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Saturday, August 18, 2018

Videogame Review, Star Wars- Return of the Jedi: Death Star Battle for the Atari 5200 Super System




Videogame Review, Star Wars- Return of the Jedi: Death Star Battle for the Atari 5200 Super System

Star Wars isn’t a religion.  What we have here is a game that comments on possible futures as technology is considered for fashionable lasers and ships on an imaginary sense.  Still, you’ll find gold on the 5200 with this guy.  R2-D2 rings in with his unique, robotic roar while your ship plunges into space between the sprinkles and twinkles of hyperspace.  As so much in the way of graphics is indicated on the TV screen you’ll find yourself exploring barriers which take quickly to get to, 8-bit gameplay as indicated not only through Atari 2600 relevance but also 5200 analog controls.  I can tug my ship around here and there with twitches and twists of my 5200 joystick where thoughts count for a general demolishment of the Death Star within repetitions and loops in altered forms of fascinating details, written and programmed on the TV screen like it’s a magnified curse out of bounds towards fiction as is.  Robotic sound waves are sure to please across the board of background noises and clanging metal.  Enough happens, enough is at stake, and I’m having fun pulling the Death Star’s string away by means of laser enhancements: acceleration, deceleration, and everything without the cross hairs as far as what I see presented in “Return of the Jedi: Death Star Battle”.  Darth Vader isn’t in this game though.  Instead you’ll find ships and fatal beams that add chaos towards the battle front near the other side of the universe somewheres and it take courage, stamina, and a kind of dead feeling to go through the motion in privilege and discipline with the 5200 joystick, a joystick I’d like to describe as a black twister concerning innovation and slow-moving focus.  Focal points can be labeled all over the 5200 joystick in blueprint fashion in engineering- generally speaking, the four winds of direction (Up, Left, Down, Right) are solidified with plates and gears that rub and neutralize lack of action unless electricity is given to unconnected tools.  Unconnected tools include failed circuits, locked chips, desoldered joints, clipped wires, and general button malfunction.  And even connected parts can feel less comfortable depending on specific circumstances observed of the 5200 joystick; so, I’ve gotten my 5200 joysticks with gold contacts and brand new parts to ensure a good experience and Star Wars is a really neat pastime for lasers which vanquish all ships into reversed existence.  The Death Star is very much akin to a toy I’ve likened on privilege against sanity on my mark to get set and go.  My 5200 joystick whips along the lines assumed for gaming until crazy moves are explicated upon the borders near barriers in a galaxy far, far away.  As I’m thinking of fun you’re probably thinking of boring.  Well, someone seems to have reversed existence.  I’ve thought of myself from time to time as a bad guy and it feels good to be so daring and strange onto others as far as Star Wars comes to see light where even darkness may not shed enough weight to refuse the light. 



https://youtu.be/EzBU5UG1CWY

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