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<TITLE>Unearthed Links - The Dot Eaters - Classic Video Game History</TITLE>
<B>Ummagumma</B>
<a href="mailto:ummagumma@rogers.com">ummagumma@rogers.com</a>
<BR>I made this!
<B>The Dot Eaters/The Number Crunchers</B>
<a href="http://www.8bit-museum.de/">www.8bit-museum.de/</a>
<BR>The German language version of my site, along with author Stephan Slabihoud's own classic computer index.
<B>Emulators Unlimited</B>
<a href="HTTP://www.emuunlim.com">www.emuunlim.com</a>
<BR>My gracious hosts, and a great emulation support site. From here you can get all the programs you need to play
most of the games featured on this site, plus many, many more. Along with an emulation news section, emu author
interviews, universal videogame list, videogame ad archive, and much more...it's your one stop shopping emulation
extravaganza!
<B>The Vintage Gaming Network</B>
<a href="http://www.vg-network.com/">www.vg-network.com/</a>
<BR>Formerly Dave's Classics, the flagship site of classic game emulation. This site has weathered quite a storm
as waves of litigation have washed over the whole scene, and it has come out the other site as a continuing lighthouse
for anyone interested in what's happening with classic gaming.
<B>Digital Press</B>
<a href="http://www.digitpress.com/" target="_top">www.digitpress.com</a>
<BR>Another great stop for anyone interested in classic gaming and the emulators that let you relive it. Offers such
services as the Retro Mall, classic game reviews, FAQ archive and sound and image sections.
<B>Ginger's Classic Corner</B>
<a href="http://www.ralphbaer.com">www.ralphbaer.com</a>
<BR>Known for his meticulous record-keeping (a habit that probably came in pretty handy during 20 years of videogame
patent litigation), it's no surprise that Ralph Baer maintains the most detailed and informative history of the development
of the first commercial home TV videogame system, what eventually became Magnavox's Odyssey. Full of fascinating
information, along with a plethora of incredible images, including the "brown box" prototype and even scans of the
handwritten conceptual notes he made prior to its development.
<B>Videogamespot's History of Video Games</B>
<a href="http://www.videogames.com/features/universal/hov/index.html">www.videogames.com/features/universal/hov/index.html</a><BR>
A quick walk-through of the industry's history.
<B>Videotopia</B>
<a href="http://www.videotopia.com">www.videotopia.com</a>
<BR>One of the coolest things I've never seen. If it ever gets up near Toronto I'm there. Videotopia is a huge travelling
exhibition of classic videogames, both arcade and home consoles. On the advisory board are such videogame luminaries as Al
Acorn (PONG), Ralph Baer (Odyssey), Nolan Bushnell (Computer Space, PONG), and Eugene Jarvis (Defender) among others. Not
too shabby. The website contains the major entries in the exhibit, along with a truncated history for each.
<B>Classic Video Games Nexus</B>
<a href="http://fly.hiwaay.net/~lkseitz/cvg/nexus/">fly.hiwaay.net/~lkseitz/cvg/nexus/</a>
<BR>Consider it the Yahoo! of classic arcade and home videogaming. Jumping off point for all things videogame classic.<P>
<b>Game Rankings - The Game Review Database</b>
<a href="http://www.gamerankings.com/">www.gamerankings.com</font></a>
<font face="Verdana" size="2">An index of game reviews, making it easy for
punters to pony up the dosh, cor blimey! Sorry, I think I just had a
flashback to Amiga Zone magazine.</font>
<B>The Giant List of Classic Game Programmers</B>
<a href="http://dadgum.com/giantlist/">dadgum.com/giantlist/</a>
<BR>A priceless site for information about the people behind the games that established the industry.<P>
<b>Metacritic: PC GAMES REVIEWS
<a href="http://www.metacritic.com/games/pc/">www.metacritic.com/games/pc</a>
<font face="Verdana" size="2" color="Black">What I consider the rottentomatoes.com of computer games review sites.
Gathers all of the reviews for a game and provides an average score, as well as links to the individual reviews themselves.
Of course, the quality of a game is a very subjective thing, but this site still provides a good
starting point for a possible purchase. Very handy.<P>
<B>The Museum of Dead, Gone and Obsolete Computers</B>
<a href="http://www.gamespot.com/">www.gamespot.com</a>
<BR>My favourite of the non-tree-killer computer games magazines. Huge, with lots of previews, cheats, demos, betas,
interviews and best of all, user submittable game reviews. Produced in conjunction with Computer Gaming World, my second
favourite printed gaming rag.
<b>UPDATE:</b> Unfortunately, in the wake of the dot.com collapse, you now have
to subscribe to "Gamespot Complete" to get even basic services like game
screenshots and the ability to submit game reviews. Does anyone actually
think this is a sound business model? Ask for payment for things you can
easily get for free at a dozen other sites? I dunno. Good luck GS,
you money-hungry B's.<P>
<b>GameSpy.com - Gaming's Homepage</b>
<a href="http://www.gamespy.com/">www.gamespy.com</a>
<br>What was once simply a homepage for an online gaming service to rival Kali
(remember Kali?), is now a top-notch gaming news site as well. Again, like
GameSpot, they've introduced a subscription scheme, but it isn't as fascist
about denying you information. Check it.
<B>PC Gamer Online</B>
<a href="http://www.pcgamer.com/main.html">www.pcgamer.com/main.html</a>
<BR>My favourite of the tree-killer computer games magazines, and the online version is mighty fine too, with plenty of
feature articles, every game review they've ever done, columnist rants, new game levels, patches, yadda yadda yadda...and
that Coconut Monkey bastard too.
<B>Video Gamers First Network</B>
<a href="http://www.vgf.net/">www.vgf.net/</a>
<BR>Another nice gaming network, comprehensive in scope and, as far as their homepage goes, pleasant in layout.
<a href="http://www.pong-story.com/">www.pong-story.com/</a>
<BR>A complete look into the development of the first popular videogame, both in the arcade and the mass of dedicated home
games. Includes plenty of great information and images.
<B>You Should Have Been There--Pong</B>
<B>Blue Sky Rangers</B>
<B>The Intellivision Overlay Site</B>
<B>Sam's Intellivision Page</B>
<a href="http://members.aol.com/pbjurman/intv.html">members.aol.com/pbjurman/intv.html</a>
<BR>Very nice overview of the system and its peripherals, providing lots of information and graphic images.
<a href="http://www.sacnews.net/adamcomputer/">www.sacnews.net/adamcomputer/</a>
<BR>Expandable Computer News was an industry newsletter published from 1984-1988, covering Coleco's ADAM computer through
it's ups and downs. This site features the complete text from a few of them, including the first and last issues. In
these texts you'll find an earnest, but honest, account of the evolution of Coleco's buggy entry into the home computer
race.
<B>The ADAM Resource</B>
<a href="http://www.theadamresource.com/">www.theadamresource.com/</a>
<BR>An extremely informative...well, resource. Features the comprehensive AIA (ADAM International Archive), an up-to-date
news section, and a very well put together ADAM pages by Geoff Oltman.
<B>The Coleco Adam Home Page</B>
<a href="http://www.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/u/dmwick/adam.html">www.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/u/dmwick/adam.html</a>
<BR>Here is where one goes for a large amount of technical information on the CV, a breakdown of the various AdamCons that
have been held over the years, lists of suppliers, and other great stuff.
<B>Coleco Adam's House</B>
<a href="http://coleco.freeservers.com/m.htm">coleco.freeservers.com/m.htm</a>
<BR>It baffles me why web retailers figure they have to pump cheesy midi musak at us like we're strolling around K-Mart or
something...guess it's supposed to evoke that department store feeling. All it does is make me want to go to the hunting
section and get me a .306 and start ventilating people (luckily, while virtually shopping you can do that by firing up Quake)
But musak aside (<b>UPDATE:</b> They've deep-sixed the music, but not the brain-breaking design and colour scheme), this is
a good site dealing with the sale and service of ColecoVisions and ADAMs, along with other classic consoles.
<B>ColecoVision.com</B>
<a href="http://www.colecovision.com/">www.colecovison.com</a>
<BR>A great starting point for information on 1982's last, best hope for the videogame industry.
<B>MovieFlix</B>
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