The_Falconer
New member
Hi -
I'm here because I'm nearly finished with a quest.
A while back, I decided that I wanted to try and collect one of every home gaming console or computer that was ever released in the USA. (I've limited myself to my native country for the sake of sanity; trying to collect foreign hardware as well would be, I think, impossible; especially once Japanese game systems were taken into account.) So, starting with the Fairchild Channel F and the Atari 2600 VCS, I've worked my way forward in time... only to reach the gaping hole in history that is gaming hardware from the early to mid 90s (i.e. the limbo between the 4th and 5th console generations, and between the decline of the Commodore/Atari era and the rise of Windows 95). That's where all the rare, really hard-to-find hardware hails from.
Including the last piece I want to add to my collection: a later model, early 90s Atari ST platform computer. An STe or a Falcon. One machine left, and I'll be done with this mad endeavor. Cool, huh?
I'm here because I'm nearly finished with a quest.
A while back, I decided that I wanted to try and collect one of every home gaming console or computer that was ever released in the USA. (I've limited myself to my native country for the sake of sanity; trying to collect foreign hardware as well would be, I think, impossible; especially once Japanese game systems were taken into account.) So, starting with the Fairchild Channel F and the Atari 2600 VCS, I've worked my way forward in time... only to reach the gaping hole in history that is gaming hardware from the early to mid 90s (i.e. the limbo between the 4th and 5th console generations, and between the decline of the Commodore/Atari era and the rise of Windows 95). That's where all the rare, really hard-to-find hardware hails from.
Including the last piece I want to add to my collection: a later model, early 90s Atari ST platform computer. An STe or a Falcon. One machine left, and I'll be done with this mad endeavor. Cool, huh?
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