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  • Why I hope the Atari 400 Mini will bring respect to Atari’s most underrated platform


    Karlston

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    • 1 comment
    • 235 views
    • 6 minutes

    Can USB, HDMI, and built-in games raise awareness for a platform overshadowed by the C64?

    Last week, UK-based Retro Games, Ltd. announced a mini console version of the Atari 400 home computer, first released in 1979. It's called "THE400 Mini," and it includes HDMI video output, 25 built-in games, a USB version of Atari's famous joystick, and it retails for $120. But this release means something more to me personally because my first computer was an Atari 400—and as any other Atari 8-bit computer fan can tell you, the platform often doesn't get the respect it should. This will be the first time Atari's 8-bit computer line has received a major retro-remake release.

     

    My Atari 400 story goes a little something like this. Around the time I was born in 1981, my dad bought my older brother (then 5 years old) an Atari 400 so he could play games and learn to program. My brother almost immediately found its flat membrane keyboard frustrating and the Atari 410 cassette drive too slow, so my dad ordered an Atari 800 and an Atari 810 disk drive instead. This began our family's golden age of Atari 800 gaming, which I've written about elsewhere.

     

    I've often said if a modern game designer wants to learn how to make games, just dive into the Atari 400/800 game library. There are some priceless gems there you can't find anywhere else, plus others that play best on the platform. OK, I'll name a few: The Seven Cities of Gold, Archon, M.U.L.E., Wizard of Wor, Salmon Run, Star Raiders, The Halley Project, and so much more.

     

    benjedwards_atari800_400_xmas_1985-640x5

    A photo of Benj Edwards' family Atari 800 and Atari 400 in his brother's room, Christmas 1985.
    Benj Edwards

     

    Even with the new 800, it seems that my dad must have kept the original Atari 400, because by the time I grew up more and wanted "my own computer" in the late 1980s, he gave me the Atari 400. The 800 was still my brother's baby and typically remained in his bedroom. When I wasn't playing more complex games like M.U.L.E. and Archon on the 800 with my brother, I hooked up the 400 to a small black-and-white TV set in my room and mostly played Galaxian, Pac-Man, and Donkey Kong on a cartridge. Not long after, I got an Apple II Plus and learned BASIC on that, but the Atari 400 always got pride of place in my growing computer collection.

     

    benj_atari_400_todo_list-640x116.jpg

    A snippet from a 1988 to-do list written by Benj Edwards' dad that says "Get TV/monitor for Benj’s
    Atari 400 computer," completed 4/14/88.
    Benj Edwards

     

    But enough about me. Let's talk about the new Atari 400 Mini. I haven't used it myself yet, so all we have to go on is the information provided by the company—and the company's reputation. Retro Games has previously released full-sized remakes of the Commodore VIC-20 and the Commodore 64, and mini consoles of the Amiga 500 and the Commodore 64. In 2020, Engadget gave the company's "THE64 Mini" mixed reviews, praising its looks but complaining about its joystick and poor game selection. We'll admit preconceived bias and hope the 400 Mini fares much better. Even if the joystick ends up a dud, Retro Games says you can provide your own USB stick or controller.

     

    I also hope THE400 does well because Atari 8-bit fans have a tough time with group identity in the span of retro tech history. Few Americans aside from Atari 400/800 owners have heard of the platform (though the platform did very well in Eastern Europe). The Atari 8-bit series didn't sell nearly as well as competitors like the Commodore 64 in the US (although Sean Lennon had an Atari 400 as a kid—cool trivia).

     

    And even though the Atari 400/800 series provided the template for Commodore to imitate with the VIC-20 and C64, Commodore undercut Atari in price with cheaper parts, which contributed to Atari's crash in 1983 and drove Texas Instruments out of the home computer business. More recently, the Commodore 64 has had several retro re-releases since the Commodore 64 Direct-to-TV in 2004. The Atari 400/800 platform has had none until now.

     

    • 3.jpg
      A shot of THE400 Mini console provided by Retro Games.
      Retro Games
    • 1.jpg
      A shot of THE400 Mini console provided by Retro Games.
      Retro Games
    • 2.jpg
      A close-up shot of THE400 Mini's four USB controller ports provided by Retro Games.
      Retro Games
    • 4.jpg
      A close-up shot of THE400 Mini's keyboard provided by Retro Games.
      Retro Games
    • 5.jpg
      A Retro Games USB reproduction of the Atari CX40 joystick called "THECXSTICK."
      Retro Games

    Even on the Atari fan front, the 400/800 platform is often overshadowed by Atari's home game consoles like the Atari 2600, 5200, and 7800 on the retrogaming scene. The 400 was a strange beast: a hybrid home computer and game console that filled neither role well enough to hit the sweet spot Atari intended. As I wrote in my 2019 Fast Company piece, Atari originally intended the 400 to be a game console only, but Atari decided to add a cheap keyboard so people could play the system's killer app, Star Raiders, which was in development in parallel with the platform. It then became a relatively poor computer (regarding mostly the limited RAM and keyboard) and an excellent but slightly too expensive game console that wasn't really marketed as a game console.

     

    Can Retro Games cram some vintage Atari magic into a tiny plastic box? We'll have to wait and see. We don't know exactly what's under the hood of the THE400 Mini, but we can surmise it's likely a single-board computer running emulation software. Retro Games promises HDMI output at 720p, five USB ports, save states plus game rewind, and the ability to load your game ROMs (and disk images, hopefully) onto the miniature console.

     

    benj_edwards_mule_photo-640x427.jpg

    An Atari 800 (the big brother of the Atari 400) that Benj Edwards set up to play M.U.L.E. at his
    mom's house in 2015, for nostalgia purposes.
    Benj Edwards

     

    So far, Retro Games has not released a full list of included games, but their sales page mentions a few good ones: Berzerk, Lee (a renamed version of Bruce Lee), Millipede, Miner 2049er, M.U.L.E., and Star Raiders II. In this case, M.U.L.E. is the clear standout. It's a 1983 strategy classic that, if it plays well on the unit, is worth the entire price of admission alone (in 2015, I wrote about my love for M.U.L.E. for PCWorld, and in 2009, I named it one of the 10 greatest PC games of all time in another PCWorld piece). Yes, I would pay $120 for a plug-and-play M.U.L.E. console with four joystick ports and HDMI output. Dani Bunten Berry's masterpiece is that good—an excellent family game or retro party game.

     

    Retro Games says the The400 Mini will be available on March 28, 2024. It can be preordered from retailers like Amazon.

     

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