Remember the Dig Dug or Centipede or Robotron? They used to be favorites wheimagen Atari’s 7800 series was still around. Now since the era of those consoles is over and a different world of interactive reality gaming has taken over, Atari Museum, a site run by Atari enthusiast, has got hold of has unofficially source code of over 15 games for the coders and enthusiasts to admire the state-of-the-art (because  this is what it was back then) of game development. During those times nobody would have imagined in their wildest dreams the games that Atari’s developers floated into the gaming thirsty market and instantly swept across continental boundaries. But things changed soon after that and a company once regarded as one of the most successful gaming console manufacturers and developers faded away in the pages of our technology’s hall-of-fame.

In an official release, Atari has quoted that the purpose of the release is to give potential developers insight into the Atari’s gaming platform so they may possibly build upon the 7800 series.

I have collected of the game’s banners:

image image image

image image image

You can grab the source code here:

Robotron 2084

DOWNLOAD

Xevious

DOWNLOAD

Dig Dug

DOWNLOAD

Centipede

DOWNLOAD

Joust

DOWNLOAD

Ms. Pac Man

DOWNLOAD

Commando

DOWNLOAD

Crossbow

DOWNLOAD

Food Fight

DOWNLOAD

Galaga

DOWNLOAD

Hat Trick

DOWNLOAD

Sphinx/Nile Flyer/Desert Falcon

DOWNLOAD

7800 PAL OS

DOWNLOAD

7800 Base OS -  NTSC

DOWNLOAD

Super Stunt Cycle/Motopsycho

DOWNLOAD

7800 Development System (Atari ST)

DOWNLOAD

7800 Animation Tool (Atari ST)

DOWNLOAD

 

PS: I skipped this part over accidently.

Courtesy Atari Meuseum

PS #2: I misquoted that Atari released the source code. Rather it’s Atari Museum which has released the code.

We offer up to date braindumps to help you prepare and pass real exam without any difficulty. Download the VCP-410 dumps for fail-safe exam preparation.