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I Grew Up on Atari. Now I’m Reliving My Childhood on the Gamestation Go

Commentary: Wander down Gen X gamer memory lane with 200 games, including Pac-Man, Asteroids, Berserk and Centipede.

On Christmas Day, 1982, I unwrapped my very first video game console, an Atari 2600. Although it was released in 1977, it was new to me, and I’m pretty sure the reason my parents got it for me was because of a 2600 game released around that time: E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial. My parents knew I was obsessed with the movie, a transformative film that I almost missed because I was so scared to watch it.


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Seven-year-old me was ecstatic. With my gigantic brown glasses atop my nose, wearing a red E.T. shirt, I had one of the best Christmases ever. Despite my love for the movie, I didn’t get far in the game, which left me frustrated and confused. I had no idea it wasn’t because I was unskilled, but because it was bad. Even today, people find the game overly complex and impenetrable to play.

(How bad? Copies of the game were literally buried for decades because it sold so poorly.)

The Atari 2600 came bundled with Combat and two controllers. I played it for years, starting down the road of becoming a dedicated gamer like millions of other kids of the era. If you had asked me a few months ago how many games I remembered from the 2600 or its subsequent successors, the Atari 5200 and 7800, I would have had a hard time answering. I could have named maybe a dozen titles at most.

So, when Atari lent me a Gamestation Go handheld gaming console to try out, I was shocked that dozens of titles came rushing back to me. The moment I saw their cover art, animated screenshots, or just their titles, memories flooded back quickly. I played so many of these. 

And the ones I didn’t get to own or try, I pined over, pointing at them at the store or poring over whatever game magazines I could get my hands on.

Asteroids and Berserk and Centipede and Night Driver and Yar’s Revenge — so, so many games.

Old games, new console

The Gamestation Go, which sells for $179, collects about 200 of those Atari home console games. But it also includes versions of arcade games, including Crystal Castles, Food Fight and Tempest, plus seven Balls of Steel pinball tables, Classic and 2600 versions of Pac-Man, and games from Jaleco and Piko Interactive such as Bases Loaded and Bad Street Brawler. Many of the games can be enjoyed in multiplayer mode by connecting a game controller.

It’s a wide-ranging set of games, and Atari packages it in a nice hardware setup with a larger screen than the original Nintendo Switch.

There are no detachable controllers like on the Switch, but the crazy array of controller options makes up for it: the usual D-pad and shoulder buttons, but also a dial you can rotate (good for games like Breakout), a trackball wheel (for games like Centipede and Crystal Castles) and even a physical number pad, handy for some Atari 5200 games and if Mattel’s Intellivision titles ever get added. 

It features an HDMI port, three USB-C ports, a headphone jack, and a micro-SD slot for side-loading additional games. A solid, but flimsy-looking kickstand can prop up the system. An extra set of small buttons gets you Settings, Credit, Select and Start. Instructions for using the game system, such as navigating in and out of titles, are clear and available from the main menu.

You can perform system updates via built-in Wi-Fi, but there’s no app store to buy or download additional games.

Retro vs. modern

The biggest challenge I faced during my time with the Gamestation Go was devoting time to games from eras past, and ignoring the siren call of modern games on modern consoles and computers.

Did I really want to blast an endless downward cascade of Centipedes or play very slow-paced stick-figure Tennis when I could be finishing Act II of Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 or hopping onto a Marvel Rivals match with my friends?

Some of the gameplay of the old Atari games, and a few of their Recharged revamps, still hold up incredibly well. Missile Command still raises your pulse no matter which version you try, and it’s fun to control with the included trackball, even if its marble size makes it a challenge to use with as much precision as the larger one you might remember from the arcade.

The Balls of Steel pinball tables look and play great, even if viewing them on a horizontal screen presents a challenge to gameplay. Tempest with the dial or trackball controls is still a twisted joy. I found myself particularly drawn to arcade games I either missed entirely, such as Cisco Heat All American, or that I remember dropping many, many quarters into, like Asteroids.

Missing in action? E.T., the game that started it all for me. But there’s Steeplechase, with its sorta-horse animations, and Ninja Golf, which is as weird as it sounds.

Getting bogged down with E.T. 

I’m not a big emulation player, though I’ve been curious about the possibilities of home arcade cabinets that allow you to add many more games than those that come standard.

The Gamestation Go makes it easy to access retro games, provided you have access to ROM files and a microSD card to store them on. The process involves creating a set of folders to store the files in and then booting from the microSD card when the Gamestation starts up.

In my testing, the Gamestation handled Sega Genesis and Atari 2600 titles like a champ. However, online reports vary about how well it reproduces games from more advanced consoles, such as the original Sony PlayStation or the Sega Dreamcast.

There’s some controversy over ROMs, digital copies of game software. Most ROMs are copies of games that are still under copyright, meaning the original creators, such as Nintendo or Sega, legally own them. Downloading or distributing ROMs without permission is illegal in many countries, even if you own the original game. That said, some ROMS have been available on the Internet Archive, and there’s no shortage of sites that collect files and descriptions for games across many game consoles.

Atari offers this capability to play ROMs in the hopes that you will find legal means to purchase ROMs or only use ROMs from games where you already own a cartridge of a digitally purchased version.

For the sole purpose of seeing whether E.T. was what I remembered as a young boy, I found a copy of the game after trying unsuccessfully to find a way to purchase it as a digital file or even a physical copy with a ROM included. 

E.T.’s visage shows up on the title screen as a chiptune version of the John Williams theme plays. When I started it up, I got goosebumps.

But that tingly feeling was gone almost instantly when the game started. I instantly fell into a bog. I tried to chase down tiny dots meant to represent Reese’s Pieces candies, but got repeatedly accosted by FBI agents and scientists. Down the bog I went. Again and again. Soon, I was dead, my alien body turned white to indicate loss of life. The frustration I felt back then was now combined with an adult’s annoyance at how poorly the game was designed. How dare they rush this game out to entice parents of kids like 1980s me? Who thought this might be fun?

After a few more annoyed minutes, I shut the game off. There’s probably an online walkthrough on how to easily beat E.T., but I didn’t even bother. I was done for another few decades, at least.

E.T. for Atari 2600, like so many other things, belongs in the past.

Should you buy a Gamestation Go?

As E.T. proves, not all the early games were good. Many of them were and continue to be garbage. (Sorry, Swordquest.) 

But there are lots of gems bundled into the Gamestation Go that draw you in, even if it’s only for short bursts of time before you get tired of the repetition and want to play something from this century.

But what a warm wave of feelings the Gamestation Go will give you the first time you boot up and look at that long list of titles, games you once may have wished and wished for and spent weeks trying to master!

Is it worth buying? It really depends on how much nostalgia is worth to you these days, or whether kids in your family are curious about retro gaming and emulation.

My inner 7-year-old, the one who would have been in 8-bit heaven with so many games to play, says you’d be a fool not to. But grown-up me has some reservations.

Technologies

ChatGPT Gets Spotify Wrapped-Style Year-End Review

Want some perspective on your ChatGPT use in 2025? OpenAI has a little something for you.

‘Tis the season for year-end recaps from the online services you frequent. The latest entry: Your Year with ChatGPT, a look back at your interactions with the AI chatbot, in the spirit of Spotify Wrapped.

Available now in the US, UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand for all users across the web and mobile devices, it looks at your queries to pull together the biggest themes and curiosities in a pastel-colored package. Your Year with ChatGPT also gives awards with certain attributes and ranks them in various archetypes against other ChatGPT users.

For example, I got an inventor award and recognition as a «navigator» archetype, which accounts for 22.9% of users. That makes sense, given how much time I spent investigating how ChatGPT functions, both as a thing itself and in comparison with other chatbots like Claude and Gemini. I do some serious stress-testing of these AI tools.

The year-end review also generated an AI image of all my interests. 

To get a Your Year with ChatGPT, you have to have «reference saved memories» and «reference chat history» turned on. You also needed to use ChatGPT a minimum number of times to trigger the feature. Your Year with ChatGPT isn’t available for Team, Enterprise or Education accounts.

ChatGPT maker OpenAI is following in the well-trod footsteps of year-end reviews from other tech companies. Spotify Wrapped is the buzziest, with users eager to sharing their results on social media. It’s prompted some creators to film their own parody wrapped videos showcasing their dismal dating lives. YouTube too latched onto the trend with Recap, showcasing the creators that users watched most throughout the year and where they landed against all viewers. Other end-of-year rewinds include Google Search, Google Photos, Apple MusicPlayStation and Steam

Your Year with ChatGPT caps a successful, if rocky, year for OpenAI. The company released GPT-5 — which many users weren’t crazy about — and its open weights local model named GPT-OSS. OpenAI also inked major infrastructure deals with Oracle, Nvidia and AMD, shooting its valuation to $830 billion, and it moved from being a nonprofit-esque public benefit company to a privately held company, laying the groundwork for a potential initial public offering. 

At the same time, it’s been feeling the heat from Google’s AI efforts, including the launch of Gemini 3. Investors are also becoming wary of OpenAI’s cash burn amid concerns of a larger AI bubble.

(Disclosure: Ziff Davis, CNET’s parent company, in April filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)  

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Technologies

Today’s Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for Dec. 23, #1648

Here are hints and the answer for today’s Wordle for Dec. 23, No. 1,648.

Looking for the most recent Wordle answer? Click here for today’s Wordle hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Connections, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands puzzles.


Today’s Wordle puzzle is a little tricky, starting with an unusual letter. If you need a new starter word, check out our list of which letters show up the most in English words. If you need hints and the answer, read on.

Read more: New Study Reveals Wordle’s Top 10 Toughest Words of 2025

Today’s Wordle hints

Before we show you today’s Wordle answer, we’ll give you some hints. If you don’t want a spoiler, look away now.

Wordle hint No. 1: Repeats

Today’s Wordle answer has no repeated letters.

Wordle hint No. 2: Vowels

Today’s Wordle answer has one vowel.

Wordle hint No. 3: First letter

Today’s Wordle answer begins with G.

Wordle hint No. 4: Last letter

Today’s Wordle answer ends with T.

Wordle hint No. 5: Meaning

Today’s Wordle answer can mean to give out or reflect small flashes of light.

TODAY’S WORDLE ANSWER

Today’s Wordle answer is GLINT.

Yesterday’s Wordle answer

Yesterday’s Wordle answer, Dec. 22, No. 1647 was CONCH.

Recent Wordle answers

Dec. 18, No. 1643: RUGBY

Dec. 19, No. 1644: MYRRH

Dec. 20, No. 1645: WHITE

Dec. 21, No. 1646: QUILT


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Technologies

How to Get a Free PC Game Every Day From the Epic Games Store

It’s hard to argue with free games.

The end of the year usually means a last-minute rush for gifts, not least for that gamer in your life. Digital platforms like Steam have their Winter Sale, but the Epic Games Store not only has discounted games for the holiday, it also has a free title available every day during the sale.  

From Dec. 18 to Jan. 1, Epic is giving away one free PC game per day. These games are a surprise and are only available for 24 hours. No purchase is needed to get access to these free titles, but an Epic Games Store account is required. 

These freebies are primarily critically acclaimed indie games, but there could be some notable titles. Last year, the company gave away Remedy Entertainment’s Control and Warhorse Studios’ Kingdom Come: Deliverance.


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What free games have been given away so far? 

The free Epic Games Store giveaways started on Dec. 18. So far the games given away have been:

  • Paradise Killer (Dec. 22)
  • Sorry We’re Closed (Dec. 21)
  • Blood West (Dec. 20)
  • Eternights (Dec. 19)
  • Jotunnslayer: Hordes of Hel (Dec. 18)
  • Hogwarts Legacy (Dec. 11-17)

How do I sign up for an Epic Games Store account? 

An Epic Game Store account is free. For that you have to visit the Epic Games Store website, click «Sign In» on the upper right side of the page and select «Create an account» on the next page. All that’s needed is an email address and date of birth. 

When does the new free game show up on the Epic Game Store page? 

The new free games will be listed on the store’s front page at 11 a.m. ET/8 a.m. PT. Each will be available for 24 hours. 

How do I play these free Epic Games Store games? 

Playing the free Epic Games Store requires downloading the Epic Games Store app. The app is available for PC, Mac, Android and iOS (only in the EU). 

While the app does allow access to the games, playing the game still requires certain PC specs. Those are listed on the game’s store page when downloading. If the computer meets all requirements, just click on the game from the Library in the app and it will start up. 

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