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- THE COMMODORE 64 RETURNS...
- by E. Grady Glover II
-
-
- You can't keep a great computer
- down. After nearly 10 years of being
- out of production, the Commodore 64
- Computer is once again available to
- consumers.
-
- Well, sort of. Tulip Computers and
- Mammoth Toys joined forces in 2004 to
- put out something that Commodore
- lovers have longed to see, a new
- Commodore 64 product called the
- Commodore 64 Direct-to-TV gaming
- controller. The unit was originally
- available only from QVC or QVC.com,
- though close out units have appeared
- at KB Toys.
-
- The C64 DTV is not merely an
- emulator of the Commodore 64 but
- rather a miniaturized version. It is a
- hand held controller that houses 30
- built in games from the past. It is
- simple to use. Just install the
- batteries and plug two wires to your
- television set.
-
- The 30 games include:
-
- -Bull-riding
- -Championship Wrestling
- -Cyberdyne Warrior
- -Cybernoid
- -Cybernoid II
- -Eliminator
- -Excelon
- -Firelord
- -Flying Disc
- -Gateway to Apshai
- -Impossible Mission
- -Impossible Mission II
- -Jumpman Jr.
- -Paradroid
- -Pitstop
- -Pitstop II
- -Ranarama
- -Silicon Warrior
- -Speedball
- -Summer Games
- -Sumo-Wrestling
- -Surfing
- -Supercycle
- -Sword of Fargoal
- -Tower Toppler
- -Uridium
- -Winter Games
- -World Karate Championship A
- -World Karate Championship B
- -Zynaps
-
- Many of these games are remembered
- as produced by Epyx Games when
- Commodore was at its peak. Since the
- original launch of the Commodore 64 in
- 1982, it played a large role in the
- evolution of the modern games
- industry.
-
- The love of the C-64 may well be
- responsible for the high sales of the
- C64 DTV on its first release day --
- November 26th. Reportedly, 40,000
- units flew out the door during the
- first 24 hours.
-
- What a showing for a "toy" based
- on a obsolete computer, out of
- production since the end of 1992.
- Notably, Commodore Business Machines
- went bankrupt in 1994. Tulip Computers
- of The Netherlands bought the rights
- to Commodore in 1997 and worked with
- many ideas on how to get the company
- back into the eyes of the consumer.
-
- Tulip, along with the units
- designer, Jeri Ellsworth, a self
- taught computer chip designer, (and
- the "darling of the C= world", ED)
- have done just that.
-
- Thanks to Jeri, the C64 DTV unit
- is the first plug and play game that
- can actually be used like the
- original, albeit with some
- limitations. Many "hardware hackers"
- have been hard at work, from the
- moment their units arrived on their
- porch step, figuring out ways to get
- this handheld device to function as a
- real C-64. With a little soldering, a
- PC keyboard and a Commodore disk drive
- can be added, making LOADSTAR or any
- other C-64 software available.
-
- EGGII
-
-
- [JUST A COUPLE OF NOTES:] If you have
- the C64 DTV and have not yet found the
- "easter eggs", joggle the joystick
- left and right while the main menu is
- LOADING. You will find a C-64
- Directory with lots of new stuff to
- try -- the most addictive of which is
- "Splatform" by Robin Harbron.
-
- One of the programs is the C-64
- screen, with a joystick controled
- "keyboard" on the screen. LOAD"$",8
- will bring up yet another directory --
- chock full of more good stuff! Using
- the joystick to type is a singular
- pain -- but the effort is worth it!
-
- Back on the corporate front, Tulip is
- selling its Commodore properties for
- an incredible price to someone else
- that thinks the "C=" holds the magic.
-
- DMM
-
-
-