Atari 5200 | |
Manufacturer | Atari |
Type | Console |
Release Date | November 1982 (NA) |
Discontinued | |
Media | Cartridge |
Save Format | None |
Input Options | 4 Atari 5200 Controllers |
Special Features | Cartridge Input Power Switch RF Output Power Output |
Units Sold | |
Top Selling Game | |
Variants | Atari 5200 2 Port |
Competitor(s) | Intellivision ColecoVision Vectrex |
Predecessor | Atari 2600 |
Successor | Atari 7800 |
The Atari 5200 was Atari's attempted follow up to the Atari 2600. It was released in 1982, and featured a design similar to Atari's own 8 Bit line of computers. Atari also attempted to improve the controllers by making them analog, meaning the longer players held the joystick in one direction the faster the character the player was controlling moved. The controller also featured 360 degrees of movement (a step up from the 2600's 8 directions) and a first in the industry - a pause button. Unfortunately, the controllers had some problems. For one, they were not self-centering, meaning players had to manually move the joystick back to the center each time they wanted their character to stop. Another problem was that these controllers were considered very frail and easily broke. Atari also chose not to release exclusive "must have" games early in the consoles life, opting instead to bring out a bunch of updated 2600 titles (eventually Atari would reverse this decision, but it was too late in the system's life to make enough of a difference). One final thing that turned consumers off the console was that the console was not backwards compatible with Atari 2600 games at launch; an adapter was later released.
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