Sunday, June 29, 2025

Intellivision - My Road to 55 - the start

 

Around the time that I turned 55 a few years ago, my parents had cleaned out their basement and passed along our Intellivision games.

I had 28 games by Intellivision directly and 4 extra ones by other companies.  Two of the boxes (Space Armada and Triple Action) were in really rough shape.  The rest of them seemed okay.  I was only missing two of the overlays (1 for Major League Baseball, and 1 for Triple Action).

 

Since Intellivision had produced 55 games and I already had over half of them, I thought it might be fun to see about picking up the remainder to complete the original set.  I have the Intellivision Flashback which is a retro console that emulates a lot of the original Mattel Electronics and INTV games for the Intellivision.  It doesn’t have a lot of the licensed games though, so that was another push to get the remaining ones.

 

Starting out, I had Las Vegas Poker and Blackjack which came with the original console.  We also picked up Armor Battle, Major League Baseball, and NFL Football from the 1979 set of 8.  We also got Auto Racing, Sea Battle, Space Battle, Tennis, and the US Ski Team Skiing from the 11 games that came out in 1980.

These original 19 games originally came out with numbers on the top of the box, and many of them also came with full color manuals, both  of which are subsets of collecting the games in addition to just having the later editions that came with the two-color manuals (black plus another) and did not have the top box numbers.

 

We had 6 of the 7 games from 1981 – Astrsmash, PBA Bowling, SNAFU, Space Armada, Star Strike, and Triple Action.    One of the things that Mattel did with their boxes was that they had different colors for their ‘networks’ of games.  Blue was for Sports, Green was for Gaming, Purple was for Strategy, and Red was for Action.  They added Indigo for their Space games but had released Space Battle and Space Armada as Red originally, and then later as Indigo.

 

1982 was the largest year by Mattel Electronics.  The Intellivision II came out, which shipped with Lock ‘n Chase in Canada, and later with Burger Time in the United States.  They released 17 games and we got 12 of them – Lock ‘n Chase, Night Stalker, Reversi, Sharp Shot, Space Hawk, Tron: Deadly Discs, Tron: Maze-a-Tron, USCF Chess, Utopia, Bomb Squad, Space Spartans.  They also released the Intellivoice module, and three of the games release were in the Cream boxes for the Intellivoice Network.

In 1982, other companies started making games for the Intellivision as well.  Coleco released 3 games, and Imagic released 7.  We got Carnival, and Donkey Kong.

 

Of the 12 games that came out in 1983, we only got two of them.  Which is unfortunate as five of the games from this year do not appear on the Flashback.

We did get Vectron, and Burger Time, which are probably the worst and best games for the year.  This year they also became quite scattered in their Network colors.  Other companies released another 31 games of which I only got Lady Bug, and Pitfall!.  Mattel Electronics also put out 6 cartridge games for the ECS expansion, which allowed you to add a keyboard, and even a musical keyboard to your system.

 

At the end of 1983 there was the “crash”, with a glut of unsold games pulling down the majority of the video game consoles.  The Nintendo NES was released in 1985 and broadly in 1986.  The Apple II line of computers was already out since 1977, and the Apple IIc was released in 1984.  The Vic-20 had come out in 1980, and the Commodore 64 was released in 1982.  The IBM PC Jr came out in 1984.  

 

Then INTV got the assets for the Intellivision from Mattel Electronics and started releasing more games, mostly by mail order.  They originally game in bags with just the cartridge and manual, but later were released with boxes, although only the Baseball game came with overlays.  From 1985 through 1989 they released another 21 games, as well as rereleasing some of the games from other companies under their own line of boxes.

 

Then the line went quiet, until 2001 when a homebrew version of Tetris came out on a cartridge as 4-Tris.  Since then, there have been more games release since 2000 than were released before 2000.  This can make collecting the entire set a bit tricky.  As well, Sears/CBS released a bunch of the Mattel Electronics games under their line with variant covers.

 

Because of this history, collecting the entire set is a matter of deciding what you consider a complete set.  Mattel Electronics released 55 games for the system, plus another 6 for the ECS (Entertainment Computer System) keyboard expansion.  There were another 41 games released by 1983 by other companies like Activision (7), Atarisoft (3), Coleco (8), Imagic (14), Interphase Technology (2), Parker Brothers (6), and Sega (1). 

Dextell Ltd released 2 games in 1986.  And INTV released another 21 games between 1985 and 1989.  They also released some older games by other companies in INTV packaging.

This gives you a bit of a choice to what you want for a ‘complete’ collection.  You can collect the original 19 games – as noted by the number on top of the boxes.  You can collect the entire 55 Mattel Electronics games.  You can collect some, or all, of the games by other companies.  You can skip the ECS games or even the INTV games, which allows a smaller collection.  Or you can go for the entire 125, or even beyond with the newer releases.

 

For me, I set the original Mattel 55 as a goal.  With perhaps the original 19 as a secondary goal.  Then I will need to re-evaluate how deep into this rabbit hole I am willing to go.

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Keycon 2025 Guests

 Keycon is our local science fiction convention.  It’s never been that big – in the largest years they have claimed attendance of ~500, but many years have been much less than that.   We used to go all the time but don’t go as often lately.  I even ran the gaming room for a few years in the 90s.

 

But Jim Butcher and Jeremy from Black Magic Craft were the guests, so we definitely wanted to go this year.  Jim Butcher is one of our authors and he writes The Dresden Files.  While Black Magic Craft is one of the youtube crafting channels that I follow.

 

In April, our friend Chris called us to see if we would be guest liaisons for Jim Butcher and Jennifer Blackstream.  We would have to get them to and from airport, and make sure that they made it to their panels.  They wanted someone who would not be too starstruck to be responsible for them.  After confirming that we would not have to attend meetings, we accepted. 

 

Chris was also running programming at the convention, and asked me if I would do an interview with Jim on the Saturday.  I agreed, and tried to find some questions that he had not already answered a bunch of times.  Because I was dressing as Captain Hammer on the Saturday, I wrote the questions on cue cards that I could keep in my glove.  I’ve often complained that the people doing the interview don’t seem to ask the obvious follow up questions, so this was my time to see if I would fall into the same mistakes.

 

While we had read the entirety of The Dresden Files, we hadn’t read his other two series, or any of Jennifer Blackstream’s books.  We made an effort to get the six books in the Codex Alera series, as well as the two Cinder Spires books.  We also ordered the first three of the Blood Trails books.  I was able to read the first two of Jim’s Codex Alera books, as well as Deadline, the first book in Jennifer’s Blood Trails series.

 

On the Friday, we picked them up from the airport.  Since the convention started later, we took them to dinner, and then took them to the local grocery so that they could get some supplies for the weekend.  We made sure that they got to their panels on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.. We got invited to the after-con dinner which allows the convention chairs a chance to interact with the guests.  On the Monday after checkout, we took them for lunch, and then back to the airport and made sure that they got on their flight.

 

As guests, they were lovely.  Jim was very engaging, and was quite good about posing for pictures and signing autographs.  A few people had brought a lot of books for him to sign (three at a time), and he was very generous about signing all of them.  He even stayed beyond his allotted time to ensure that he signed everything. 

 


Jennifer Blackstream was adorable.  She was also great about taking photos, and had a great panel with Tanya Huff which gave both perspectives – both from an older writer and from a newer one.  Her shark movie panel with Jim was very fun and engaging.  It sounds like they might try it again at DragonCon so, if you get a chance to see it, I highly recommend it.

 

Canadian author Tanya Huff was also there as a guest.  While we did watch her Blood Ties TV series, we haven’t really read any of her books yet.  She came across as feisty in her panels though, and we definitely will need to check out some of her work.  She had a great panel with Jim where they discussed the tv adaptions of The Dresden Files, and Blood Ties, which both had one season in 2007.

 

Due to scheduling, I wasn’t able to catch any of Jeremy’s panels. They had sounded interesting, but we just couldn’t get to everything.

 

After the convention, we ordered another dozen of the books in Jennifer Blackstream’s Blood Trails series.  She has been pretty prolific, but that gives us the first 15 of the 19 books.

 

Saturday, June 7, 2025

Figure Painting Total - May 2025

 Even though I haven’t gotten any impetus to paint yet, I was able to fill another gap in my Dust Tactics squads.  With this, that is the last of the Allies that I am chasing down.  I might get more if I get a great deal, especially another Pelican, but this was the last one I felt I needed.  I am still looking for another Natalya/Nadya/Natasha as well as possibly a helicopter for the SSU.  I am also looking for the Gorilla Support Squad for the Axis, as well as another walker and Horten.  If I can find any of the bunkers reasonably, I would get those as well. 

While I am interested in the Cthulhu forces, the Mercenaries, and the Imperial Japan forces, they never seem to come up for cheap.  I might need to wait until they possible get reprinted, which might now take longer than ever.   

 

 

Bought

Dust Tactics Heavy Rangers Attack Squad – Grim Reapers – 3

 

Painted

 

 

May total – figures bought 3, figures painted 0

Running total 2025 – figures bought 33, figures painted 0