Inside Atari’s rise and fall

By the first few months of 1982, it had become more common to see electronics stores, toy stores, and discount variety stops selling 2600 games. This was before Electronics Boutique, Software Etc., and later, GameStop. Mostly you bought games at stores that sold other electronic products, like Sears or Consumer Distributors. Toys ’R’ Us was a big seller of 2600 games. To buy one, you had to get a piece of paper from the Atari aisle, bring it to the cashier, pay for it, and then wait at a pickup window behind the cash register lanes.

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Adorably tiny, playable versions of classic arcade cabinets are the perfect novelty item

I finally own my own arcade cabinet.
Well, kind of.
Tiny Arcades, brought to life by Super Impulse in its line of World’s Smallest products, are pocket-sized arcade cabinets featuring equally miniature versions of classic arcade games complete with t…

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