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Here are some examples of what just basic vintage games could make you if you sell them. Space Invaders (Atari 2600, 1978): $75 to $1,450 Pong (original Atari Pong C-100, 1972): $100 to $150
This category lists video games developed or published by American Game Cartridges. Pages in category "American Game Cartridges games" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.
Dandy (later Dandy Dungeon) is a dungeon crawl maze video game for Atari 8-bit computers published by the Atari Program Exchange in 1983. It is one of the first video games with four-player, simultaneous cooperative play. Players equipped with bows and unlimited arrows fight through a maze containing monsters, monster spawners, keys, locked ...
American Game Cartridges (AGC) was an American video game developer and publisher established as a subsidiary of ShareData in 1990. Like ShareData, American Game Cartridges was headquartered in Chandler, Arizona. [1] AGC published three video games for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) in 1990.
"single player game of adventure and combat based on Dungeons and Dragons" [23] Eliminator: 1981: Adventure International: Defender clone Eliza: Tandy Corporation: psychiatrist Q&A simulation Empire: CLOAD: based on Hamurabi and Santa Paravia en Fiumaccio: Empire: Wargame of the Century: port in Z80 assembly, based on FORTRAN source
In April 2024, Blaze unveiled their new Giga Carts. The cartridges are identical in appearance to regular cartridges, other than the addition of a small Giga Cart logo on the label, but have a larger storage capacity. The larger capacity would allow for larger game files to be stored on the cartridge, particularly games originally released on ...
The player plays as Colonel Bahamut, the main antagonist from Contra: Hard Corps. Although the game was released with only two different characters to choose from, Konami has released additional characters via DLC. Contra 3D Contra 3D is a pachislot game based on the Contra series which was released in Japan in 2013.
Camerica was notable for being an unlicensed distributor, reverse engineering cartridges [11] that would bypass Nintendo's 10NES lock-out chip. [12] Like the circuit used in Color Dreams cartridges, Camerica's workaround generates glitch pulses that freeze the lock-out chip. These cartridges are shaped and colored slightly differently from ...