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Tuesday, June 4, 2013

ET game excavation confirmed by studio

ET game excavation confirmed by studio


Atari 2600 ET gameThe Atari 2600 game based on the film ET was very badly received by players after its release in time for Christmas in 1982

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A Canadian studio has confirmed to the BBC it will search a former landfill site in New Mexico where Atari's much-criticised ET game may be buried.
Fuel Entertainment has permission from the city of Alamogordo to excavate and is finalising funding for the project.
The video game was among the first to be licensed from a film franchise and was based on the Spielberg film ET.
Despite the success of the film the game was very badly received and Atari suffered huge financial losses.
It was released at Christmas 1982 for the Atari 2600 console but many copies were returned and the game was given terrible reviews.
Shortly afterwards the entire video games industry crashed, as PCs started to become more widespread.
Urban legend
In September 1983 the firm is said to have dumped millions of cartridges at the landfill site and buried them under concrete.
Fuel Entertainment, which has offices in Canada and LA, has six months to carry out its search, to coincide with the 30th anniversary.

What's so bad about the game?

The object of the game is for ET to find parts of a phone to put together in order to "phone home" and be collected by a spaceship as happens at the end of the film.
The character has to avoid falling into any of the many pits which proliferate across every screen, and being caught by a scientist and FBI agent who are in close pursuit throughout.
In a YouTube video, a reviewer, called Aqualung, says the game fails because it is too complicated - and there are too many pits.
"It seems like a decent game on paper but it's impossible to follow without the manual," he said.
"The real reason so many people hate it at the level that they do is that they have no clue what to do. "
"ET was one of the first videogames based on a licensed property, and one of the earliest and most poignant examples of mass over-hyping in digital entertainment," Mike Burns, CEO of Fuel Entertainment, told the BBC.
"With the city of Alamogordo's approval to explore the dump site, we're currently looking forward to moving further into the planning and preparation process."
Atari has never confirmed whether it did dump the games there and journalists were kept away when several trucks arrived from the firm's El Paso plant in Texas.
Local resident Joe Lewandowski, who worked at the site at the time, told the Almogordo Daily News that he saw "games and other Atari related brick-a-brac" bulldozed and buried in concrete.
However Mr Burns has admitted that Fuel Entertainment's search may prove fruitless.
"We don't know exactly what we'll find, but it's bound to be interesting," he said.

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