The Dig: Uncovering the Atari E.T. Games Buried in New Mexico Desert

MentalIlness

Platinum Member
Nov 22, 2009
2,383
11
76
http://www.ign.com/articles/2014/04...he-atari-et-games-buried-in-new-mexico-desert

et-copy-ignjpg-a29c7d_960w.jpg


They've found them.

April 26, 2014

Update: Atari 2600 copies of E.T. The Extra Terrestrial have been discovered in the Almagordo, New Mexico desert. IGN is on site and snapping photos of the excavation. Check out a screenshot gallery of what's been found, right here:

And check out video of the big announcement here:
Confirmed: Atari E.T. Cartridges Buried in the Desert Found02:16

Today one of gaming's greatest mysteries will be solved: Were millions of unsold Atari cartridges and hardware, including the infamous flop, E.T. The Extra Terrestrial, really buried in the Almagordo, New Mexico desert?

To find out, IGN's Fran Mirabella III and Naomi Kyle are on site at the big dig.
Why is this a big deal? Well, we explain why in this video over a game of E.T.:

The dig itself is part of an upcoming documentary that will be released exclusively on Xbox One by the newly formed Xbox Entertainment Studios. Directing the film is Avengers and X-Men 2 writer, Zak Penn.

The myth of the buried games was still in question just before the dig began; Zak Penn told IGN, "Other than garbage and the truth, I have no idea what we'll find. I think that's what's exciting, we won't know exactly what's down there until they start digging."

A brief history: In 1983, the New York Times and other papers reported 14 trucks of unsold Atari products were driven from a factory in El Paso to a landfill.

This represented the end of an era. With Atari's business in ruin (thanks to a number of flops, including E.T. and a shoddy port of Pac-Man) and the general public losing almost all interest in home console games, 1983 was a bleak year for the video game industry. What's become known as the "video game crash" was due in large part to Atari's collapse, and E.T. was Atari's final, and costliest, blunder of that era.

Although the burial was widely reported at the time, Atari employees, including Howard Scott Warshaw, the rushed programmer in charge of getting E.T. shipped in just 6 weeks (games took 6 months or more to make in the early 80s), have disputed the claim. Additionally, if anything was buried, it was crushed and paved over -- even before the elements took their toll. Whatever the case, E.T.'s journey from shovelware to shovel is an important historical story that finally has an ending.
 

mmntech

Lifer
Sep 20, 2007
17,501
12
0
I wasn't expecting them to find them, least of all not in such good condition. And especially with the boxes and manuals still intact. Though I guess being a dry environment, that stuff isn't going to decompose. I want to see the whole doc now. Since I don't have an Xbone, guess I'll just have to wait until it airs, cough, elsewhere. :sneaky:

Next question: where's the crown, the stone, and the sword?
 

Skel

Diamond Member
Apr 11, 2001
6,214
672
136
I honestly didn't expect them to find them. I thought it would turn out to be either a folk story or so far gone they'd show no semblance to what they once were. It's a twisted kind of awesome they found them... wonder if anyone had a Atari on hand to test them.
 
Oct 19, 2000
17,860
4
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I honestly didn't expect them to find them. I thought it would turn out to be either a folk story or so far gone they'd show no semblance to what they once were. It's a twisted kind of awesome they found them... wonder if anyone had a Atari on hand to test them.

Yeah, there's a picture of a kid playing an Atari game out there, I'm pretty sure they were testing them.
 

Ichinisan

Lifer
Oct 9, 2002
28,298
1,235
136
I wasn't expecting them to find them, least of all not in such good condition. And especially with the boxes and manuals still intact. Though I guess being a dry environment, that stuff isn't going to decompose. I want to see the whole doc now. Since I don't have an Xbone, guess I'll just have to wait until it airs, cough, elsewhere. :sneaky:

Next question: where's the crown, the stone, and the sword?

In one of the videos I saw, they recovered a crushed cardboard shipper box (like the retailer would receive). Inside the shipper, there were multiple shrink-wrapped retail copies of the game. There were lots of such shipper boxes. Of course, everything was crushed.
 

railven

Diamond Member
Mar 25, 2010
6,604
561
126
Perhaps I need to turn in my gamer card, but what's the point? Call me jaded but this all seems just like more mainstream hatting of a hobby I cherish.

I guess AVGN can put his movie/project to rest now.
 

mmntech

Lifer
Sep 20, 2007
17,501
12
0
Perhaps I need to turn in my gamer card, but what's the point? Call me jaded but this all seems just like more mainstream hatting of a hobby I cherish.

I guess AVGN can put his movie/project to rest now.

James Rolfe did comment on the find and what it means for the movie.
http://cinemassacre.com/2014/04/26/e-t-atari-landfill-unearthed/

As much as I still do enjoy the AVGN show, the trailer for the movie doesn't look like something I'd watch. Not going to hate on it though, because he's put his heart and soul into it. Just got bored of stuff like that back when his buddy the Nostalgia Critic jumped the shark.
 
Oct 19, 2000
17,860
4
81
Perhaps I need to turn in my gamer card, but what's the point? Call me jaded but this all seems just like more mainstream hatting of a hobby I cherish.

The point is to make a documentary about a long-standing gaming urban legend. Try not to over-read into what this is all about.
 

sweenish

Diamond Member
May 21, 2013
3,656
60
91
The landfill story was never urban legend. It happened, it was reported on. At the time.

No one knew specifically where they were buried.