ALAMOGORDO, N.M.: Diggers find Atari's E.T. games in landfill | Business | ADN.com: http://www.adn.com/2014/04/25/3442598/diggers-ready-to-unearth-ataris.html#emlnl=Morning_Newsletter
"BY JUAN CARLOS LLORCA Associated Press April 25, 2014"
ALAMOGORDO, N.M. — A decades-old urban legend was put to rest Saturday when workers for a documentary film production company recovered "E.T." Atari game cartridges from a heap of garbage buried deep in the New Mexico desert.
The "Atari grave" was, until that moment, a highly debated tale among gaming enthusiasts and other self-described geeks for 30 years. The story claimed that in its death throes, the video game company sent about a dozen truckloads of cartridges of what many call the worst video game ever to be forever hidden in a concrete-covered landfill in southeastern New Mexico.
The search for the cartridges of a game that contributed to the demise of Atari will be featured in an upcoming documentary about the biggest video game company of the early '80s.
As a backhoe scattered a huge scoop of 30-year-old trash and dirt over the sand, the film crew spotted boxes and booklets carrying the Atari logo. Soon after, a game cartridge turned up, then another and another.
Read more here: http://www.adn.com/2014/04/25/3442598/diggers-ready-to-unearth-ataris.html#emlnl=Morning_Newsletter
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"BY JUAN CARLOS LLORCA Associated Press April 25, 2014"
ALAMOGORDO, N.M. — A decades-old urban legend was put to rest Saturday when workers for a documentary film production company recovered "E.T." Atari game cartridges from a heap of garbage buried deep in the New Mexico desert.
The "Atari grave" was, until that moment, a highly debated tale among gaming enthusiasts and other self-described geeks for 30 years. The story claimed that in its death throes, the video game company sent about a dozen truckloads of cartridges of what many call the worst video game ever to be forever hidden in a concrete-covered landfill in southeastern New Mexico.
The search for the cartridges of a game that contributed to the demise of Atari will be featured in an upcoming documentary about the biggest video game company of the early '80s.
As a backhoe scattered a huge scoop of 30-year-old trash and dirt over the sand, the film crew spotted boxes and booklets carrying the Atari logo. Soon after, a game cartridge turned up, then another and another.
Read more here: http://www.adn.com/2014/04/25/3442598/diggers-ready-to-unearth-ataris.html#emlnl=Morning_Newsletter
'via Blog this' Google profile: https://profiles.google.com/kevindayhoff/
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