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Everything posted by bfstats
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To Tavi and anyone monitoring this thread, here is a photo of the "VCS on a chip" taken directly from a rare 2600 Junior (not mine). As you can see, this is a 64-pin chip. The one in the TV-Boy is 48-pin.
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Not derailing at all, Tavi. I am intrigued by your question. Worth further research...
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Here is the board of my NICS Electronics TV-Boy, recently acquired, and works perfectly: I bought it because, to my knowledge, it has never been dumped. I have a suspicion that some of the ROMs in the chip are, perhaps, uniquely modified NTSC versions of PAL binaries. So, I'm anxious to run its contents through CloneSpy. Inquiries with the gentleman who had a similar challenge... you can read about his console dumps here: ...solved his problem with the help of a friend in Slovakia. Cool! But I was hoping to ship it to someone in the US (MUCH less costly) who has the necessary equipment and soldering skill. Here is what he told me needs to be done in order to fulfill my objective: "The ROM could be that DIL32 signed as NS-31(N) TV-BOY(127G). It could be a classic 512KB (4Mbit) mask ROM, so it should be de-soldered, inserted to a programmer with 27C040 support and dumped, then re-soldered onto the board." So, anyone monitoring this Forum live closer to Maryland than Slovakia, have the ability to solder, have the equipment mentioned above and the ability to use it, AND have the inclination to take this on and return the TV-Boy to me in full working order along with the dumped file? Not asking much, am I?! I will pay for shipping in both directions, of course, and compensation can be discussed. I'm prepared to ship it to Slovakia if necessary, but am hoping to find a local solution to save on the overall cost. The separated binaries will be shared with the community if any are previously undiscovered. Please advise...
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SO well said! Thanks, Rick. Update: As of early 2020 no crash has occurred, homebrews are plentiful, and every year there are GREAT (especially in the AtariAge Store) and TERRIBLE (as with EVERY year going back to 1977) new games regardless of programming languages. As members of the community, let's continue to encourage all who have any inclination to make games. Even if their initial releases leave something to be desired, a START may lead to a CONTINUATION which will PERPETUATE the hobby and BENEFIT everyone. So there. Oh, and boxes ROCK!
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Nice, and I agree but... Need a box, Dude.
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Atari 2600 Hacks and Homebrews ROM Collection V1.2
bfstats replied to Impaler_26's topic in Atari 2600
Thanks! Arenafoot, that is one IMPRESSIVE spreadsheet! Much respect. -
Yet another extraordinary and UNIQUE contribution from Omegamatrix!
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Atari 2600 Hacks and Homebrews ROM Collection V1.2
bfstats replied to Impaler_26's topic in Atari 2600
Bump! Anyone able and willing to post a more up-to-date Homebrew ROM pack? I'm looking specifically for the finished Titan Axe ROM. -
Bought a sizable lot from me, and was a genuine pleasure to talk to and to do business with. Great communicator, prompt payment, thorough follow-ups. Highly recommended!
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VCS/2600 Game Rarity by Number of Known Copies
bfstats replied to Blazing Lazers's topic in Atari 2600
Per Joe Santulli, who quoted CommaVid founder Dr. J.M. Bronstein to me, 20 copies of Video Life were made. -
Please be sure to distinguish between "information" (my experiences) and "assumption" (no substantiating data). I have no desire to cast aspersions on possibly-legitimate transactions, if they indeed happened. And I'm not a Cold War conspiracy theorist. I just want my assumptions to be proven wrong... if possible. I was one of his "victims" after mail-ordering Chase the Chuckwagon for $19.95 (it worked even though it was in a Mystique shell), and then sending him another $300 for an extensive list of his unreleased titles. I actually spoke to him on the phone once... BEFORE he got my check. Seemed like a great guy. AFTER he got my check, he never answered his phone again. If he hadn't seemed so hurried during our brief chat, I would have asked how he was able to "acquire" all those prototype ROMs. There is no way to know how he got them or if he ever had them at all, yet clearly he had the Zimag prototypes as Atarimania's photos prove. I'd very much like to know the answer to your question. CTCW was released. He likely owned the cart, dumped the ROM, burned a new chip, and put it into another cart. Homemade piracy. So how about it? Anyone here receive a cart from Pleasant Valley Video that contained an unreleased game?
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When business started waning for Atari in the US, due to the crash or whatever, they marketed more aggressively in the UK and Europe, hence the release of their PAL-only games and, especially, the PAL console pack-in cart, 32-in-1. "Companies" who appeared and released games in the US during and after the crash - namely Zimag (mid '83), Panda (late '83), and Froggo (late '87 in time for Christmas), did the exact opposite of Atari. Most of their releases were NTSC versions of previously-released PAL games in Europe and Asia. As has been pointed out so astutely, copyright laws in other countries are not likely to be the same or as stringent as they are in the US, if they even exist at all. The production of many of the pirated works in Taiwan and South America didn't require a "deal" between "companies". Just buy the legit US-made cart, extract the ROM, alter the graphics slightly, put a new name on it, then sell it ANYWHERE as your own trademarked product! So as legit (or not) as the US companies in question may have been, it is fairly safe to assume their acquisition of the ROM images contained in the games they released was NOT a product of legitimate, legal commerce. Would the US Copyright Office have compared, for example... Zimag's I Want My Mommy to Taiwanese Bit Corp's Open Sesame? or... Panda's Space Canyon to then-defunct Apollo's Space Cavern?, or... Froggo's Task Force to sold-company-to-Bondwell Spectravideo's Gangster Alley? I think not, since each of these releases has its own copyright, according to its labeling, if that can be believed. Would the "Copyright Police" have issued C&D orders (through the courts) to these companies had anyone protested? Probably, but were Bit Corp, Games by Apollo, and Spectravideo going to be the ones protesting? Probably NOT because they were either overseas or out-of-business, their products/copyrights having been sold off, and their execs/copyright holders having moved on. Again, these are, I think, fair assumptions by someone who was monitoring the US video game market closely, especially after the crash, and ESPECIALLY after having bought Space Canyon only to find it was a rip-off of Space Cavern which I already owned. And that's why I didn't buy Lochjaw when it showed up in the bargain bins at Kay-Bee. I already owned Shark Attack. Game-cloning left a bad taste in my mouth and made me wary of every "company" during that era. Some other easy assumptions: When Mystique receives bad press in the US for Custer's Revenge, just start another fly-by-night company and sell in Europe (where consumers aren't so damned uptight), and name it Playaround. When Ultravision fails to get its console into the US marketplace before the crash, just start another company, named Funvision, in Taiwan where you can get away with cloning anything, EVERYTHING, even games by a legit US and still-existing company like Activision. And, since the dreaded Jim Redd of Pleasant Valley Video was able to get his hands on the unreleased prototype ROMs credited to Vidco (including Pizza Chef), surely a pirating South American "company" like CCE would be able to get them, too. Doesn't really seem to matter how although, like the rest of you, I'd really like to KNOW. These assumptions are based on human nature; if there's money to be made, no matter how, there will always be someone who will find a way to make it. But if any of my assumptions have been proven to be incorrect by anyone, please set the record straight.
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Magnificent! Thank you, Dutchman. Next step... box and manual...
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Sold him two 2600 company sets and the transaction could not have been more pleasant. Classy communication and prompt payment. A fine member of our community!
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Fighter Command, Combat II and RealSports Basketball ROMS Released!
bfstats replied to Dutchman2000's topic in Prototypes
...and it was released in 1982 by Warner Bros., another indicator of a possible Atari connection. We'll figure this out yet... -
Fighter Command, Combat II and RealSports Basketball ROMS Released!
bfstats replied to Dutchman2000's topic in Prototypes
Didn't Fox have the license, and couldn't it be that licensing issues may have led to name changes? Examples: Bank Heist was originally called Bonnie and Clyde, then Roaring Twenties. Crash Dive was originally called Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea. Since we're speculating anyway, let's assume anything is possible. -
Fighter Command, Combat II and RealSports Basketball ROMS Released!
bfstats replied to Dutchman2000's topic in Prototypes
Great stuff, Tempest! Nicely done, as usual. Thanks for sharing the ROM, Dutchman! My two cents: Sounds like Firefox. If it had the capability to fire missiles from the back of the jet, that would likely be the proof. Alas, we are left only to speculate... again.
