NES: Joust, Millipede and Star Gate (Defender II)

  • @PeteSkerritt
    @PeteSkerritt 9 лет назад +40

    This work was fantastic. Even though I had a pretty solid understanding of Tengen v. Nintendo, I learned a lot by watching this video... and your research shines here. The stories within the story are woven together really well.
    As someone who has gained much of his knowledge of the video game industry mostly through experience, that knowledge is enriched through pieces like this one.

  • @TheDumontShow
    @TheDumontShow 9 лет назад +58

    ***** this is one of the best videos you ever done. It was so informative and in depth. I can tell you had a great time doing this one. So well made and researched. I love what you do. I am gonna put up a RUclips channel myself and this vid has inspired me to carry on my plan. Don't let anybody stop your passion. Keep it rocking, homie

    • @GamingHistorian
      @GamingHistorian  9 лет назад +4

      Dickens Dumont Thanks! Good luck with your channel. I remember starting mine like it was yesterday.

    • @emmanuelkumi8299
      @emmanuelkumi8299 9 лет назад +1

      I agree with Dickens Dumont

    • @TheDumontShow
      @TheDumontShow 9 лет назад

      ***** , thank you norm. i will strive to being the same quality you bring to yours

  • @mormacfey
    @mormacfey 5 лет назад +5

    This is a well put together documentary on this little part of gaming history. Thank you so much Gaming Historian! Bravo!

  • @patrickmcdaniel2048
    @patrickmcdaniel2048 4 года назад +12

    I never knew about any of this. I've always seen the tengen games for NES but I never gave them much thought because they always had those funny looking cartridges. I always felt like the funky cartridge was offputting and, while I do still have many titles for my old NES, I don't have any from tengen. Cool story

  • @TR-cp1fo
    @TR-cp1fo 7 лет назад +107

    Best video game channel on youtube. Super informative

  • @CraigOrangeSoda
    @CraigOrangeSoda 9 лет назад +29

    Sorry, I just want to do this.
    Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann

    • @DontpushtheBbutton
      @DontpushtheBbutton 9 лет назад +4

      Kristoffer Morato Row row, fight the power!

    • @babybuussj4
      @babybuussj4 9 лет назад +6

      Dontpushthebbutton Nintendo power?

    • @idnyftw
      @idnyftw 9 лет назад

      Kristoffer Morato they sure did fight the power that time, eh?

  • @duanebonney
    @duanebonney 5 лет назад +5

    Well done mate. Love these videos. Thanks for taking the time to do them. It's great to learn about the behind - the - scenes. There is so much more to the gaming world than meets the eye.

  • @KabukeeJo
    @KabukeeJo 5 лет назад +23

    The "Seal of Quality" really meant "Licensing Fees Paid in Full" since many shitty games came out for the NES that were pure poop. And some games came out with serious bugs, such as Castlevania. So much for quality.

    • @garyvarjian3420
      @garyvarjian3420 4 года назад +1

      Castlevania is beyond reproach

    • @somethingsomething9008
      @somethingsomething9008 3 года назад +2

      Its was more to prevent overlfooding the market because that's what kinda caused the video game crash

    • @ultrairrelevantnobody1862
      @ultrairrelevantnobody1862 2 года назад +1

      Yep, Retail glut caused the crash. Not just low quality games, but even overorders of highly popular games.

    • @KabukeeJo
      @KabukeeJo 2 года назад

      @@ultrairrelevantnobody1862 It was not just a glut that caused the crash. it was a glut of pure cheaply made crappy games meant to make a quick buck.

    • @ultrairrelevantnobody1862
      @ultrairrelevantnobody1862 2 года назад

      @@KabukeeJo
      While there were a lot of bad games on Atari, most of them weren't sold in major retail shops. There are exceptions, but low quality games generally could be found only in smaller shops that were easier to make deals with. A lot of the bad games that barely sold much, like Chase the Chuck Wagon, did a lot less damage financially to companies than commercially successful games.

  • @MrSweeperUSA
    @MrSweeperUSA 7 лет назад +9

    it's funny how the chip shortages excuses still continue even today with the NES classic and Nintendo switch

  • @driptrat
    @driptrat 9 лет назад +63

    I can understand Nintendo's desire to control the content on their machine. But with something like the NES that would be like a manufacturer making demands on what is written on the paper they print. They have the right to do it, and Tengen is in the wrong for using the patent office to steal Nintendo's technology. But I can't help feel after watching this that Nintendo's practices created the environment for Sega to thrive in. Had Nintendo been more reserved in it's policies, plumber and hedgehog may never had gone to war.
    Well made documentary folks.

    • @lupvirga
      @lupvirga 9 лет назад +5

      David Hopkins while i agree, the licensing agreement is REALLY bad. It's about as bad as the Nintendo Partners Program for RUclipsrs.

    • @gunsmithbasic
      @gunsmithbasic 9 лет назад +18

      Nintendo wanted to stop the total freedom that destroyed Atari. The crash mostly happened because of a lack of standards, and a general consumer perception that the main console company represented all the software on it. By the standards of today, the control over software that Nintendo did would be considered standard. The only part of their agreement that is unfair by today's standards was stopping third parties from developing for other consoles.

    • @TheBrainScratcher
      @TheBrainScratcher 8 лет назад +9

      gunsmithbasic yes, the average nes game quality is so high.. that totally worked...
      keep believing fairy tales.

    • @nathenhutchison6182
      @nathenhutchison6182 8 лет назад +9

      +gunsmithbasic This sentiment gets stated a lot, but I don't believe that it was the freedom that destroyed Atari. It wasn't poor-quality, third-party games that brought Atari down. It was the poor-quality games that were produced BY ATARI. What are the two games that most often get mentioned in connection with the video game crash? Pac-Man and E.T. Those weren't third-party games. They were developed by Atari. When you have sold 10 million Atari consoles and you decide to produce 12 million cartridges under the assumption that one cartridge will be sold for EVERY console in existence and that the very existence of the game will drive the sale of an additional 2 million consoles (20% of total console sales to date) and then you rush the actual game through development in a few weeks so that you can have it out in time for Christmas...........stuff like that is what killed Atari. Not poor-quality, third-party games. I'm no business executive. I don't know a lick about running a business. But even I know enough to know that is just plain idiocy. The consumer is smart enough to know the difference between a crap game put out by a third-rate developer and what should be a quality game put out by the console developer themselves or a reputable developer. But when the console developer themselves start putting out crappy games under the assumption that the consumer will buy anything that they produce, that is what kills companies.

    • @GiordanDiodato
      @GiordanDiodato 7 лет назад +4

      +Nathan Hutchinson
      Uh... did someone forget the fact the Colecovision had an add-on that played Atari 2600 games?

  • @robertserna9628
    @robertserna9628 5 лет назад +5

    Just came across your videos and I'm impressed. Well done. I think ill be binging the rest of them now.

  • @barowt
    @barowt 3 года назад +3

    I watch all of these history videos over and over spread through the years, still love them again and again.

  • @sgiacomo84
    @sgiacomo84 9 лет назад +40

    This is one of the best videos I have ever seen! So informative and very well put together! Amazing job!

  • @efisherspfld
    @efisherspfld 9 лет назад +41

    This video is serendipitous for me in a way... just earlier today I was watching a video from Game Sack about arcade to console ports. They covered fantasy zone by tengen. I became curious about the company and looked for more videos about them. I found 2. Both were less than 10 minutes long and not quite informative. I took a nap, and by the time I woke up, I had a notification on my phone that you had just uploaded this video! Talk about timing... Great video and series over all! :)

    • @GamingHistorian
      @GamingHistorian  9 лет назад +16

      Eric Fisher Awesome! It is the circle of retro gaming.

    • @ashfury
      @ashfury 9 лет назад +2

      I'm glad we have guys like Gaming Historian and Game Sack who cover topics that are truly interesting. AVGN is pretty shallow in comparison.

    • @pyrotek85
      @pyrotek85 9 лет назад +2

      ashfury I think AVGN is good, but I think it's always been more about the comedy. His videos are usually very light on the history side of things. So I wouldn't say a direct comparison is fair.

    • @arthurlarrubia
      @arthurlarrubia 9 лет назад +1

      ashfury AVGN is more like a sketchy/ comedy/ trash/ horror show.

    • @davidcoaker274
      @davidcoaker274 9 лет назад +1

      Eric Fisher kinda like what happened with me the fallout lore series

  • @PrankZabba
    @PrankZabba 6 лет назад +41

    Remember when A&E used to have this kind of quality content?

    • @cheetahjab
      @cheetahjab 4 года назад +7

      pepperidge farms remembers.. :P

    • @evacody1249
      @evacody1249 4 года назад +2

      Yup. History Channel to.

    • @GRINGOf10
      @GRINGOf10 3 года назад +1

      Yes, now it’s my 600lb life and crocodile hunters on crack.

  • @TexasGuitarist
    @TexasGuitarist 5 лет назад +9

    Man, I never knew video game history could be so riveting! This could be a movie!

  • @Ux7hfs9Fco4fkaakggaa
    @Ux7hfs9Fco4fkaakggaa 6 лет назад +34

    Gaming Historian is a national treasure. Thank you for the stellar work. We greatly appreciate it!

  • @THEGREATMAX
    @THEGREATMAX 8 лет назад +6

    I remember I had a Tengen version of Ms Pacman on NES that let 2 players play AT THE SAME TIME and had a turbo speed/boost button and if Pac-man and Ms Pac-man hit eachother, they would bounce off eachother and fly to opposite sides of the screen
    It was amazing

  • @misterbennnn
    @misterbennnn 2 года назад +5

    I recently started watching every episode of The Gaming Historian to try to find the first long-form, documentary style episode. This was it, and it was great. It was also very interesting to see the AVGN inspiration slowly drop in lieu of Norm's personal, professional style, as well as watch the audio/video equipment get progressively better.
    Fantastic video, fantastic channel, and I'm going to keep working my way up to the present.

  • @wastedarse
    @wastedarse 5 лет назад +7

    These shows are truly television quality. Keep up the hard work!

  • @jaradipra
    @jaradipra 8 лет назад +33

    i feel like im watching discovery channel / Nat Geo documentary film. Production quality of this video is very good. You've done a wonderful job dude!

  • @metalmat3651
    @metalmat3651 7 лет назад +9

    I remember renting those odd looking Tengen games back in the day, I really liked RBI Baseball and Klax

  • @paranormalskeptic3893
    @paranormalskeptic3893 5 лет назад +4

    Amazingly well done video. I could watch things like this all day. Really kept me glued to find out all about Tengen. And the mention of other subsidiaries of other large game companies was something I didn’t know. Thanks for the great video game history lesson, loved it ! Oh yeah, I immediately subscribed after finishing the video. Glad is discovered this RUclips channel.

  • @DCTib
    @DCTib 3 года назад +5

    RBI 2 and RBI 3 are still the best baseball games to this day. It would be great if someone could program versions with updated rosters and the ability to play an actual 162 game season with stats. That would be perfection. John NES lite allows you to play them anytime and anywhere.

  • @ilexgarodan
    @ilexgarodan 9 лет назад +8

    I lit up at 18:44 when Kerbal Space Program music started playing!

  • @KiljiArslan
    @KiljiArslan 8 лет назад +24

    This could make a great movie.

  • @NickPCage
    @NickPCage 4 года назад +2

    I just found this channel, now I'm binge watching , this guy is amazing and literally keeps me intrested in the content, thank you so much for making this types of videos.

  • @captcorajus
    @captcorajus 6 лет назад +2

    AWESOME voice over, and presentation. I've been binging on your channel. Its very addictive. Thanks!

  • @Doommaster1994
    @Doommaster1994 9 лет назад +9

    Great work, Norman! Here's a couple things you may have wanted to add to the video.
    One thing is that the NES used 6502 assembly programming, which I heard was very hard compared to the Master System's Z80 and the Genesis's 68000 programming. Also, American/European game developers apparently had no support/documentation from Nintendo. Maybe you can cover this in another video. I really enjoyed this video though. Very informative, and a lot of stuff I didn't know about. Thanks!

  • @walterchapman2094
    @walterchapman2094 8 лет назад +12

    Always wished Atari Games had supported their other half at Atari Corps. when the 7800 was released. I can understand releasing games for the popular NES but they ignored the SMS and 7800 till late in the systems life span. The 7800 could have used a quality 3rd party developer such as Tengen and there really wouldnt have been much competition.

    • @OtakuUnitedStudio
      @OtakuUnitedStudio 5 лет назад

      Tengen would technically be a 2nd party developer if they had gone that route.

    • @TheJeremyHolloway
      @TheJeremyHolloway 5 лет назад

      Atari Games Corp [arcade and the Tengen consumer brand] and Tramiel's Atari Corp [computers and consoles] didn't get along originally. Their mutual hatred of Nintendo and Warner CEO Steve Ross' coaxing behind the scenes led to their later alliance of sorts. But yes, the 7800 needed Atari Games' library and didn't get it. The 7800 was more powerful than the NES. The recent homebrew game "Rikki & Vikki" proves it.

    • @GamingDelight
      @GamingDelight 4 года назад +1

      Jeremy Holloway
      Nevertheless, the 7800 was going nowhere, falling behind Nintendo and barely staying neck and neck with Sega in North America. Releasing the games for the Atari 7800 would only make things worse. Only the NES was gaining ground.

  • @wturner6088
    @wturner6088 Год назад

    Still my favorite episode of Gaming Historian after all these years. Simply amazing. Keep up the fantastic work!

  • @klaatu9726
    @klaatu9726 2 года назад +5

    You do these type of videos better than anyone else that tries. Please don't stop!

  • @90SecondGameReviews
    @90SecondGameReviews 8 лет назад +22

    Hideyuki Nakajima died on the same day 21 years before Satoru Iwata.

    • @simpsonfanboy
      @simpsonfanboy 8 лет назад +10

      Joey Russell That's really an amazing coincidence. The guy who led the fight against Nintendo's strict policies died the same day 21 years before the guy who ultimately reformed Nintendo and moved them away from those strict policies.

    • @neilisbored2177
      @neilisbored2177 6 лет назад +3

      (That sound effect that happens after paula gets kidnapped)

    • @derpd6578
      @derpd6578 6 лет назад

      Okey

    • @yaboisanic2922
      @yaboisanic2922 5 лет назад

      @@neilisbored2177 da-da-da-da-Daaa

  • @kniferaffe
    @kniferaffe 9 лет назад +18

    Shit, Norm, this belongs on tv. Awesome job.

  • @kainpwnsu
    @kainpwnsu 4 года назад

    Thank you for creating these fantastic videos! They are very well composed, detailed, and have a professional feel. I'm impressed with your visuals, which is arguably the most arduous part of composing a historical documentary.

  • @paulavarela9447
    @paulavarela9447 5 лет назад +8

    This episode is awesome. Your videos are amazing and so well done...It is a relief to watch such damn good content on RUclips this days. Please keep on going and do not lower your standards!!

  • @jcau99
    @jcau99 9 лет назад +4

    This was probably your best video to date Norm! Enjoyed the Ken Burns style voice overs.

  • @thegreatwalrus6574
    @thegreatwalrus6574 9 лет назад +25

    I feel like I'm watching a documentary!

  • @fratercontenduntocculta8161
    @fratercontenduntocculta8161 4 года назад +3

    love the videos! you're answering so many questions I had as a kid

  • @judahosborne8868
    @judahosborne8868 4 года назад

    Your channel mixes two of my favorite things, history and video games! I love it!

  • @Michirin9801
    @Michirin9801 9 лет назад +4

    Wow, I just learned about a bunch of stuff that I didn't know happened...
    I thought that Jack Trameil had bought all of Atari, I didn't know the Atari Games division even existed!

  • @Markimark151
    @Markimark151 8 лет назад +6

    Nintendo was trying to have a near monopoly in the video game consoles back in the mid 1980s. Competitors like Atari and Sega couldn't get enough third party support because Nintendo signed two year exclusive deals, which why Capcom and Square couldn't make games for other consoles at that time. Norman has made a really well put together documentary, it feels like the Ken Burns of video game documentary.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 8 лет назад +1

      +Matt R The Contract was from February 18,1986 to December 31.1988.

    • @gc3k
      @gc3k 5 лет назад +1

      Now Sony are the pricks in the game industry

    • @AltairEgo1
      @AltairEgo1 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@gc3kyep, and the funny thing is, no one bats an eyelash over it. Probably because it's a company that caters more to western interests, and its virtual monopoly of a market is sanctioned by our governments.
      Nintendo is the only video game company congress acted against, multiple times. First hit with anti-trust laws that interestingly enough never get utilized for other hardware companies, even major telcoms, then again hit with censorship laws.

  • @Crimefighter
    @Crimefighter 4 года назад +6

    You completely missed the DRAM chip shortage that went on during the period resulting in the five game limit per company policy.

  • @chrispacheco8590
    @chrispacheco8590 5 лет назад +3

    I was always mystified by those black Tengen cartridges when I was a kid and wanted practically all of them, they where some really good games at the time, I recall really wanting After Burner, and was just amazed to see Shinobi a very popular SEGA game on the NES come on one of these sleek black cartridges, it was sad to see them slowly disappear.., great piece btw I appreciate the level of quality, it held my attention 100% of the time, very well put together, very appreciative of all your hard work and passion, thank you.

  • @Hieifireshadow
    @Hieifireshadow 7 лет назад +6

    This is such a cool topic oh my gosh. I've been watching at least one of your videos every day for a few days now! These feel like mini-documentaries and I absolutely love them! Your voice is super chill, too- these are really nice as background noise and even nicer as documentaries. I'm glued to my screen every time!
    Thanks for making these, lots of love from a new fan! ❤️

  • @dcgitz
    @dcgitz 8 лет назад +17

    Face it, this could be one of the best ideas for a movie. Maybe even better than Pixels (no offense to those who enjoyed the movie).

  • @Shinobi33
    @Shinobi33 5 лет назад

    Best episode I've seen so far. So informative. When it comes to historical knowledge on the video game industry you and Wrestling with video games are the best. Hands down. Great job as always man.

  • @CocktailFridays
    @CocktailFridays Год назад

    Man, this episode is such a masterpiece. Bless you for making this epic overview of this moment in history. Also, godspeed on your way to hitting 1 million subs soon!!

  • @nintendad8168
    @nintendad8168 9 лет назад +5

    That was an amazing video I'd say your best to date . I enjoy all of your work but this was perfection .

  • @aleksandrklimenko730
    @aleksandrklimenko730 9 лет назад +4

    I can't stress enough how good this video is. Masterpiece. Thank you so much for your hard work!

  • @Sambeck63
    @Sambeck63 3 года назад +5

    I wholeheartedly believe this is one of the most underrated channels on RUclips! You deserve to have 8,000,000+ subscribers! You should be way ahead of PewDiePie!!!!

    • @BubbledDEV
      @BubbledDEV Год назад

      He absolutely deserves more subscribers. I'm surprised he hasn't even hit a million yet.

  • @markhunt9643
    @markhunt9643 5 лет назад +168

    Atari: Better deal? We are Atari, we pretty much created the video game industry
    Nintendo: Wasn't it a game on your systems that caused the crash in the first place?
    Sega and other gaming companies: OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

    • @sirnubless
      @sirnubless 5 лет назад +1

      ......

    • @DrGreenThumbNZL
      @DrGreenThumbNZL 5 лет назад +1

      Stfu newb

    • @LUCKO2022
      @LUCKO2022 5 лет назад +17

      1) That was a different Atari, to start with. That Atari was under the management of Warner Communications being run by Ray Kassar. Atari Games was the result of Atari being split into 2 and both sold off (well actually 3, Warner retained the telecomunications part of Atari).
      2) ET DID NOT CRASH THE INDUSTRY. It goes deeper than just 1 game. The problem was Atari didn't have control on who makes games for the 2600. So everyone and their dog started to make games for it and resulted in allot of shitty games getting out there. That is what caused the market to crash, not just 1 game.

    • @windowsme2327
      @windowsme2327 4 года назад

      Nec:bup bup bup
      Sega:ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

    • @nicholastosoni707
      @nicholastosoni707 4 года назад +1

      @@LUCKO2022 It was also that Sears, Radio Shack, etc. had their own game consoles which were compatible with Atari. Result: A hot mess for consumers--nobody knew exactly _what_ to buy. I think Colecovision and Intellivision were also Atari-friendly, adding to the headache. Correct me if I'm wrong and don't quote me on it.

  • @TomHPMc
    @TomHPMc 9 лет назад +23

    This is great, man, very informative and of a stellar quality. It's clear a lot of work went into this.
    As a side: I can't help but feel the 'Tengen Seal of Quality' was a bitter joke at the expense of Nintendo!

  • @After4th
    @After4th 8 лет назад +3

    Also mention other publishers made unauthorized games. Color Dreams/Wisdom Tree, American Video Entertainment, Camerica

  • @georgefremd1802
    @georgefremd1802 8 месяцев назад +3

    You could probably also argue that without nintendos strict licensing policy. The game industry might not have taken off at all in the US when it did. Nintendos policy stabilized an industry.

  • @AtariLegend
    @AtariLegend 4 года назад

    Simply amazing documentary. I am lost for words at how well this is made. Thank you.