In the late 1970s and early 1980,, a company that filled childhoods with fancifully designed toy cars and dubiously proportioned dolls took on what would become an iconic company of early Silicon ...
The next PlayStation and Xbox are confirmed to be in the works at Sony and Microsoft, but the more interesting upcoming consoles might just be those from 80s relics like Atari and Intellivision. The ...
Last year around this time Activision released Activision Classics for the PlayStation. And it was bad. Hoo-boy, was it bad ¿ not the games per se, just the entire collection: that compilation of ...
At the dawn of the video game age, Atari dominated early on, but a storied toy company almost knocked the 2600 off its perch. The Mattel Intellivision broke new ground on its release in late 1979.
An old-school video game rivalry has a new chapter with Atari acquiring the Intellivision brand, one of its long-time competitors. Atari purchased the brand and rights to over 200 Intellivision games ...
In 1980, Mattel Electronics leapt headfirst into the burgeoning world of console gaming with its first console, the Intellivision. Big, bulky, and covered with gold tone and wood-grain accents, it was ...
You might have missed it, but just before E3 2018 a new challenger entered the console war: The Intellivision is returning nearly four decades after it initially launched. The original Intellivision, ...
Nintendo vs. Sega, PlayStation vs. Xbox – the gaming industry has been full of competition for decades now, leading the top companies in the market to go head-to-head in what gamers have dubbed the ...
Jack Peachey is a features writer who's worked at Dualshockers and Game Rant. An animation nerd, his favourite games don't have a genre in common as much as they all have pretty pictures. When not ...
Intellivision, the video game maker that didn't survive the '80s, is back and ready to build something new on top of gaming nostalgia. After teasing the idea earlier this year, the company has ...
I tried to hide my disappointment, but I couldn't. It was Christmas, 1983 and I wanted a ZX Spectrum. All my friends either had one, or were also desperately hoping one would be sitting under the tree ...