8-bit Atari Games

Designed by Jay Miner, who would later develop the Amiga, this 8-bit home computer was well ahead of its time (1979–82). It had only 8–48kB RAM, but it had custom coprocessors, sprite processing, and quite astonishing multimedia capabilities, which can be admired in Alternate Reality: The City. It had four joystick ports instead of the usual two, so that up to four players could compete in M.U.L.E.

The Atari 800 XL, often just called Atari XL for short, was released in 1983. It had the same processor (a MOS 6502 running at 1.8MHz), but 64kB RAM, and a smaller, elegant black-and-white case. Unfortunately, it proved less compatible to the Atari 800 than it was supposed to. Nowadays you can run the programs for both machines with the same emulator.

Breakout Arcade 79 US  
Softporn Adventure Adventure 81 US Chuck Benton
Mankala Mancala 82 US Elizabeth Chase MacRae
Artworx Strip Poker Strip Poker 83 US  
Castle Wolfenstein Action US  
M.U.L.E. strat US Dan Bunten
Ultima I–III RPG US  
Zork I–III Adventure US  
Alley Cat Arcade 84 US  
Beyond Castle Wolfenstein Adventure US  
Boulder Dash Puzzle Ca  
Karateka Fighter US Jordan Mechner
Alternate Reality: The City RPG 85 US  
Ultima IV RPG 86 US  
Saracen Puzzle 87 US Ilan Ginzburg
Geo Tetris 88 De  
Speed-Puzzle De Harald Höppner
Super Puzzler De Jörg Redemann
Tigris De Matthias Drees
Tetrys Tetris 89 Cz  
The Warsaw Tetris Pl  
Dredis De Kemal Ezcan
Zador Shisen-Sho De Kemal Ezcan
Ashido Ishido 90 De Kemal Ezcan
Cultivation Puzznic De Kemal Ezcan
Stack Up Columns 91 UK  
Valgus² Tetris US James R. Glenn
Another World Adventure 92   Inofficial
Sexversi Othello 93 Pl  
Sudoku Sweep Tetris 06 Pl  
Flowers Mania Columns Pl  

Emulation

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Last modified 2007-04-16