Video Game, "Centipede," Recovered from Landfill, Alamogordo, New Mexico, April 26, 2014, Site of the Atari Video Game Burial of 1983
Add to SetSummary
In 1983, rumors circulated: Atari was bankrupt, and was dumping truckloads of games into a New Mexico landfill. Victim to the "Video Game Crash," the company buried 700,000 cartridges in the desert. The story became an obscure pop culture legend -- until "The Atari Tomb" was unearthed in 2014. This recovered cartridge is evidence of the world's first video game excavation.
In 1983, rumors circulated: Atari was bankrupt, and was dumping truckloads of games into a New Mexico landfill. Victim to the "Video Game Crash," the company buried 700,000 cartridges in the desert. The story became an obscure pop culture legend -- until "The Atari Tomb" was unearthed in 2014. This recovered cartridge is evidence of the world's first video game excavation.
Artifact
Video game
Date Made
1981
Creators
Creator Notes
Video game developed by Ed Logg and Dona Bailey, manufactured by Atari, Inc.
On Exhibit
at Henry Ford Museum in Your Place in Time
Object ID
2015.13.3
Credit
From the Collections of The Henry Ford. Gift of the City of Alamogordo, New Mexico.
Material
Cardboard
Paper (Fiber product)
Plastic
Dimensions
Height: 11.5 in
Width: 1.75 in
Length: 10 in