Transitions: The Launch Games/End Games Blog

Posted on Jul 25th 2010 at 06:36:56 PM by (dsheinem)
Posted under Atari 2600, Atari VCS, System Launch, Launch Games, Classic Gaming

Easily the most popular early cartridge based system, the Atari Video Computer System (a.k.a.  Atari 2600) would forever change entertainment in the home.  This entry takes a quick look at what gamers encountered when picking up the system almost 33 years ago.

[img width=300 height=154]http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq17/dsheinem/heavysixer.jpg[/img]

The VCS launch itself was a delayed event, held up due to some legal issues between Atari and Magnavox.  Magnavox (makers of the Odyssey 1 and 2) owned the rights to publish Atari games through June of 1977, and so even though a working version of the VCS was ready in 1976, Atari waited until that contract was over so they could publish their games for their own system.  In June of 1977 the contract expired and Atari brought the VCS to the Consumer Electronics Show in Chicago (which, incidentally, was the same show that introduced VHS to North America). 

A few months later, on October 14, 1977, the console was released for $199 (or $249, depending on which source you read) in the United States.  This initial VCS unit (later nicknamed the Heavy Sixer for its weight and number of switches) launched with nine titles.  Surprisingly, the system had trouble maintaining sales, failing to sell all units shipped in 1977 or 1978 (it wasnt until a home port of Space Invaders hit in 1980 that the system really started moving off shelves). 

The nine games released for the VCS at launch were Air-Sea Battle, Basic Math, Black Jack, Combat (as a pack-in game), Indy 500 (with driver controllers packed in to a big box), Star Ship, Street Racer, Surround, and Video Olympics.  Customers browsing store shelves on launch day that October had these titles to choose from:

[img width=375 height=510]http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq17/dsheinem/2600-launch.jpg[/img]

Launch games were sold in gatefold boxes (they open up like a book, similar to Odyseey2 boxes), a packaging style which was discontinued after the first year of (relatively poor) sales for the system. 

[img width=240 height=200]http://www.gamasutra.com/db_area/images/feature/3551/atari_6.jpg[/img]

I had some difficulty tracking down prices for new games, but based on what I found $20-$30 seems like a reasonable guess.  Adjusted for inflation, that is $70-$105 a pop today!  Purchasers could console themselves with the fact that they got multiple games, or modes, per purchase.  With the exception of Blackjack, each game offered between 8 and 50 different games in each package, with the number displayed prominently on the box.

I plan to look more closely at some of these games in future installments of the blog, but there are really only a few titles that seemed to have much staying power through the life of the console or today.  Combat is the obvious gem, but Indy 500 and Video Olympics both made this informal poll of AtariAge readers Top 100 2600 games of all time .  Past those three however, the rest of the launch games are a mixed bag.  Air-Sea Battle and Star Ship both offer some fun shooting, and the latter actually shows off some interesting graphics for a launch game.   Surround is more or less a Tron cycle style game, and Blackjack is, well, blackjack (a very tough version played with a paddle controller).  Woe to the poor kid whose parents brought home Basic Math or Street Racer, both of which were low points in fun for the launch lineup. 

If you wanted to pick up four titles with your new system, you would be looking to spend about $300-$350 in 1977, or about $1000-$1200 today.  By comparison, a 60GB PS3 at launch with four games and an extra controller would have cost about $900. 

A few things stand out about the system launch. 

For one, the titles of most of the games were very basic and descriptive, a strategy also used by Nintendo when they launched their NES in the U.S. some seven years later (with titles like Tennis, Kung Fu, Baseball, Golf, Pinball, Duck Hunt, etc.).  This simple naming practice, paired with what continues to be some of the most imaginative box art ever produced , allowed for shoppers to easily identify what kind of game they were buying. 

[img width=350 height=378]http://www.atarimuseum.com/videogames/consoles/2600/VCS-AD.JPG[/img]

Also notable is the lack of any well known arcade games, games based on movies, or any other connections to popular culture of the mid-late 1970s (the first arcade port would be the aforementioned Space Invaders a few years later).  Atari basically had to launch a system featuring games with no known properties, something that has not been done since.

The inclusion of a pack-in game, a practice that has fallen out of favor with many of the more recent system launches, is significant.  Not only did it give purchasers the illusion of extra value at the register, but unlike pack in games for some other systems (Super Mario Bros., Altered Beast, etc.) Combat doesn't have a single player mode.  This sent the message to consumers that the VCS was meant to be played with others and that multiplayer gaming was the foundation for the console.  This message was reinforced by the inclusion of two joysticks, another practice that has unfortunately dropped out of most system launches.

[img width=166 height=186]http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq17/dsheinem/atari_2600_indy500_big-box_1.jpg[/img]

Indy 500, which was released with the driver controllers in a bog box, is also an important title for its inclusion of accessories.  While pricing information is scarce and unreliable, Indy 500 most certainly would have cost more than a standard game because of its inclusion of these controllers.   Like modern console manufacturers, it seems Atari recognized that money could be made selling additional hardware, controllers, cables, and other add-ons for their system (the 2600 would see many accessories over the years).  Starting customers out on launch day with some extra hardware made good fiscal sense.

[img width=200 height=142]http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq17/dsheinem/800px-Atari_driving_controller.jpg[/img]

As a whole, it seems that the launch of one of the most successful game consoles in history did some things right (pack-ins) and some things wrong (no known IPs).  Fortunately for Atari, they did enough right to sustain the VCS for a few years until it really became popular with the addition of licensed titles. Tracking down the original launch games and the Heavy Sixer itself in the original boxes would be quite a daunting task today (the Heavy Sixer alone fetches a hefty premium over the other models on eBay), but I'd love to hear from anyone who has done so or who remembers the launch itself.



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Comments
 
"More video games and variations than anyone else". No joke, Atari!

Informative post on the VCS launch, thanks. I actually looked up quite a bit of this information a couple weeks ago when documenting my Atari 2600 collection, trying to figure out which variations I owned of the original launch titles.
 
Excellent read.
I never realized just how expensive it was compared with todays costs. I hope you do that with future blog entries too. It really puts things in perspective.
 
It's nice to see some VCS love, and wow, it's amazing to think of the prices adjusted for inflation. I got my first VCS around 1980, and I am shocked that my parents could shell out that kind of cash for Xmas. Thanks for the nice read!
 
at least it wasn't 599 US dollars.

I love the VCS box art.  Lots of today's game inspired "art" (not the cover pictures) seems similar to this.  The big difference is that the VCS cover art overlooks the primitive program and captures the true gaming experience.  These were the first home video games for lots of people... something to really get excited about.
 
@OatBob:

Wait, I just realized it was my first console too Sad
I should have been playing NES as a kid but my dad had me playing his 2600 for the longest time.  Fortunately we did get a SNES in '92, my newest console for the next 10 years.
 
Considering the VCS was 6 when I was born, I never had the opportunity to play the VCS until a neighbor moved in that had one. It was primitive, but it was fun. The games had to be fun! Combat is still fun with 2 players.
 
Thanks for the kind words and reminiscences. 

I was a little surprised at the price when I ran the inflation numbers as well, but several inflation calculators seem to confirm it.  Of course years later when the market crashed Atari games could be regularly found new for just $1 or $2, so perhaps the high prices had something to do with the near end of gaming.
 
I was under the impression that the market crashed due to the oversaturation of the market.
Not the cost of games/hardware.
 
@Izert101: You are partially correct about oversaturation leading to the crash, but poor quality software was also a huge culprit, in the 2600 market especially. I hate it that Atari caused the premature death of the Colecovision and Vectrex especially. Thank G-d for Nintendo.
 
This was our first gaming console as a kid. I remember playing a couple games, but not really being "hooked" on gaming until the next generation of systems.
 
Nice blog, brings back lots of memories.  I remember it well.  I still have my 2600 from launch (well the replacement from a few weeks later since the first one died) along with Video Olympics, Star Ship, & Air Sea Battle.  My brother & I spent hours upon hours playing those four titles!!!
 
Excellent work on this article dsheinem! Atari is by far my favorite system of all time. They had so many great titles. Like other's pointed out, it's interesting to see how expensive the games were back then compared to nowadays. My mother was very thrifty, buying a majority of our games at yard sales or in the clearance bin. Please keep it up!
 
@Duke.Togo: Actually the ColecoVision died because Coleco was undergoing financial difficulties at the time, not because of Atari. The Coleco Adam was an expensive flop for Coleco, and so its failure essentially forced them out of the video game business.
 
@ApolloBoy: Sounds like someone needs to write a blog post on the ColecoVision Cheesy
 
@atari_wizard: I'll be sure to cover some of these launch games in later installments, but the Atari systems in general are more interesting for their late titles/post-life titles than for their launch games.  This "launch overview" kind of entry I will certainly do from time to time, but most entries will probably focus on individual games from any/all generations.  Don't worry though, there will be plenty of Atari love sprinkeld in Smiley

@Izret101: You are right, the major factor of the crash was overs-saturation.  Still, I would bet that price factored into it somewhat as people got tired of paying inflated prices for some of the shovelware that got made for the system in the early 80s.

@bum-man: That's great that you remember the launch and the launch games.  How'd your system die?  Was this a common problem for the launch systems?  It would be interesting to learn if they had a common manufacturing problem or something...
 
@dsheinem: I don't really remember the "Launch" exactly but I remember getting our system which may have been more like November (I know it was before Christmas because games were under the tree).  I did know my friends were all still playing their Pong systems and I had moved on to something much better.  A week or two after we got it the screen was black when we turned it on so off it went to the retailer where we purchased it and a new one came home.  I don't know if that was common or not, none of my friends had a VCS.  Funny thing happened with that return, somehow the Combat cartridge didn't make it back into the box when it went back.  So I figured what the hell and I wrote a letter to Atari asking that they exchange Combat for another title because I didn't think it was a good game (hey I was like 15 and wanted more games!!!)  I got a letter back from Atari, which I still have somewhere, explaining that they aren't licensed to do retail business and can't help me.

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