Many stories have Glori-Anne Gilbert Archivesbeen told about an ancient power that tried to conquer the world, only to be punished for its hubris and vanish. This power wasn't Atlantis – it was Atari.
Following the home version of arcade sensation Pong, the Atari 2600became a cornerstone of the second generation of gaming consoles. With replaceable cartridges and a programmable CPU instead of hardwired transistors, it aimed to bring the arcade experience into the home – and succeeded, becoming the first game console owned by millions.
The Atari 2600's downfall was just as spectacular as its rise. In Japan, it became known as the "Atari shock." In the U.S., it was called the video game crash. Despite this, the 2600 survived and remained on the market into the 1990s, competing with Nintendo until newer players took its place.
Image credit: darkrisingmitch
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Best Presidents' Day deal: Save $250 on Peloton Bike
Best smart scale deal: Get 20% off the GE Smart Scale at Amazon
Why Refresh Rates Matter: From 30Hz to 540Hz
Segway Xyber is a wickedly quick e
Nvidia GeForce Now Ultimate vs. Your Own RTX GPU
Google's AI Mode search tool gets a voice
Why GPUs are the New Kings of Cache. Explained.
Swole Jeff Bezos joins Instagram to tease his new ROCKET FACTORY
Best CPU Deals, AMD vs Intel: Holiday CPU Buying Guide
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。