“Uniting Atari and Intellivision after 45 years ends the longest-running console war in history,” said Mike Mika, Studio Head at Digital Eclipse, an Atari-owned game studio.
Atari made its biggest splash with the launch of its Atari 2600 console back in 1977. While primitive by today’s standards, the Atari 2600 was a hot item back in the day, selling tens of millions of consoles throughout its lifespan. The Atari brand today is not the same as it was back then, having changed hands multiple times starting with the infamous video game crash of the early to mid 1980s.
Meanwhile, Mattel released the Intellivision in 1979, and while it didn’t sell as many units as the Atari 2600, it sold enough to emerge as the first serious rival to Atari’s dominance. It was also the technologically superior console, in terms of its hardware and capabilities.
As part of the deal to acquire Intellivision, Atari gains access to more than 200 retro games. Atari could also potentially release new Intellivision games now that it owns the Intellivision brand and its trademarks.
“This was a very rare opportunity to unite former competitors and bring together fans of Atari, Intellivision and the golden age of gaming,” said Wade Rosen, Chairman and CEO of Atari.