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The Atari 400 is a home computer that first launched in 1979 with a 1.79 MHz 8-bit processor, 8 KB of RAM, four joystick ports, a cartridge slot, and an unusual membrane keyboard.
The Atari 400 and 800 were the first machines that truly bridged the divide between video game players and home computer enthusiasts. Breakout: How Atari 8-Bit Computers Defined a Generation is ...
Atari 400 Mini review: beige beauty is a modern way to discover Atari's niche 8-bit era Atari's newest mini console endeavour makes 25 8-bit titles more accessible, alongside some appreciated ...
With The400 Mini, the Atari 400 is making a comeback in a compact version. On board: 25 games and lots of 8-bit nostalgia. We have tested it.
As a result, Atari's 8-bit systems quickly fell by the wayside in the early 1980s. The 400 Mini is able to emulate the whole Atari 8-bit range and the 5200 console.
Atari's new, adorable The400 Mini ($119.99) emulates the entire range of Atari 8-bit computers, from the 400 and 800 through the XL and XE lines, plus 1982’s 5200 SuperSystem and the 1987 XE ...
The new Atari 400 Mini takes that to another level, even if it comes with some trade-offs. The new retro system takes the NES Classic Edition route, shrinking the original 8-bit Atari computer ...
Atari 400 Mini $100 (was $120) Atari 400 Mini What’s great about the Atari 400 Mini is that it can emulate all Atari 8-bit systems, including the 400, 800XL, and 5200.
This site has everything, from assembling Atari 8-bit computers based on the 6502 chip, to programming them in BASIC and assembly, to running official and homebrew games on the hardware itself.
Worse, a few major titles never made it over to the Atari 8-bit platform at all. As a certifiable role-playing game nut, I lamented the lack of Wizardry, Might and Magic, and Bard’s Tale games.