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CNET editors' rating:
3.0
stars
Good
Detailed editors' rating - Average user rating: 3.0 stars out of 15 reviews
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Product summary
The
good: It's just like the old days: the Atari Flashback 2 is an homage to the original Atari 2600 game console, with 40 built-in retro classics from gaming's early days. The entire system costs less than most current PC and console games, and it includes two vintage joysticks. The system can even be hacked to play original 2600 cartridges.
The
bad: It's just like the old days: most of the titles suffer from simplistic and repetitive gameplay, and the graphics are downright rudimentary. Also, most titles are available in retro compilations you can get for PCs and consoles.
The
bottom
line: The Atari Flashback 2 delivers a genuine Atari 2600 retro gaming experience at an unbeatable price.
Specifications: Product Description: Atari Flashback 2 - Game console See full specs
CNET editors' review
- Reviewed on: 10/25/2006
- Released on: 08/15/2005
The Flashback 2, released in 2005, is a faithful replication of the Atari 2600, the product that effectively created the home video-gaming market in the late 1970s. It's about two-thirds the size of the original and sports big yellow and orange buttons instead of toggle switches, but it's an otherwise faithful re-creation, right down to the faux wood paneling. A six-foot A/V cable is hard-wired to its backside; betraying the age of the source material, it's monaural, not stereo, but it'll plug into any free A/V input on your TV, A/V receiver, VCR, or DVD recorder. The Flashback 2 is powered by an AC adapter, unlike many of the other plug-in games that require batteries.
Instead of a cartridge slot, the Flashback 2 has 40 built-in games. From a main menu, the games are divided into four categories: arcade, adventure, skill, and space. Titles range from bona fide 2600 classics (Asteroids, Adventure, Combat, Pong, Space War) to some more obscure games (Haunted House, Yars' Revenge) and even a couple from third-party publisher Activision (Pitfall and River Raid). Moreover, if some of the other games--Aquaventure, Combat 2, Frog Pond, Save Mary, and Wizard--sound unfamiliar even to enthusiasts, it's because they're unreleased prototypes, available here for the first time. At the same time, many will lament the dearth of other favorites (Space Invaders, Pac-Man) that didn't make the cut for one reason or another.
The real highlight of the Flashback 2 is its controllers. The package includes two joysticks, which are near-perfect replicas of the Atari 2600 classic. When compared to today's increasingly complex gamepads--the Xbox 360 controller, for instance, has seven buttons, four triggers, two depressable thumbsticks, and a four-way directional pad--the simplicity of the eight-way joystick and a single action button is rather a breath of fresh air.
The games play exactly the same as they did way back when, though one caveat looms: what was state of the art during the Carter administration doesn't hold quite the same allure after a quarter-century of raised expectations. Those old enough to remember the blocky graphics and rudimentary gameplay may be in for a shock ("I wasted three summers playing this?"); younger gamers will be equally stunned by the fact that these "classics" are far less sophisticated than any cell phone game, browser-based Flash title, or GameBoy Advance release to which they're accustomed. But that, of course, is part of the charm. The graphics may have been blocky, but the dueling biplanes in Combat, the gunslinging cowboys of Outlaw, and the anthropomorphic projectiles of Human Cannonball brought back a flood of happy memories and had us grinning in ways that Madden NFL 07 just couldn't match.
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