Its just confirming a mildly interesting story. And it gives them something to throw into a documentary about videogame history. No ones planning on making big bucks over the issue.
Plus the story comes up occasionally in lectures about economic bubbles, so its kind od nice to be able to use it without worrying if you’re spreading an urban legend or not.
Is it possible these documentary guys have been promoting the myth a bit on the recent past? Giving it an air of mystery, and making it appear a hotter story then it ever was?
I’m a little confused. Was this considered an actual “urban legend”? I always thought it was fact. What made it “urban legendy”? Or is there just doubt that it was done at the scale reported?
According to the Snopes article, it seems that the legend is that “ET is such a bad game that no one bought it/everyone returned it and Atari had to throw away millions of copies into a landfill.” I think also part of it is that “ET ruined Atari.”
Looks like the truth is that yes, Atari did send 14 trucks full of garbage to a landfill. And yes, Atari did have to sell 4mm copies of ET to get back the money they spent on licensing. But that doesn’t mean they printed 4mm copies, and that millions went unsold or returned. And 14 trucks of garbage could have been anything, not just copies of ET. And Atari had a lot of problems not related to ET, so ET isn’t what killed Atari.
The fact that only a few hundred copies of the game have been unearthed so far - along with the fact that you can readily buy a copy for $5 on eBay - suggests that there weren’t 14 trucks full of ET carts but yes, they did get thrown away.
Well… I do not find Ballet, Cricket, Gardening, Word Working, Crab Fishing, Accounting, Rom Coms, Entomology or Antiquing interesting. So they should never be spoken about or put on TV/Video.
I bought both Atari cartridges and diapers from Toys R Us at the time, and was unaware that you could return dirty ones to them.
From a consumer point of view, PacMan was the turning of the tide, the first game which was significantly worse than the arcade version. Never fell for ET.
I got an emulator with the games loaded in a joy stick which you could plug into your TV - Adventure is still fun, in a mindless kind of way. First ever Easter Egg for those who don’t know.
My take is that for a certain generation, the 1983 event conjures up images of buried treasure, as opposed to routine corporate behavior. Those older don’t care. Those younger don’t care. Many of the same age never cared, some formerly cared and the remainder are nostalgic.
That game was a big part of Atari and video games going down the tubes until the revival of video games by the NES. Its a piece of history, a part of the legacy of video games. The fact that some in Atari have been kind of dodgy and defensive about it over the years makes it more interesting for people to poke around. That’s why its interesting.