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All feedback (12)
- jenk56 (2078)- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchasethanks for your purchase, great ebayer
- kentstate2study2013 (7179)- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchaseThank you for an easy, pleasant transaction. Excellent buyer. A++++++.
- wident (33863)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseQuick response and fast payment. Perfect! THANKS!!
- aikeadirect (3271)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseThank you for the purchase! Great Customer!
Reviews (1)

Jun 09, 2016
It's awesome... To me.
2 of 2 found this helpful It's funny how something can be so good, but I know younger folks would probably just give me that look and walk away. Now, I'm not a grandpa, but as a 37 year old I am a product of the good old 80s. Video games were just picking up speed in the marketplace and we gathered around 13" screens in complete awe of them. Yes, that little digitized person jumping when I press the one button on the joystick was amazing. The coddled newer generation have no respect for playing video games that have no ending but just get unbelievably harder. Games that you can't save. Games that only require a back and forth motion but stand as one of life's greatest challenges. Younger folks are looking for realism, a plot, twists and turns, soundtracks, and a satisfying ending. We, on the other hand, would invest hours and hours into shooting a single pixel at blocky space ships, or sending that same pixel from one side of the screen to the other as many times as we possibly could. It was a magical time where the potential of games could be imagined, but we were completely on board by controlling what was happening on our screens. Thank you Atari Anthology for taking me back if only for a moment.