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Activision Anthology on PS2


On 04/22/2014 at 02:10 PM by KnightDriver

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                        a

      Activision Anthology is really great. I think Activision really understood the Atari 2600 and made simple, fun games with great design in every aspect of the product.

      The box art and cartridge art are great. I’ve often thought of owning a complete collection of Activision Atari games because they have such a good look to them that is consistent from game to game.

                         boxart

      I love the manuals with their full page of tips from the programmer in the back. This company let their creators take a priviledged spot in the presentation of the games, and I appreciate that. These are games by real people not some faceless corporation.

                                         tips

      Finally there are the games themselves which all share a similar design. Of the many Activision games in this collection, nine of them became my current favorites. I thought I’d link up a bunch of screens of these games and try and figure out what about the design makes Activision games some of the best on the 2600.  

     Barnstorming is a race against time. You are given a certain number of barns to fly through and a timer. When you fly through the last barn, the game stops and you record your time. Higher difficulties just add more barns. You also have to fly over towers and avoid birds. It's so simple, but quite fun. The image here uses big bold primary colors and lots of space to manuever. Detail is kept to an absolute minimum, but it's just enough to convey the elements of the game. 

                        barn

     Boxing is super simple but fun because the controls work well. You try and get jabs in the opponent's face and keep pounding away. It takes a moment to get the feel of it and the timing right, because the AI player can easily get his own jabs in as well. You get points for head punches and there's a timer for the rounds. Highest point count wins. What could be simpler? The design is bare minimum, but you don't really need more, because it's all about the gameplay. The controls are fast and responsive and that's the important part. The screen is just easy on the eyes with no distractions from the task at hand.

                         box

     What can I say about Ice Hockey. It's just plain fun with two players or against the AI. It's two-on-two with control switching automatically to whichever player is closest to the puck. You can knock a guy on his butt, drive to the net and out fox the goalie for the big score. What more do you need in a hockey game? It's hockey at it's most basic elements and handled perfectly. I think that's what Activision did right. They stayed within the limitations of the Atari 2600 and nailed the controls, keeping the graphics simple and colorful, and making sure the gameplay was rock solid.

                         ice

     Plaque Attack is not quite as elegantly designed as some other Activision games, but I couldn't help enjoying this as I paniced over loosing teeth. Here's something we can all relate to immediately, tooth decay. All you do is shoot toothpaste on food to stop it from destroying the teeth. 

                         plaque

     Seaquest is a fun game were you rescue swimmers while avoiding fish and other enemy subs which come from either side of the screen. You have an air meter that you have to watch, surfacing every so often to resupply your air. Again, it's just Activision's simpliciy of gameplay and visual design that makes this so appealing.

                         sea

     Skiing is like many of Activision's sports games in that it nails the basic mechanic of the sport, in this case, angling your skiis to turn. This is a race against time and you just have to stay within the flag posts. What I like a lot about Activision games is the amount of space the game gives you. You're not crowded by objects or have to navigate a tiny path. You have plenty of environment and can focus easily on the specific task of the game.

                        skiing

     Stampede is my all-time favorite Atari 2600 game. It's so simple but tricky to get to the 3000 point goal to qualify for the Activision Patch. Your horse stays on the far left and you move up or down while you lasso doggies in such a way as to not let any pass you by. The basic strategy is to keep the slowest moving doggies on the screen and open one path at a time. The doggies come at you in waves starting with a static skull or Angus and then the fastest moving doggies up to the slowest. The Angus gets you the most points as do the slowest moving doggies but you want to lasso them carefully to keep any from passing you. You get to let three doggies pass before the game ends. After a while the whole game speeds up and its gets harder. It's just a fantastic game that plays great and allows for a little strategy that's very satisfying when you get it to work just right. And look at that design. Simple and to the point. No unnessessary visual business.

                        stampede

     This one brings me way back to when I was a pretty serious tennis player in high school. Tennis is simple as can be but surprisingly nuonced. If you hit the ball on the very edge of your racket you can get a wicked angle. Hit it slightly differently and you can make a drop shot just over the net and make the opponent rush forward. You can even pop the ball up high. I'm not totally sure how all these moves are exactly done, but when you play it you will get a sense for it. It all adds up to a really fun one-on-one battle where you can move the ball around the court at your whim.

                       tennis

    I also liked Atlantis, but it is actually an Imagic game although it shares some of the same aesthetic of the Activision games. It plays a lot like Missile Command accept that your attackers are space ships that cross horizontially.

                        at

    So I think Activision games are some of the best on Atari 2600 and mainly because they get the controls right and they have a simple and colorful design. They are works of beauty and fun, may favorite combination in games.


 

Comments

Matt Snee Staff Writer

04/22/2014 at 03:14 PM

huh.  I never heard of Atlantis before. Looks beautiful. 

KnightDriver

04/22/2014 at 03:18 PM

Greens, reds, and blues. It looks good to me too. 

Matt Snee Staff Writer

04/22/2014 at 05:46 PM

is Chopper Command on that disc?

Cary Woodham

04/22/2014 at 07:19 PM

Yes, and it's excellent.

KnightDriver

04/23/2014 at 01:55 AM

I always had trouble with Defender and games like it. It's something to do with the way the screen moves when you turn around. It throws me for a loop every time.

Cary Woodham

04/22/2014 at 07:23 PM

Activision Anthology for PS2 and PSP (and GBA I think) is one of the best classic collections out there.  It even rivals the PSOne Namco Museums!  Not only do you have a great selection of games, most of which are actually really good, but you also have scanned copies of all the instruction booklets, high score patches, and even TV commercials you can unlock!  I also liked the 80's music they played in the background (80's music is one of my guilty pleasures).

One funny thing to note about the PS2 version is that is has the 2600 port of Capcom's Commando!  It even has the copyright info on the instructions and everything.  I have a feeling that Capcom didn't know they were going to put it on the collection.  I guess Activision published it back then.

My favorite 2600 game from Activision was Pressure Cooker.  Have you tried it?  It's actually pretty complicated for a 2600 game.  --Cary

KnightDriver

04/23/2014 at 02:02 AM

I really liked how you select games with a virtual cartridge organizer and a preview of the game on the TV. The 80's music is fine, but it plays during the games, and after a while it got annoying.

I noticed on the wiki page that there are a bunch of Activision made games that didn't make the cut because of licensing issues such as Ghostbusters. I guess they managed to solve the Commando one.

I tried Pressure Cooker but I guess I didn't get it. You build a burger and then drop it in one of the chutes. I should read the instructions I guess. 

Cary Woodham

04/23/2014 at 07:43 AM

Yeah you do kind of have to read the instructions in order to play Pressure Cooker properly.  That's why the scanned instruction booklets come in handy!

KnightDriver

04/23/2014 at 02:48 PM

I like the way you access those booklets in the virtual room. It's very easy.

Halochief90

04/22/2014 at 09:42 PM

I feel I've have played a bunch of these games before. I'm pretty sure I at least played Ice Hockey. As for the others, I can't be sure. You know it's a simple time when every game uses basically the same art-style.

KnightDriver

04/23/2014 at 02:13 AM

I kinda liked that about Activision. They didn't try to do too much with such a limited system. Each game had one main gameplay element and it was done well. 

goaztecs

04/23/2014 at 02:02 PM

I like that no matter how simple the design of the games were, they were tons of fun. You didn't need crazy button setups or real life graphics, it was about the gameplay. I can't remember if that skiing game was on a desktop pc, but I remember playing something similar before class started in high school. 

KnightDriver

04/23/2014 at 02:53 PM

You've got one button and a joystick, just like most arcade games at the time. How much can you really do with that anyway.

goaztecs

04/23/2014 at 03:00 PM

Yup, that is true. 

C.S.3590SquadLeader

04/29/2014 at 04:35 PM

Seems like a lot of fun, maybe if I get the chance to fix my PS2 I'll see if I can find this game too.

KnightDriver

04/30/2014 at 03:41 PM

The games look really good on the PSP version, Activision Hits Remixed, and I just found out there's a GBA version that has some homebrew games not on the other collections. There's also a version for iOS/Android that includes the Imagic game Dragonfire which is not on any other collection. In that version you get Kaboom for free and then pay per game.

NSonic79

06/18/2014 at 01:50 PM

Don't think I could go for this, even if the are simple games. Plus I didn't get the chance to play these kind of games back in the day.

KnightDriver

06/18/2014 at 01:56 PM

There are a bunch of indie games taking their cue from these old games but adding a lot of modern thrills to them. Resogun looks a lot like Defender and Pac-Man CE really spruces up the gameplay of Pac-Man quite a bit, making it fun again.

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