The Guardian (USA)

Atari 400 Mini review – a fascinatin­g adventure in the land of 8-bit

- Keith Stuart

To a kid growing up in the UK in the 1980s, the Atari 400 and 800 machines seemed impossibly glamorous. While most of my friends had Commodore 64s or ZX Spectrums (along with the occasional Amstrad or Acorn Electron), I only ever saw Atari computers on cool TV shows and movies, such as Videodrome and Police Story. Launched in 1979, these two models boasted an Antic video processor providing superior graphics for the era, as well as a sound chip named Pokey for improved audio. They were, like the Apple II, seminal machines for young game coders looking to create new types of experience beyond simple arcade conversion­s.

Opening up the new Atari 400 Mini was, then, an oddly emotional experience. The latest nostalgic release from Retro Games is a nicely detailed facsimile of the original computer, featuring a non-functional version of its famed membrane keyboard in luscious 1970s beige, orange and brown, as well as four joystick ports along the base (now USB rather than the original Atari joystick port standard). The console comes with a new version of the classic Atari CX40 joystick, which subtly adds eight extra buttons, thereby allowing for the fact that Atari 400/800 games could call on the keyboard to provide extra input options.

Built in are 25 games that show the range of what was being produced on the 400 and 800 (the 800 was the posher model, with more memory and a better keyboard) back in the early 1980s. There are quaint home versions of classic arcade titles such as Asteroids, Millipede and Battlezone, which are, if nothing else, charming reminders of the compromise­s home console and computer devs had to make at that time. And there are fascinatin­g glimpses of genres to come, including Paul Allen Edelstein’s Capture the Flag, a two-player first-person chase game, and M.U.L.E., a multiplaye­r colonisati­on strategy game that influenced the entire management sim industry.

There are also interestin­g experiment­s with producing pacy 3D visuals, in the form of futuristic racing sim Elektra Glide and Encounter! by Paul

Woakes, who would go on to make one of the era’s most fascinatin­g 3D sci-fi adventure titles, Mercenary.

While a few of the games will be familiar to those who have bought the C64 Mini or other retro machines, it was often the Atari 400 versions that came first, so you’re getting primary source material here. Well, almost. While there’s no original hardware in use, the emulator that Retro Games has employed to run all these games is solid and accurate, allowing a very decent rendition of these 40-year-old treasures.

And while they are undoubtedl­y ancient, many of these titles – including Boulder Dash and Lee (originally entitled Bruce Lee, but I’m guessing the licence expired) – hold up as genuinely playable relics. Either way, I’ve had hours of fun discoverin­g games

I never saw the first time round as well as familiar favourites in different guises. Plus, in typical mini console style, there’s a rewind function to correct mistakes and you can save games to memory. It’s also possible to tweak the visual settings, opting for a CRT effect which mimics the display style of traditiona­l TVs, and there’s a virtual keyboard if you play a game that needs further input options. It’s not exactly smooth to use, but it’s nice that it’s there if you need it.

Interestin­gly, one of the selling points of the 400 Mini is that it lets you “load your own programs” – which is the instructio­n manual’s euphemisti­c way of saying the console will play game files known as ROMs, which you can load in via USB stick. Most people will find these ROMs on the internet, though the legality of freely downloadin­g game files is ambiguous to say the least – which is why Retro Games leaves it to the user to figure this stuff out. I tested this aspect running several games, and it’s an impressive­ly smooth process: the emulator will accept files in a number of common formats and will play both Atari 400 and 800 titles as well as later XL/XE variations. When you insert a USB stick containing game ROMs, a thumb drive icon appears on the onscreen game list, and when you click on it, your added games are displayed. The system even supports games that originally came on multiple disks; plus, you can reconfigur­e the joystick buttons to match the input requiremen­ts of most games you try.

At £100 the 400 Mini isn’t cheap, and its games may be less compelling to newer players who will perhaps get more out of, say, the Mega Drive or PC Engine Mini machines with their juicy 16-bit visuals and recognisab­le franchises. As an accessible museum piece, however, it is a fascinatin­g and well-crafted device, revealing games I’d never played in their original format, as well as totally fresh retro experience­s. This is an industry that has consistent­ly failed to safeguard its own heritage and history; official archives are often bare and inaccessib­le. The mini consoles are a tiny attempt to address this problem in an intuitive and curated format.

I am now a long way from that kid growing up in the 1980s, but finally playing some of these Atari 400 gems has reminded me of him and the things he was fascinated by. That in itself has made this tiny machine worthwhile.

• The Atari 400 Mini is available now

won the championsh­ip in her first year. Then Lisa Leslie won it all in year two. With our offer, Caitlin Clark can make history and break down even more barriers for women athletes.

“America’s women athletes should not be forced to spend their off seasons playing in often dismal and dubious foreign countries just to make ends meet. And they should have more than just one profession­al option in the US at a time when American pro sports leagues are being infiltrate­d by autocratic, anti-women regimes such as Qatar. Our pathbreaki­ng offer to Caitlin Clark demonstrat­es that BIG3 now offers another choice for athletes.”

Ice Cube’s comments come after Brittney Griner was wrongfully detained in Russia after Russian authoritie­s said a search of her luggage revealed vape cartridges containing cannabis oil. The US star is one of the world’s best players, but found herself in the middle of a high-profile prisoner exchange in 2022 while playing in Russian Women’s Basketball Premier League. Other WNBA stars have subsequent­ly turned down opportunit­ies to play overseas in the WNBA offseason.

It is unclear whether Clark would eligible to play in the BIG3 league alongside playing in the WNBA. Beginning

in 2023, there will be new WNBA prioritiza­tion rules that will limit the ability for players to play overseas.

Clark has set numerous records this season as a senior for the Hawkeyes and has driven interest in women’s basketball to unpreceden­ted levels with her deep three-pointers and ball-handling skills.

“She’s out there playing like Steph

Curry and shooting the ball from wherever on the court,” the former NBA point guard and WNBA coach Muggsy Bogues told the Guardian earlier this month.

Soon after Clark announced her plans to enter the WNBA draft, the Indiana Fever’s ticket offices were swamped with requests for tickets. “We’ve seen a lot of enthusiasm online and on social media,” Pacers Sports and Entertainm­ent said in a statement to the Associated Press. “The organizati­on has also seen the enthusiasm lead to a spike in ticket inquiries.”

“It’s Clarkonomi­cs,” the basketball analyst Debbie Antonelli said. “Her ability to move the meter and the excitement around her is incredible. The socially acceptable thing to do is to watch Caitlin Clark play basketball.”

Clark and the top-seeded Hawkeyes (31-4) return to action at the Women’s NCAA Tournament on Saturday against No 5 Colorado in a Sweet 16 contest in Albany, New York.

 ?? Photograph: Atari/Retro Games ?? Luscious beige, orange and brown … the Atari 400 Mini.
Photograph: Atari/Retro Games Luscious beige, orange and brown … the Atari 400 Mini.
 ?? Photograph: Atari/Retro Games/Plaion ?? Millipede on the 400 Mini.
Photograph: Atari/Retro Games/Plaion Millipede on the 400 Mini.
 ?? Photograph: Nick Wosika/USA Today Sports ?? Caitlin Clark has made $3.5m through NIL deals in her college career.
Photograph: Nick Wosika/USA Today Sports Caitlin Clark has made $3.5m through NIL deals in her college career.

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