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Atari Games licensed the Jaguar's chipset for use in its arcade games. The system, named CoJag (for "Coin-Op Jaguar"), replaced the 68000 with a 68020 or MIPS R3000-based CPU (depending on the board version), added more RAM, a full 64-bit wide ROM bus (Jaguar ROM bus is 32-bit), and optionally a hard drive (some games such as Freeze are ROM
The Atari CoJag is an arcade board released in 1995 by Atari Games (a then-subsidiary of Time Warner Interactive that licensed the console hardware) before Atari Corporation's reverse merger with JT Storage. It was based on the Atari Jaguar chipset. It features nearly identical hardware that doesn't differ from that of the console except for ...
Atari COJAG (A modified Atari Jaguar for arcade systems). Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) for their DECstation workstations and multiprocessor DECsystem servers. Evans & Sutherland for their Vision (ESV) series workstations. LSI Logic for their CW4003 RISC processor core and DCAM-101 system-on-a-chip. [3]
1989: The short-lived Atari Transputer Workstation contains blitter hardware as part of its (Mega ST-based) "Blossom" video system. [16] 1989: The Atari Lynx color handheld game system has a custom blitter with scaling and distortion effects. 1993: The Atari Jaguar game console has blitter hardware as part of the custom "Tom" chip. [17]
[1] [2] By 1996, the Jaguar and game development for it were discontinued. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The best-selling game is Alien vs Predator , with 52,223 copies as of April 1, 1995. [ 5 ] Hasbro declared the Jaguar as an open platform in 1999, releasing the console's patents and rights into public domain , allowing software developers to make and release ...
Area 51 is a light gun arcade game released by Time Warner Interactive in 1995. [6] It takes its name from the military facility.The plot of the game involves the player taking part in a Strategic Tactical Advanced Alien Response (STAAR) military incursion to prevent aliens, known as the Kronn, and alien-created zombies from taking over the Area 51 military facility.
The Atari Jaguar was released in November 1993 and was marketed as the world's first 64-bit system. However, sales at launch were well below the incumbent fourth generation consoles, and a small games library rooted in a shortage of third-party support made it impossible for the Jaguar to catch up, selling below 250,000 units.
The game was not originally developed or published by Williams, Midway, or Atari Games, but by the Leland Corporation (which was acquired by WMS Industries, the holding company of said developers, in 1994). Both the arcade version of the game and its Track Pack upgrade can be found in Midway Arcade Treasures 3 for the PlayStation 2 and Xbox.