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Sunday, April 26, 2020

Videogame Review, Centipede for the Atari 7800 Console (w/ Gold Atari 7800 Joystick)




Videogame Review, Centipede for the Atari 7800 Console (w/ Gold Atari 7800 Joystick)

Centipede isn’t an exact delectation.  Madness gets really involved where graphics surround themselves upon constant start and reset.  A line of judgement is necessary for this exhilarating program.  The joystick I have has already fallen into the “used” category although you wouldn’t be able to tell by using it.  Failure is to be expected, chances are happening, where Centipede pulls the plug on impact with sweetness of motion and general exhaust, and, I do mean that with a positive decision for gameplay.  Our house contains these games in my family.  By turns of the wheel and spinning effects, the Atari 7800 console is quite a surprise with tremendous force regarding Centipede.  Of course it’s actually my dad who refers to this program with greater interest and anxiety disorder- he’s a horse and I’m a zebra.  What interests him in skill doesn’t interest me.  The Atari 5200 version of Centipede is more up my alley because the difficulty in that program is a better height and development of challenge.  This Atari 7800 version is perfect for the beginner types and it’s not unusual to find gaps and leeways towards your goals in performance for some arcade action.  Problem is, my skills are the expert kind for Centipede and I find the 7800 version to be quite a tiresome affair.  Horses should be apt for easy, comfortable notions while zebras are very territorial over hazardous ground; so, since my dad is a “horse” and I’m a “zebra”, this program relates more to him than to me.  But the Atari 7800 Centipede is an excellent work of art due to the infrastructure of time and space.  Depth plays a key role to the action.  Maybe I’m speaking out of disinterest; other than that, I’m pretty good to go over the heat and pressure.  It’s not that practical in terms of multiplayer- I’m smarter than dad, so why make him look stupid and shatter his dreams of eternal matters?  Locking horns takes some practice.  Besides, it’s better for him to play alone without me.  A beginner doesn’t tolerate loss very well.  He agrees that the Atari 7800 version is more suitable to his tastes compared to the Atari 5200 version, which threw him off with premature results.  I guess it depends on the player’s references to digital and analog.  Now we shouldn’t give too much reference to definitions high and low regarding modern technology since these views of light, over and over changing us for the exchange of looks, put gamers into trouble just out of goals everybody in gaming needs to work on.  My Atari 7800 joystick is an original work- the joystick clicks in place, the red buttons provide me with a bigger touch for automatic fire, and overall bias for the device leaves a great mark or scar under my radar of fortunes.  If you’re a beginner you’ll love Centipede.  But for me, it’s the wrong spoil of temptation.


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