#oneaday Day 25: Atari In Your Pocket

We announced some new products at work today: two new models of the HyperMegaTech! Super Pocket, a low-cost handheld that comes with a bunch of built-in games, plus full compatibility with the Evercade ecosystem, allowing you to expand the device’s capabilities with 500+ games across more than 50 cartridges. And yes, that is the official PR line! I should state up front, though, that this is my personal blog, and thus nothing I say here should be considered official Blaze shenanigans; I just wanted to enthuse about this stuff.

One of the two new Super Pockets joining the existing Taito and Capcom devices is focused around Technos Japan, which is a brand for whom the license expired for their Evercade cartridge, meaning second-hand copies of it now go for absurd prices. The Technos Super Pocket brings most of those games (and a couple of newcomers) back at an affordable price point, which is nice.

The one I’m really excited about, though, is the Atari model, which comes with a whopping 50 games. And we worked with Atari to deliberately select a lineup of games that isn’t the same as those seen on other Atari-branded devices. Sure, we’ve got some familiar favourites in there from the 2600 and arcade back catalogues, but we’re backing those up with plenty of 5200, 7800 and Lynx titles, including a blend of both games that were on the existing Evercade Atari cartridges, and some brand new ones.

Perhaps best of all, we’re doing a limited edition (2600 units, natch) which is designed in classic ’70s-style woodgrain. You can preorder that one right now from Funstock; the standard non-limited versions of both Atari and Technos will be up for preorder at the end of the month for an October release.

With Atari having been such an important and defining part of my life growing up, I’m naturally delighted to play a part in bringing a bunch of these games back. So I thought I’d pick out some of my personal favourites, because why not.

Solaris

This is a great game for the Atari 2600. Despite not being called Star Raiders, it is an official sequel to the original Star Raiders (and different to the game actually called Star Raiders II on Atari 8-bit). It’s made by the same programmer (Doug Neubauer) and features the same conflict between humanity and the legally distinct Zylon Empire. Like Star Raiders, it features a blend of action and strategy, tipping a little further in the direction of “action”, and is probably one of the most technically impressive, ambitious 2600 games to come out of first-party Atari.

In Solaris, you fly a ship around the galaxy in search of the titular planet. You travel long distances on a grid-based sector map, and by warping to occupied sectors you can battle enemy fleets, destroy enemy bases and rescue allied forces from the Zylons. While it might initially seem complex, it’s easy to pick up and very compelling, plus relatively short play sessions make it ideal for handheld play. Definitely a highlight if you’ve never played it, though it is available on the existing Evercade Atari cartridges.

Miner 2049’er/Bounty Bob Strikes Back!

I’m grouping these together because they’re both very similar — the latter is the sequel to the former. They’re single-screen platform games in which you control Bounty Bob, a Canadian mountie, who is chasing down a dastardly trapper named Yukon Yohan. Yohan has, it seems, taken up residence in an abandoned radioactive mine filled with mutant nasties, so it’s up to Bob to clear the way.

The narrative setup doesn’t matter at all; this is a game from the early ’80s. What does matter is the gameplay. Your main task in each stage of both Miner 2049’er and Bounty Bob Strikes Back! is to walk across every bit of platform in the level. This starts out simple (in Miner 2049’er, anyway; Bounty Bob Strikes Back! is much tougher, working on the assumption you’re already familiar with the prior game) but quickly introduces you to a variety of gimmicks, giving each level a somewhat different feel from the last. Both games demand concentration, dexterity and for you to puzzle out the best route to victory, and their arcade-style structure makes them, again, great handheld titles.

Final Legacy

An all-time favourite of mine, this one. It’s best known as an Atari 8-bit game but it was also ported to the 5200, which is near-identical internally.

Final Legacy is an action-strategy game. Some call it “Battlezone with ships” but it’s a bit more complex than that. There are four distinct components to the game: a navigation map, in which you move around the game world, pick your targets and attempt (usually unsuccessfully) to avoid detection by enemy ships; a “Sea-to-Land” section where you destroy ground targets with a laser; a “Sea-to-Air” section where you shoot down incoming missiles (inevitably launched while you were pratting about in Sea-to-Land mode); and a Torpedo mode in which you destroy enemy ships.

Final Legacy isn’t one of Atari’s most well-known games, but as far as I’m concerned it’s Star Raiders-tier good. I hope the Atari Super Pocket encourages people to give it a proper go.

Ninja Golf

It’s Ninja Golf. The title surely tells you everything you need to know if you weren’t already familiar with arguably the Atari 7800’s best game.

Turbo Sub

A fantastic Atari Lynx game, Turbo Sub is a real showcase of the platform’s spectacular sprite scaling ability. It’s a first-person shoot ’em up in which you pilot the titular sub both above and below the waves, blasting enemies to kingdom come and, when beneath the surface, collecting crystals which can be spent to upgrade your weapons for the next stage.

Turbo Sub is pure arcade-style fun. It looks great and it plays super-smoothly. It was one of my favourite Lynx games back when I had one, and having it just ready to go on a pocket-sized device is going to be a delight.

Warbirds

Another great Lynx game, Warbirds is a World War I-themed combat flight sim. While its scenarios are limited to dogfighting against one, two or three other planes, the wealth of difficulty options mean that you can customise the experience a great deal, and it’s a lot of fun seeing how many missions in a row you can survive with everything turned up to the hardest level.

Like Turbo Sub, Warbirds is a showcase title for the Lynx’s sprite scaling capabilities, with both cloud cover and enemy planes depicted as smoothly animated sprites. These are combined with simple polygonal elements for ground detail — a few hills and the hangar that marks your airstrip. It’s relatively simple at its core, but it’ll keep you coming back for more.

Berzerk/Frenzy

I’m grouping these two together because, again, the latter is the sequel to the former. These are two early ’80s arcade games from Stern, casting you in the role of a little green man (literally) and tasking you with fighting your way through increasingly ferocious waves of killer robots. Take too long clearing a screen and the demonic Evil Otto (the world’s most terrifying smiley face) will come after you.

Berzerk is the original game, and became famous for a couple of reasons: firstly, its speech synthesis, which would often yell “QUARTER DETECTED IN POCKET” to unsuspecting passers-by; and secondly, the fact that, according to urban legend, it “killed” two people. (The truth of that one is that two people just happened to suffer a heart attack after playing a game of Berzerk; there’s no real evidence that the game itself or the stress of playing it caused the problems, but you know how these things go.)

Frenzy, meanwhile, adds a few elements to Berzerk’s basic mechanics such as reflecting shots and destroyable walls. The only home port it got back in the day was to Colecovision, and no-one had a Colecovision (which is a shame, because the Colecovision is very good!) so this Super Pocket release is noteworthy for being one of the few official home releases it has had since its heyday.

I think that’ll probably do for now. I suspect I’ll be spending a lot of time with the Atari Super Pocket when I get one (because of course I’m getting one; I’d be getting one even if I didn’t work for Blaze) and I’m super-happy to be involved in making it a thing that exists.

You can find out more about the Super Pockets on the official website, and Evercade likewise. This was not a paid ad. I just like what I do.


Want to read my thoughts on various video games, visual novels and other popular culture things? Stop by MoeGamer.net, my site for all things fun where I am generally a lot more cheerful. And if you fancy watching some vids on classic games, drop by my YouTube channel.


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