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Video games go back to future as first wave of players age.


Keith Robinson
This article is about the comedian. For the actor, see Keith Robinson (actor). For the rugby union player, see Keith Robinson (rugby player)


Keith Robinson is an American comedian who was a regular guest on Tough Crowd with Colin Quinn.
 has an unusual strategy to sell video games See video game console. : staying several decades behind the competition.

Robinson, chief executive of Manhattan Beach-based Intellivision Productions Inc., bought up the video game portfolio of his old employer, Mattel Inc., after they faded from popularity. He's using nostalgia to get people to revisit titles from their youth.

"For anyone under 35, video games have been a part of their life," said Robinson, who is 49. "An old video game can have as much of an evocative experience as a TV show or an old song."

The original Intellivision games This is a list of games for the Intellivision game system, organized alphabetically by name. See Lists of video games for related lists. A
  • ABPA Backgammon
  • (AKA Adventure, Cloudy Mountain, Misty Mountain)
  • Armor Battle (Mattel/INTV)
 such as "AstroSmash," "Night Stalker Night Stalker or Nightstalker may refer to: People
  • Original Night Stalker, an unidentified serial killer and rapist unrelated to Ramírez's murders
" and "Snafu," relied on simple, two-dimensional graphics. Games lasted five minutes or so--they're known as "quick games" today--and don't compare to the complex characters and rich graphics of the popular games such as Microsoft Corp.'s "Halo" or Activision Inc.'s "Call of Duty."

Even so, Intellivision games generated $25 million in worldwide sales last year, through $20 CDs that run on the PC, Xbox and Playstation 2 formats, and the main product, a plug-and-play device that connects to a TV set.

"I wouldn't say it's huge, but there is a healthy market for the retro-gaming product," said Daniel Morris Daniel Morris (January 4, 1812 - April 22, 1889) was a U.S. Representative from New York.

Born in Fayette, New York, Morris attended the public schools and the Canandaigua Academy in Ontario County, New York. He studied law.
, editor-in-chief of PC Garner. The plug-and-play TV See CableCARD.  product, sold through Walgreen Co., Urban Outfitters Urban Outfitters, Inc. NASDAQ: URBN owns and operates three retail clothing brands: Urban Outfitters, Anthropologie and Free People. The first store opened in 1970 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, focusing on "funky" fashion and household products.  Inc., Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. during Christmas, comes with a joystick and either l0 games ($9.99) or 25 games ($19.99).

Intellivision licenses the games to overseas manufacturers who keep most of the revenues. Intellivision took in about $475,000 in license fees last year, including the games and products such as baseball caps and T-shirts with the distinctive "running man" logo.

Though they have sold well, the plug-and-play units have critics. Amazon.com Inc.'s customer reviews logged 15 complaints out of 21 reviews, with comments about shoddy construction and inoperable inoperable /in·op·er·a·ble/ (in-op´er-ah-b'l) not susceptible to treatment by surgery.

in·op·er·a·ble
adj.
Unsuitable for a surgical procedure.
 controls. Many complained that the reprogrammed version of the games strip away the best features.

Robinson admitted that serious Intellivision fans will be disappointed by the plug-and-play product. "We tell the true fans to get the PS version, the Mac version, the Xbox version--those are the true Intellivision experience," he said. "The controller is designed for children. It is an inexpensive, battery-operated little device."

Robinson joined Mattel in 1981 after majoring in computer science at UCLA UCLA University of California at Los Angeles
UCLA University Center for Learning Assistance (Illinois State University)
UCLA University of Carrollton, TX and Lower Addison, TX
. But by 1984, the toymaker
For the 3APL-M application, see 3APL


Toymaker (real name Cosmo Krank) is a brand new, original villain in The Batman. He first appeared in Cash for Toys. He is voiced by Patton Oswalt.
 had sold the rights to Intellivision and laid off all the programmers. The company that bought the brand filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 1990.

Meanwhile, Robinson became a technical writer for video games and computers. A casual cartoonist, he also launched a weekly comic Weekly Comic (漫画周刊) is a manga magazine based in Malaysia that serializes many of Japan's current popular manga. About Weekly Comic
The Weekly Comic Magazine is published every Saturday in both east and west of Malaysia.
 strip called "Making It," which became syndicated in several newspapers, including the Chicago Tribune. He stayed in touch with his Intellivision past, meeting frequently with fellow colleagues to discuss business ideas.

In 1997, Robinson and another former colleague, Stephen Roney, bought back the Intellivision name for $50,000. Roney is now in charge of software.

"We wanted to get something out there immediately that said we were back," Robinson said. So they started selling baseball caps emblazoned with the old logo, a purple graphic running man. They planned to license the game, but no one was interested. They decided to manufacture it themselves, selling a hybrid CD-ROM CD-ROM: see compact disc.
CD-ROM
 in full compact disc read-only memory

Type of computer storage medium that is read optically (e.g., by a laser).
 that would work on the Macintosh and PC format, Robinson said.

Their first product, the "Intellivision Lives!" compilation, was sold through the company's Web site. They manufactured 2,000 CDs, bundling dozens of the classic games together. In its first two hours of sales, the site received 300 orders.

Then Santa Monica-based Activision Inc. licensed the games for Sony Corp.'s Playstation 1 format and sold 150,000 units during the 1999 Christmas season.

THQ THQ Toy Headquarters
THQ Territorial Headquarters
THQ Tehsil Headquarters (Pakistan)
THQ The Holy Quran
THQ Theater Headquarters
 Wireless Inc. was the next gaming company on board, making the quick-play games available for cell phones in 2001.

Intellivision's success has been followed by other retro-gaming marketing efforts.

Atari Inc., with top-tier games such as "Pac-Man," "Ms. Pac-Man" and "Space Invaders," has resurged since its purchase by French video game conglomerate Infrogrames Entertainment SA in 2001. (The company took on the Atari name.)

Intellivision is now trying to expand beyond the nostalgia market. It is launching a clothing line this year, Intellivision Gear, which will combine the classic logos with hip urban wear. A line of earrings is on the way, made with iconic images from video games. Specialty video game stores already carry Intellivision merchandise. There's also a record label, Intellivision Music.

"For hard core garners who go back that far, Intellivision is a name that people really recognize," Morris said.
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Title Annotation:MEDIA & TECHNOLOGY; Intellivision Productions Inc industry management
Comment:Video games go back to future as first wave of players age.(MEDIA & TECHNOLOGY)(Intellivision Productions Inc industry management)
Author:Potkewitz, Hilary
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 11, 2005
Words:763
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