Atari Files For Bankruptcy
First time accepted submitter halls-of-valhalla writes "Atari was one of the very first video game companies, starting way back in 1972. However, this long-running name that brought us titles like Pong and Asteroids is having major financial issues. Atari's United States branches have filed for bankruptcy on Sunday. This bankruptcy is an attempt to separate themselves from their French parent which has quite a bit of debt. The plan is to split from the French parent and find a buyer to form a private company."
GAME OVER PLAYER 1
This is formerly Infogrames, who bought rights to the Atari name after the original went bankrupt.
A little basic fact-checking would have fixed this entry, "editors".
Hail Eris, full of mischief...
E pluribus sanguinem
I'm sure their patents are expired by now, but does anyone know if the entity currently named "Atari" still holds copyright to the old games?
Infogrames bought not just the name, but the company. Yes, it's been through a number of acquisitions and mergers. So yes, the current Atari does, in fact, own the copyrights on the 70s and 80s games that everyone associates with it, and it is still the same company. It's not just a brand that someone is licensing around (like RCA).
But you're right, it hasn't really been Atari in the emotional sense since at least 1998 when Hasbro bought them.
It's also why people go to Chuck E. Cheese's.
I thought is was for the quality food and comforting screams of agitated children. Pew pew pew.
Brent is exactly correct here: http://pvponline.com/comic/2008/12/08/they-love-the-80s/
All that is necessary for the triumph of good is that evil men do nothing.
Name your company Atari.
It's also why people go to Chuck E. Cheese's.
Gonna have to explain that one further. Locally when the weather is bad, its by far the cheapest place to take the whole family for "fun" which also has a liquor license, so the local cops are continually breaking up fights between dirtbags, which is not exactly great PR so its driving everyone except the dirtbags away. "Oh you went to CeC last night, were the cops there?" Basically if mom and/or dad are prime dive bar customers, but they have the kids that weekend, they can go to CeC and get drunk while the kids play. On the other hand its actually a pretty nice place to visit early enough in the day before the parents get drunk. If they would just close around sundown or so it would result in much higher class/lower crime clientele. Also the local news rag is offended that they aren't paying for enough advertising, so they highlight every minor problem to "motivate" them to purchase more advertising...
I'm guessing the analogy is something like Atari is more fun when you're drunk/baked or ?
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
Now Atari. My formative years have just received a major nutshot.
"ET, now only on the Apple iPad"
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
And it used to be called Infogrames, known for the 90s PC "Alone in the Dark" saga. Then they became a publisher and aquired the Atari brand to get their products more visibility.
With a music video done by Neil Diamond!
"More juice..."
That would be cool, especially if they used the fixed version.
Well, cool except for the platform exclusivity... That's never cool.
Required reading for internet skeptics
Perhaps something to do with Nolan Bushnell starting both companies?
"When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
Atari was named for a term in the game "go" in which a stone or group of stones are in danger of being taken by one's opponent and the player has only one option available to avoid this outcome . Kind of like bankruptcy. So it seems that Atari has finally reached a state of Atari.
"ET, now only on the Apple iPad"
ET would hate the iPad. Anyone can magically make it do stuff whether their finger glows or not.
What'chu talkin 'bout, Willis?
sig: sauer
Personally, I've been in a Chuckie's exactly two times. The first time was due to ignorance. I didn't like the food, and I damned sure didn't like the kids squealing all around me. It was just to juvenile, and unsupervised. The second time, I was pretty much dragged in, and the experience was even worse.
I guess it's been 25 years since I've been in one, and there is no nostalgia or any similar emotion that might make me venture in again. Some kind of serious money offer might induce me to walk through their doors again. Serious, I said. I'm not going in for a hundred bucks, thank you very much.
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
Barring uncovering something nasty during due diligence, I'd pay $0.25 for them if all unsecured debt and unwanted future obligations were canceled. Now if they demanded two quarters, that's another story.
Remember, a quarter isn't worth what it was in Atari's heyday.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
Atari has been through bankruptcy before, and will likely go through it again.
Why? Because somebody will buy the name, which still resonates for some reason.
It's also why people go to Chuck E. Cheese's.
Coincidently or not, both of those companies were founded by the same guy, Nolan Bushnell.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
What a cool thing! And a very, very good analysis.
I really feel for Warshaw. A couple more weeks. A little playtesting.
I also love how now code archaeology has become a thing. This is a highly interesting read. Grab a pot of coffee and waste an hour.
20 minutes into the future
why should "we" do that? Can't "you" do it yourself?
Please login to access my lawn
Eat the power pill!
It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
I am pretty happy I got an Atari Flashback a few years ago. It even has marks on the board so you can use it with the old cartridges. I will have to do that one day when I get some time.
See comments above about the cluster&*(# about licensing issues.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
There are many, many reasons why we should go back to the original copyright term of 14 years. None of those reasons benefit the current super-wealthy corporation conglomerates that continue to lobby the government for even more draconian copyright rules and enforcement practices...so don't expect it to happen anytime soon.
I'd pay ten bucks for a DVD with all of Atari's old games on it. It could lie around on a shelf, and when I got bored, I'd browse through the library, and play something. But, I can't imagine actually BUYING a game in the store for twenty bucks. They weren't worth that much back in 1980's!
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
Ever seen the Child's Play movies? I wouldn't want Chucky at my birthday either.
Atari has filed for bankruptcy several times now. Each an every time, someone buys the name and some IP, then they go bankrupt soon after. It's a curse!
Yeah, I wish the "hacks" forum on AtariAge had more of this kind of break-down. You sometimes find good discussions about problems and solutions though.
Required reading for internet skeptics
Infogrames bought not just the name, but the company [..] it is still the same company.
Not really, the "company" Infogrames bought and "continued" was merely Hasbro Interactive- and they themselves were merely an unrelated company that had purchased the Atari name and IP.
Quick rehash... the original "true" Atari Inc. ran into trouble following the 1983 US video game crash. It was split into arcade and consumer divisions; the former was "Atari Games" (later sold to Midway, who renamed it and eventually shut it down in 2003).
The latter was bought by Jack Tramiel and became "Atari Corp.", a legally separate company that nonetheless could still be seen as a spiritual continuation of Atari Inc's computer and console division.
Fast forward to the mid-90s, and all Atari Corp's recent products have flopped. The company is cash rich, but with no future, so Tramiel "merges" Atari Corp. with JTS, a second-rate hard drive maker. Since this is- in effect- just a means for him to transfer his investment to JTS, Atari Corp. basically ceases any meaningful operations at this point, remaining only a legal entity within JTS.
A couple of years later, JTS goes bankrupt, and Hasbro buys the Atari IP. No real connection with the original business(es) in any real sense, as there's nothing meaningful to continue by this point.
So, Hasbro weren't really "Atari" except that they bought the name and IP, and Infogrames aren't really either. Both successors that had any meaningful continuation of Atari Inc. (i.e. Atari Corp. and Atari Games) are both now long defunct with nothing left to continue.
"Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
Infogrames subsidiary needs cash badly. Infogrames subsidiary is about to die.
I find most of the old games to be more fun to play than the new ones out today. The new ones are nice to look at but mostly suck for play.
any similar emotion that might make me venture in again
Well, aside from clientele issues previously mentioned which boil down to, train your bartenders to not serve liquor to dirtbags, its basically an arcade/carnival/state fair/amusement park experience, indoors... I can see how you'd be very unhappy if someone tricked you into thinking its a gourmet suit and tie fine dining establishment, but its not much different or worse than the state/county fair carnival area experience.
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
Old enough to really enjoy the video game arcade but too old to be impressed with some dude in a chuckie costume posing for pictures. I'd guess about 10 yrs old. Then again for a toddler to maybe 5 yr old, seeing the mascot walk around seems pretty cool to them.
Kind of like how kids about that age don't believe in Santa anymore and are not going to do the "sit on his lap" thing, but they're still pretty cool with opening presents...
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
I bet he caused a pong. He was French[1], after all.
[1] But only just. If he'd been born a few months earlier he'd have been an Eyetie.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
You used to be able to buy a joystick that had an emulator inside it that included all the old Atari console games.
Or was it the Sega?
In either case, all means "all except the one that was your total best most favouriterest evar".
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
I remember playing E.T. on the 2600 when I was a kid. I never thought it was "horrible" -- though constantly falling in wells was annoying -- but it just felt really boring. The first game where I forced myself to finish it. Superman and Raiders of the Lost Ark were both games that also featured the same concepts of exploration as E.T., but without sucking. Okay, Superman wasn't fantastic, but flying around picking up bad guys and helicopters was a lot more fun than a useless little alien falling into wells constantly.
Raiders of the Lost Ark on the other hand was an amazingly complicated game. Quite brutal actually, and somewhat nonsensical, but it was the first game I played where I felt like the developer was daring me to keep playing. Interestingly, ALSO created by the same guy who did E.T., Howard Scott Warshaw. How one guy can make one of the better 2600 games, and then make one of the worst, I'm not sure.
A company called Jakks Pacific made a few of those, including a few console-like ones in their Flashback series. I'll bet you could still find them as they're not all that old.
IIRC, you could solder in a cartridge slot on the FlashBack 2 and play any of the old games. A real shame it didn't have that built-in from the start. Coupled with an AtariMax MyIDE-II Compact Flash Cartridge and you've have the ultimate modern 2600 setup.
Required reading for internet skeptics
Where is the bailout money for Atari? Car companies got it. Banks got it. Why not show some love? People gonna lose their jobs n' stuff...
My Windows is NOT slow, it's special!
It was made between July 27 and September 1 of the same year.. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E.T._the_Extra-Terrestrial_(video_game)#Development
Hi Curt ;-)
This is a good book though. Halfway through it myself. If you have a remote interest in Atari, it's a goldmine of info, background and nuggets that hadn't seen the light of day before. Just ignore the typos. Great pics too.
I want a list of atrocities done in your name - Recoil
This company is one of a long line of owners of the "Atari" name. Just like Activision, this has nothing to do with the original company aside from the name and some licensed titles from the original company.
Kriston
Wow it isn't even the real Atari. It's Infogrames with the name Atari.
My Chuck E. Cheese stories:
Wife brought daughter there for Saturday lunch. Some dirtbag employee started stalking her. Every time she turned around he was 10 feet away staring at her. She couldn't wait to get out of there.
I took daughter there for lunch one day while wife was working. We were the only ones at the counter. It took 10 minutes for someone to wait on us while 3 employees stood around counting tokens and others wandered around like zombies. I ordered a beer and the drone asked for my ID. I was about 50 and didn't look close to being under age but he had to check with his manager. He disappeared for another 10 minutes with my license and finally came back with his manager. I grabbed my license, told him what i thought of their service and walked out.
I guess you can't work at CeC unless you're a pervert, idiot or slacker. I wouldn't go back if everything was free.