Vectrex reborn: How a chance encounter gave new life to a dead console

A black, tall CRT screen sits on a table with a black cart in front of it. The cart reads

Enlarge / A Vectrex console and CRT display with a cart for a long-lost game. (credit: Tim Stevens)

The Vectrex may be the most innovative video game console you've never heard of. It had everything it needed to prompt a revolution, including controllers far more sophisticated than the competition and the ability to render polygons a decade before gaming's 3D revolution.

It was years ahead of anything else on the market, yet it could not have launched at a worse time. The Vectrex hit stores at the tail end of 1982. Over the next six months, the then-booming video game market went bust. The Vectrex, a potential revolution in home gaming, was swept into bargain bins, forgotten by all but the most ardent of collectors.

Forty years later, it's having something of a comeback. New developers are breathing fresh code into this aged machine, hardware hackers and tinkerers are ensuring that tired capacitors and CRTs stay functional, and a new game has seen retail release after sitting unplayed for four decades.

Read 58 remaining paragraphs | Comments



A black, tall CRT screen sits on a table with a black cart in front of it. The cart reads

Enlarge / A Vectrex console and CRT display with a cart for a long-lost game. (credit: Tim Stevens)

The Vectrex may be the most innovative video game console you've never heard of. It had everything it needed to prompt a revolution, including controllers far more sophisticated than the competition and the ability to render polygons a decade before gaming's 3D revolution.

It was years ahead of anything else on the market, yet it could not have launched at a worse time. The Vectrex hit stores at the tail end of 1982. Over the next six months, the then-booming video game market went bust. The Vectrex, a potential revolution in home gaming, was swept into bargain bins, forgotten by all but the most ardent of collectors.

Forty years later, it's having something of a comeback. New developers are breathing fresh code into this aged machine, hardware hackers and tinkerers are ensuring that tired capacitors and CRTs stay functional, and a new game has seen retail release after sitting unplayed for four decades.

Read 58 remaining paragraphs | Comments


January 04, 2024 at 05:30PM

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