Official Atari 7800+ Console & Wireless Controller
$74.99
$129.99
42% off
Reference Price
Condition: New
Top positive review
9 people found this helpful
Worth the upgrade/purchase
By Eric Schuetz on Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2025
First off, I have the Atari 2600+ purchased directly from Atari's website. I loved it, and installed the firmware updates as they rolled out (I'm a nerd, so it wasn't difficult for me. It wasn't user friendly for those not comfortable with that type of stuff). Now, the Atari 7800. This is honestly a bit of a different beast. I am not sure about the internals used, but it has been upgraded from the 2600+ hardware/chipset. The build quality is on par with the 2600+, and even reminds me of the plastic in the original 7800 (in my collection). Carts are obviously supported, and do not load instantly. This is due to the hardware not being orignal hardware, but based on emulation (both emulator programs are listed on the website). Loads can be a few seconds, but that is fine and you will get accustomed to it after a little while. Updating is really easy now. AtariAge.com has a tutorial, and the new firmware upgrade tool is very user friendly. Highly recommend checking in on the updates from time to time to help with any issues that rise as you play your games. These updates also add functionality that the community has been asking for. One such is the use of the 12 key touch pad that was required to play a game titled "Star Raiders". This is not in the 2600+ as of the time of this review. The pack in game is from a legendary homebrew developer and created a title that is mind boggling fantastic, and isn't some cake walk platformer. Bentley Bear's Crystal Quest is a polished experience that works on the 7800+, AND the original hardware. A testament to what the 7800 could have accomplished 40 years ago. My ONLY complaint is the included control pad. It isn't bad. It's weird. Atari didn't do the first control pad. They tried to do their own thing way back then. You can't hold this thing like it is an NES control pad. No. You hold the left side like normal, but the 1 & 2 buttons you hold with your pointer and middle finger resting on the top in the grooves with your thumb underneath that side for support. That is my method for comfort and functionality. This is due to the buttons are further to the middle, and a gap between them that isn't easy to go between the two buttons. This is more or less an issue in games like Bentley Bear where running + jumping isn't as simple as it is in Super Mario Bros on the NES. In closing, bust out the cotton swabs, isopropyl alcohol, and clean them old 2600 and 7800 cartridges because.... Have you played Atari Today?
Top critical review
3 people found this helpful
Does not work with Harmony or Atari game drive.
By Joe on Reviewed in the United States on February 9, 2025
Don’t waste your time with this if you have backups of all your original cartridges on a harmony or an Atari game drive, they will not work in this system. It’s going back, the free game that came with this system wasn’t bad for the period of the hardware but not good enough to keep or pay $50 for on its own by any means. I did not like the remote either the buttons are too far apart, and the joystick portion is plastic and will probably break off at some point. Pairing the controller to the system was easy and I did not notice any lag, but that also depends on your TV. This system was specifically designed to hook, newbies into the genre to get them to buy expensive cartridges for inferior quality games. For the price of one new Atari 7800 game you could buy something like starfield, which took years to make instead of a cheap game that someone could type up in an afternoon and stick on a cartridge. The system was intended to rip people off of your hard earned cash for a whiff of nostalgia. Do yourself a favor and go and buy a real 7800 used on eBay, they’re very cheap and they work just fine and also have the original controllers. I feel like such an idiot for falling into this not so new Atari marketing scandal. They made some thing that only puts money in their pockets and not something that the retro gameplay consumers want.
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