Bill Loguidice's Blog, page 80
November 2, 2017
Paradox Weekend Sale is LIVE in the Humble Store – up to 75% off!
The Paradox Weekend Sale , featuring Cities: Skylines, Stellaris, Tyranny, Steel Division, Crusader Kings, Magicka, and so much more, just launched in the Humble Store and will be live through Monday, November 6 at 10 a.m. Pacific time. Here’s the link.
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November 1, 2017
Atari Flashback 8 Gold: Activision Edition (2017) – The Official Game List
What follows is the official finalized game list for the retail version of the 2017 release of the Atari Flashback 8 Gold: Activision Edition, which will join the other AtGames products at retailers everywhere later this month after having a period of exclusive availability at Walmart.com. The all-new Atari Flashback 8 Gold: Activision Edition features 130 built-in games, including marquee Activision and Imagic classics. These games include legends like Activision’s Pitfall!, which is celebrating its 35th anniversary, and Imagic’s legendary shooter, Demon Attack, as well as many other all-time Atari 2600 classics like Centipede™, Chopper Command™, Enduro™, and River Raid™. Two high performance 2.4ghz wireless controllers, styled after the Atari 2600 originals, are included, as well as two legacy controller ports for optional wired joysticks or paddle controllers. Other features for the Atari Flashback 8 Gold: Activision Edition include 720p HDMI output, scan line filtering, and a save/pause/rewind feature for every game.
Here’s the list:
3D Tic-Tac-Toe
Adventure
Adventure II
Air Raiders ™
Air·Sea Battle
Aquaventure
Armor Ambush ™
Asteroids
Astroblast ™
Atari Climber
Atlantis
Backgammon
Basketball
Beamrider
Black Jack
Bowling
Boxing
Breakout
Bridge
Canyon Bomber
Centipede
Championship Soccer
Checkers
Chopper Command
Circus Atari
Combat
Combat Two
Cosmic Commuter
Crackpots
Crystal Castles
Dark Cavern ™
Decathlon
Demon Attack
Demons to Diamonds
Desert Falcon
Dodge ‘Em
Dolphin
Double Dunk
DragonFire
Dragster
Enduro
Fatal Run
Fishing Derby
Flag Capture
Football
Freeway
Frog Pond
Frogs and Flies
Frostbite
Fun with Numbers
Golf
Grand Prix
Gravitar
H.E.R.O.
Hangman
Haunted House
Home Run
Human Cannonball
Ice Hockey
Indy 500
International Soccer ™
Kaboom!
Keystone Kapers
Laser Blast
Maze Craze
Megamania
Millipede
Miniature Golf
Missile Command
MotoRodeo
Night Driver
Off-the-Wall
Oink!
Outlaw
Pitfall!
Plaque Attack
Pong (Video Olympics)
Pressure Cooker
Private Eye
Radar Lock
Realsports Baseball
Realsports Basketball
Realsports Soccer
Realsports Volleyball
Return to Haunted House
River Raid
River Raid II
Saboteur
Save Mary
Sea Battle ™
Seaquest
Secret Quest
Skiing
Sky Diver
Sky Jinks
Slot Machine
Slot Racers
Solaris
Space Attack ™
Space Shuttle
Space War
Spider Fighter
Sprintmaster
Stampede
Star Ship
Star Strike ™
Starmaster
Steeplechase
Stellar Track
Street Racer
Submarine Commander
Super Baseball
Super Breakout
Super Challenge ™ Baseball
Super Challenge ™ Football
Super Football
Surround
Sword Fight ™
Swordquest: Earthworld
Swordquest: Fireworld
Swordquest: Waterworld
Tempest
Tennis
Video Checkers
Video Chess
Video Pinball
Warlords
Wizard
Yars’ Return
Yars’ Revenge
Finally, as a nice addition to this excellent hardware release, I had the pleasure to work on an official paperback book for Prima Games called, Atari Flashback: The Essential Companion. While it contains plenty of information on the latest AtGames Atari Flashback products, it’s actually a great general Atari 2600 resource as well, acting as a type of missing manual for over 65 Atari games. Of course, there is a lot more to this highly visual book, including Tips & Tricks and Fun Facts. It’s priced at just $19.99, which includes a mobile-friendly eGuide version for a second-screen experience.

Atari Flashback: The Essential Companion (2017)
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Pay your own price multi-genre fiction books
Click here for the link. Offer expires 2017-11-15 11:00:00 PST.
Multi-genre multipass. This bundle is your ticket to new worlds! Immerse yourself in horror, science fiction, fantasy, and mystery from our friends at Night Shade Books. You’ll find tales by George R. R. Martin, Paolo Bacigalupi, Neil Gaiman, Jane Yolen, Stephen King, Kelly Link, Orson Scott Card, Ray Bradbury, Ursula K. Le Guin, Jeff Vandermeer, Brandon Sanderson, and even Jack Kerouac! (The bundle includes a lot of other fantastic authors too, but we’re starting to run out of room.)
Pay what you want. All together, these books would cost over $212. Here at Humble Bundle, you choose the price and increase your contribution to upgrade your bundle! This bundle has a minimum $1 purchase.
Read them anywhere. These books are available in PDF, ePUB, and MOBI formats, meaning you can read them anywhere at any time. Instructions and a list of recommended reading programs can be found here.
Support charity. Choose where the money goes – between the publisher, and, if you’d like, a charity of your choice via the PayPal Giving Fund. If you like what we do, you can leave us a Humble Tip too!
The post Pay your own price multi-genre fiction books appeared first on Armchair Arcade.
October 31, 2017
Pay your own price Humble Jumbo Bundle featuring Wasteland 2!
Here’s the link. The offer expires 2017-11-14 11:00:00 PST.
The jumbo one-oh. The Humble Jumbo Bundle hits double digits! Party with us and an awesome lineup of games, including Wasteland 2: Director’s Cut, Kingdom: New Lands, How to Survive 2, and more. The big 1-0! They grow up so fast, don’t they?
Pay what you want. Normally, the total cost for these games is as much as $174. Here at Humble Bundle, though, you choose the price!
Redeem on Steam. All of the games in this bundle are available on Steam for Windows, and some for Mac and Linux too. Epistory – Typing Chroniclesis available DRM-free in the first tier; pay $1 or more to access Steam keys. Please check out the full system requirements here prior to purchasing.
Support charity. Choose where the money goes – between the developers and the Call Of Duty Endowment via the PayPal Giving Fund. If you like the bundle or like what we do, you can leave us a Humble Tip too!
The post Pay your own price Humble Jumbo Bundle featuring Wasteland 2! appeared first on Armchair Arcade.
October 30, 2017
Pay your own price Humble Mobile Bundle: Halloween!
Click here for the offer. Offer expires 2017-11-13 11:00:00 PST.
All Humble’s Eve. We love this time of year! If you like to get creeped out too, we’ve got a perfect mobile bundle for you. Pick up a selection of mysterious, sinister, or downright horrifying games for your Android device, turn out the lights, and get spooky!
Pay what you want. Here at Humble Bundle, you choose the price and increase your contribution to upgrade your bundle! This bundle has a minimum $1 purchase.
DRM-free for Android. All games in this bundle are available DRM-free exclusively for Android. Some games may have minimum device requirements in order to run properly. For more information, please check the full system requirements here. Android is a trademark of Google Inc.
Support charity. Choose where the money goes – between the developer and, if you’d like, a charity of your choice via the PayPal Giving Fund. If you like the bundle or like what we do, you can leave us a Humble Tip too!
The post Pay your own price Humble Mobile Bundle: Halloween! appeared first on Armchair Arcade.
October 26, 2017
Get Guns of Icarus Online free, plus 90% off other games!
The Humble Store is giving away Guns of Icarus Online for FREE for 48 hours! This promotion will end on Saturday, October 28 at 10 a.m. Pacific time.
The Haunted Halloween Sale also just launched and will be live through Thursday, November 2 at 10 a.m. Pacific time.
The post Get Guns of Icarus Online free, plus 90% off other games! appeared first on Armchair Arcade.
October 25, 2017
Pay what you want RPG game book bundle
Click here for the bundle options. The offer expires 2017-11-08 11:00:00 PST.
The tabletops have turned. WARMACHINE and HORDES are dynamic tabletop miniatures games set in the steam-powered fantasy world of the Iron Kingdoms. We’ve teamed up with Privateer Press for a library of ebooks to immerse you in these fantastic realms. The battlefield has been leveled, and victory lies before you!
WARMACHINE and HORDES use the same rules, and can be played independently or against each other by two or more players. WARMACHINE triumphs through tactical resource management, harnessing advanced magic, technology, and mighty mechanical constructs. Beyond the boundaries of the industrialized world, the fierce warriors and monstrous warbeasts of HORDES risk predictable strategy for the prospect of powerful rewards.
Pay what you want. All together, these books would cost over $382. Here at Humble Bundle, you choose the price and increase your contribution to upgrade your bundle! This bundle has a minimum $1 purchase.
Read them anywhere. These books are available in PDF formats, and many as ePUB and MOBI too, meaning you can read them anywhere at any time. Instructions and a list of recommended reading programs can be found here.
Support charity. Choose where the money goes – between the publisher, the American Red Cross, and, if you’d like, a charity of your choice via the PayPal Giving Fund. If you like what we do, you can leave us a Humble Tip too!
The post Pay what you want RPG game book bundle appeared first on Armchair Arcade.
October 24, 2017
Name your own price classic adventure games and big Daedalic sale!
Here’s the link. The offer expires 2017-11-12 11:00:00 PST.
Monday, Tuesday, Devsday. Day of the Devs is an annual free festival in San Francisco. Hosted by Double Fine and iam8bit, it unites the gaming and development communities to celebrate the year’s indie hits (and discover new titles)! If you can’t make it to the event for the music, treats, and games on November 11, fret not! We’re bringing music, treats, and games to you.
Pay what you want. Normally, the total cost for these games is as much as $131. Here at Humble Bundle, though, you choose the price!
On Steam and DRM-free All of the games in this bundle are available on Steam for Windows, and some for Mac and Linux, too. Several of the games are also available DRM-free for various platforms. Pay $1 or more to access Steam keys. Please check out the full system requirements here prior to purchasing.
Support charity. Choose where the money goes – between the developers, Children’s Miracle Network Hospital through Extra Life and, if you’d like, a charity of your choice via the PayPal Giving Fund. If you like the bundle or like what we do, you can leave us a Humble Tip too!
The Daedalic Publisher Sale also just launched in the Humble Store and will be live through Friday, October 27 at 10 a.m. Here’s the link!
The post appeared first on Armchair Arcade.
October 23, 2017
Pay your own price Cloud Computing book bundle
Here’s the link. The offer expires 2017-11-06 11:00:00 PST.
Stratus, cumulus, humbleonimbus. Our newest ebook bundle is all about cloud computing. Packt Publishing has condensed a lot of information into these books, so if you’re a little hazy on the details, cut through the fog with titles like Designing AWS Environments, Implementing Azure Solutions, AWS Administration – The Definitive Guide, Mastering OpenStack, and more.
Pay what you want. All together, these books would cost over $830. Here at Humble Bundle, you choose the price and increase your contribution to upgrade your bundle! This bundle has a minimum $1 purchase.
Read them anywhere. These books are available in PDF, ePUB, and MOBI formats, meaning you can read them anywhere at any time. The videos come in MP4 format. Instructions and a list of recommended reading programs can be found here.
Support charity. Choose where the money goes – between the publisher, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and, if you’d like, a charity of your choice via the PayPal Giving Fund. If you like what we do, you can leave us a Humble Tip too!
The post Pay your own price Cloud Computing book bundle appeared first on Armchair Arcade.
October 20, 2017
Why I decided to auction off my outsized, decades-built videogame and computer collection
After I made the announcement on social media that I was auctioning off my videogame and computer collection, I received a lot of questions both public and private simply asking, “Why?”. Before I answer that, some background.
I was born in 1972, so grew up as personal computing technology in all its forms grew up. Whether early videogames or early computers, I was pretty much there every step of the way. As I’ve recounted in multiple interviews, one of my earliest memories is sitting on my mother’s lap and happily playing with some type of pocket calculator. I couldn’t have been more than 3 (I also loved messing with the kitchen phone on the wall; I even accidentally called the plumber once). After we got our first Pong system a few years later – a Sears Tele-Games model – my passion for this type of emerging technology was well and truly set. Even then, I couldn’t get my dad to hook it up to the TV enough times (for some reason it wasn’t permanently attached) to satisfy my desire to play it.
Fast forward a few years to age 7 and using my Communion money to buy my very own Atari Video Computer System (aka, 2600). My mom thought the purchase foolish and that it would be something I’d soon tire of like my other toys. Even with initially only having the two player-only Combat cartridge, I absolutely did not tire of it (many articles, books, and a movie later, and helping to work on the latest versions of the Atari Flashback systems, I’d say that initial investment – and continued passion – paid off).
I was a voracious reader of Electronic Games magazine, a publication that was extraordinarily influential to me, starting with my initial purchase of the June 1983 issue in a local Foodtown supermarket. It covered just about every noteworthy videogame and computer system of the time, and I’d often “drool” at the various screenshots, or, fairly common for the time, artist renderings/mockups. Between the magazine, the occasional arcade game, and my Atari 2600, my interest in getting to experience all of the other games and platforms grew ever more intense. Naturally, being a kid, my ability to actually use all of that stuff, let alone buy it, was supremely limited.
In any case, I got my first computer, a Commodore VIC-20, when I was 10, which was soon replaced by a Commodore 64. My friends also started to get systems of their own around this same time, with Apple II’s, Atari 8-bit’s, TI-99/4a’s, Mattel Aquarius’s, Mattel Intellivisions, and others being added to what I would get at least some first-hand experience with. At a local Odd Lots, I was able to get a ColecoVision.
Without adding more length to the story, needless to say, my appetite for this stuff was never really sated. Even before it really had a name, I was a videogame and computer collector. I had little interest in letting go of the systems I had and getting to experience other systems either at my friends’ houses or at school, only added to my desires. Here and there I would get more games and soon enough, more systems, particularly as the 1980’s wore on and other people were moving on from them.
Into the 1990’s, it was still fairly easy to find great stuff at yard sales, flea markets, computer shows, and the like, sometimes for just a few dollars. My collection continued to grow, although what I could acquire was slowed by college and not really having the time/space to make use of much of it. Even when I first moved out of my parents’ house at 23, my first apartment could maybe hold four or five systems comfortably. Eventually I was able to move to a condo with my future wife, then a house, then a bigger house, being able to liberate the rest of my collection from my parents’ basement and garage along the way.
After getting my first book deal in 2005, I used that as an excuse to greatly expand my collection since I could now also have a dedicated room for all my stuff (this is the “then a house” one). It was indeed for “research” and “first-hand experience” and what-not, but it was also because I really wanted it. Of course, by this time, eBay was already a big deal, so that became both a blessing and curse to collectors everywhere. You could find far more stuff easily, but it was no longer for a low price. That also effectively killed most other value-based sources that proved so fruitful in the 1980’s and 1990’s, like the aforementioned flea markets and computer shows.
Although my collection grew dramatically in that time, it was still relatively self-contained to just one room. That didn’t make moving to the next house (this is the “a bigger house” one) any easier, though. In fact, my collection was among the last things we moved, with help from various extended family members. It was definitely a burden. Unfortunately, the bigger house we moved to was yes, bigger, now with an enormous partially finished basement. My collection could and would now get completely unhinged, particularly as Armchair Arcade grew, I wrote more articles, and of course, worked on more books and the movie. More excuses to make use of my stuff meant even more stuff.
Now, as I implied earlier, I’ve pretty much had an interest in every aspect of videogames and computers. I’d say the vast majority of collectors and enthusiasts limit themselves to one or a handful of platforms to focus their attention on. For me, that was never enough. I truly loved it all. My collection encompasses systems from every part of the world and every era. I’m equipped to run systems with just about any power or display requirement. I could satisfy every curiosity.
What I think would probably be most surprising to those not into this kind of stuff, is that not only is there all the original hardware, software, accessories, etc., available, but practically every system – including some of the most obscure stuff imaginable – has thriving communities creating new things. Yes, new software, new ways to better use the old equipment in modern times (flash carts, connectivity, etc.), and more. That only adds to the things to get. While this can be manageable if you limit yourself to a handful of platforms, multiply that by hundreds of platforms and you see where the problem comes in.
Now, we get to the crux of the matter. I was always pretty organized with my stuff. This was relatively easy for me even into the early 2000’s. Unfortunately, once I had that basement to fill and different rooms to work on and use different systems, that’s where the problem came in. As demands on my time grew – at one point I was working on three books at the same time – as I would use these various systems, I’d either be too tired or too disinterested in putting everything back neatly. The more stuff, the harder it is to easily use without unpacking a bunch of stuff, moving other stuff, etc. My basement hasn’t recovered since, since I haven’t had the many days (or energy) to devote to getting it in order. And even with as large as my basement is, I don’t even think I have the room for everything that’s there anymore. That’s what leaving stuff around does — makes it seem like you have room where you really don’t. The floor is not a storage place.
I have a full-time job and several side jobs (fortunately, passion, not necessity), as well as a wife and three kids. My passions for videogame and computer stuff has never waned, either, so I have all the latest consoles and a great gaming laptop. All of those things take time and it’s time I want to spend on them, which leaves very little time left for older stuff, particularly older stuff that’s just not easily accessible and/or quick to set up.
In fact, one of the reasons for my comfort in moving away from physical items now has been the trend in modern consoles and computers to be all digital. Digital stuff – no matter how many thousands of items you actually have – takes up no physical space (let’s ignore for a moment what ownership of something digital really means). That’s in sharp contrast to how things previously worked. It also helps that I genuinely enjoy how the modern stuff works, and in my middle-aged adult life, convenience is something I prize since my time is more precious than ever.
One thing I’d like to stress through all of this is that I never put my collection ahead of more important things. I always placed my wife and eventually kids as my first priorities, and never sacrificed working hard at a good job and doing right by both me and my family. I resolved to succeed at my passion projects/interests without sacrificing the stuff that I deemed truly important. And even as my collection became untenable, I never let it spill out beyond the basement (at least much!). So yes, while I have an all-consuming passion, I still made sure it had its limits.
So what does all this mean? It means that psychologically I’m in a great place since I can continue to pursue my passions, albeit with far less stuff bogging me down. By partnering with Bodnar’s Auction, I can get rid of everything, save for a precious few systems with minimal extras. I no longer have to feel guilty about keeping stuff I’ll never get to use (no matter how much I want to) out of the hands of people who might make more use of it. Unfortunately, I’m not taking requests for individual items, since that defeats the purpose of doing this all in one shot. Bodnar’s Auction has agreed to put my 100 best items up (although, honestly, that’s going to be hard for me to figure out) for auction online as well as at physical auction. Everything else will be strictly physical auction. The timetable right now looks like the auction will take place some time in March or April 2018, and may be part of their grand opening event at what they expect to be a new permanent location (still in New Jersey).
As always, I’ll be happy to answer any questions. I also ask that when the time comes, to please help me spread the word. I’ll definitely be posting about this again once the auction is officially scheduled. While obviously I have a financial interest in making this a success, I’m still first and foremost a member of the community, and I really do want to see the people who would appreciate this stuff the most get it before anyone else. As good of a decision this is for me, it was definitely not an easy one.
For those interested, here’s a small selection of the platforms that should be part of the auction (of course there’s tons of boxed software and accessories, collectibles, etc.):
3Com Palm IIIx
Acorn BBC Master/Micro/Electron
Amdek PC
Amstrad CPC464/6128/GX4000/PPC640
APF Imagination Machine/M1000/MP1000/TV Fun
Apple II/IIGS
Apple Mac
Arcade Retro Collecting Multiple Classic Computer (MCC-216)
Archos 7 (6700)
Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101-A1/EeePC 1000HE
AT&T PC 6300
Atari 8-bit/ST/Stacy/Falcon/2600/5200/7800/XEGS/Flashback/Jaguar/Lynx/Portfolio/Video Pinball
AtGames (various)
Bally Professional Arcade (Astrocade)
Briel Computers Altair 8800 Micro/Micro-Kim/PockeTerm/replica 1
Cambridge Computer Z88
Coleco Adam/ColecoVision/Telstar
Commodore 128/64/Amiga/PET/CDTV/CD32/Plus-4/C16/SX-64/VIC-20
Compaq Deskpro
Cyberpower GUA290
Cybiko Wireless Entertainment System/Xtreme
Dell (various)
Dick Smith Wizzard (VTech CreatiVision)
Dream Authentics Excalibur Home Arcade Machine
dreamGEAR Plug ‘n’ Play 50 in 1
EB Excalibur Fox Sports Football Key Chain
Emerson Arcadia 2001
Enterprise 128
Entex Handhelds
Epoch Cassette Vision/Super Cassette Vision
Epson HX-20/Epson PX-8
Exidy Sorcerer
Fairchild Channel F System II/Video Entertainment System (VES)
FC Mobile FC Mobile II
Franklin ACE 1200
Gadgets Small, Inc. Spectre GCR
Game Consoles Worldwide GCW Zero
Game Sporz TV Wireless Boxing
GamePark Holdings GP2X F-200
Gateway CX210X Tablet PC
GCE Vectrex
Generic PCs
Generic Pocket Arcade 256 Games in 1
Generic Talking Brick Game 118 in 1 – E-118T
Gold Leopard King (GLK) GLK Book Education Computer M08
Grundig Super Play Computer 4000 (Interton VC 4000)
Heathkit HERO JR RT-1 (robot)
Hewlett-Packard HP TouchSmart IQ524/HP-85/Pavilions
Hyperkin GenMobile/NES RetroN 1/RetroN 5
IBM 5155/5150/PCjr
indieGO Odroid XU4
Intelligent Game MPT-03 Home Entertainment Centre
Interact Home Computer System (Model “R” – 16K)
INTV Corp. Intellivision III
Jakks Pacific Dora the Explorer TV Game/Namco TV Games/Star Wars Blaster Strike Video Game
jojoultimate Mini Universal Supergun (SuperGun, super gun)
Kaypro Kaypro 4 (Kaypro 4 ’84)/Kaypro II
Konami Konami Live Online Game Controller!/Handhelds
Laser 128 EX-2/Compumate2
Leapfrog Leapster2
Lego Robotics Invention System 2.0
Magnavox Odyssey/300/Odyssey2
Mammoth Toys Commodore 64 30 Games in One Joystick! (DTV)
MatchMaster MMDB04
Mattel Aquarius/Radofin version/Baseball/Enhanced Computer System (ECS)/HyperScan/Intellivision/II
Maximite BasicBoxX (BBX) Computer
MBR Control Dynamics S-100 Bus Chassis
Memorex Spongebob Media Player
Memorex Video Information System Player (VIS)
MFJ Video Effects Titler 1480B
MGA Entertainment (various)
Microsoft Xbox/360/One
Midway TouchMaster 5000 (arcade machine)
Milton Bradley MBX Expansion System/Microvision
Multitech Micro-Professor 1 (MPF-1)
MX Plus Android TV Box
Navman PiN Pocket PC
NEC Mobile Pro 750C/PC Engine Super Grafx/PC-6601/PC-8001A/PC-FX/NEC Trek PC-6001(A)/Duo/Express/16
Next Thing Co. PocketCHIP (PocketC.H.I.P.)
Nintendo 3DS/64/DS/GBA/GB/GBC/GC/SNES/NES/Famicom/Wii/Wii U
Nixdorf Computer LK-3000
Nokia N-Gage QD
Ohio Art Etch A Sketch Animator 2000
Ohio Scientific Challenger 1P
OnLive OnLive Game System
Oric Oric-1
Osborne Executive (OCC-2)/Osborne 1 (OCC-1)
Oscar Vermeulen KIM Uno/PiDP-8/I
Packard Bell Platinum
Palm Z22
Panasonic FZ1 3DO Interactive Multiplayer/JR-200U Personal Computer/RL-H1400 HHC
Philips CDI/Videopac G7200/Videopac+ G7401
Pimoroni Picade
Pioneer LaserActive
Pro Tech Video Game System
Radica Sega Menacer/Space Invaders
Radio Shack Color Computer/2/3/LCD Space Rescue/MC-10 (Micro Color Computer)/TRS-80 Pocket Computer (PC-2/PC-4)
Raspberry Pi
RCA Studio II Home TV Programmer
REP Electronics GameMid (Game Mid)
Retro-Bit Retro Duo V2.0 Black (RetroDuo)
Royal (TA) Alphatronic PC (CP/M)
Sears Video Arcade (Tele-Games)
Sega 32X/CD 2/Dreamcast/GG/SMS/Saturn/Genesis/Nomad/SC-3000
Sharp MZ-800 (MZ-821)/Twin Famicom
Sinclair QL/ZX Spectrum/+2/+3/ZX80/ZX81
SNK Neo Geo Advanced Entertainment System (AES)/Neo Geo Pocket Color
Sony CD-I CD Interactive Intelligent Discman IVO-V11/HB-75P/HB-F1XD/PS1/PS2/PS3/PSP/TV
Sord Creative Computer M5 (Socius, CGL M5)
Spectravideo CompuMate/SV-318/SV-328
Tandy 1000/2000/Model 100-102-200/4/4P/I
Tano Dragon
Tapwave Zodiac 2
Tatung Einstein 256
Team Ubi Ubi
TeleGames Personal Arcade DINA 2 in One
Texas Instruments Compact Computer (CC-40)/T-58/TI-74/99-4a
Thomson MO5
Tiger Game.com
Tiger R-Zone
Tiger Telematics Gizmondo
Timex Sinclair 1000/1500/2068
Tomy Tutor 16K Computer
Toy Quest Go Go TV Video VISION
Toymax Activision TV Games
Unisonic Champion 2711 Series
Valentin Angelovski Flea86 (rev 2.1, prototype)
Velleman Classic TV Game (MK121 NTSC)
VideoBrain Computer Company VideoBrain Family Computer Model 101
View-Master Interactive Vision
Vizio Co-Star Stream Player/I.Q. Unlimited Computer/Laser 310 Color Computer/Laser 50/PC-5/Socrates Educational Video System/V.Smile/VZ200
Watara Supervision
Worlds of Wonder Action Max
XaviX XaviXPORT
Yamaha CX-5M II/128U Music Computer (MSX 1)/CX5M Music Computer (MSX 1)
Yobo Gameware FC Game Console
ZAPiT Games Game Wave
Zenith Z-100 (ZF-120-xx All-In-One Computer)
The post Why I decided to auction off my outsized, decades-built videogame and computer collection appeared first on Armchair Arcade.