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Atari Lynx

The Atari Lynx was Atari's only handheld games console, and the first such machine with a color display. It was released in 1989, the same year as Nintendo's (monochromatic) Game Boy.

The Atari Lynx had several innovative features including it being the first color handheld, with a backlit display, a switchable right-handed/left-handed (upside down) config, and the ability to attach it to the Atari Jaguar (though this feature was never implemented). The latter idea was used by Nintendo in the Game Boy Advance, which may be attached to the Nintendo GameCube. The Lynx was also the first gaming console with hardware support for zooming and rotating of sprites, allowing fast pseudo-3D games with unrivaled quality at the time.

The machine was developed by Epyx as the "Handy" and completed in 1987, at which point Atari bought the rights to it. Atari changed the internal speaker and removed the thumb-stick on the control pad before releasing it as the Lynx two years later, initially retailing in the US at US$189.95. Two creators of the system, Dave Needle and R.J. Mical, were also members of the Amiga design team and much to the frustration of Atari, the Amiga was used as the software development platform.

Atari Lynx II
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Atari Lynx II

In 1991, Atari relaunched the Lynx with new packaging, new game card designs, and a new sleek black look. The new system (referred within Atari as the "Lynx II") featured rubber hand grips and a clearer backlit color screen with a power save option.

Though in some ways technologically superior to the Game Boy, Nintendo's marketing and game releases (particularly Tetris) meant the Lynx was pushed to the side. The Lynx also suffered from using more batteries (six versus four in the original Game Boy) and having lesser life. The Lynx was also physically larger than it needed to be; Atari had unwisely followed the advice of focus groups who wanted a bigger unit because that gave them "more" for their money. (Much of the inside of the Lynx's housing was empty air.) Finally the Lynx was sold at a substantially higher price than its competitors. By the mid 1990s, the Atari Lynx was no longer widely available.

As with a lot of older consoles, there's a small group of devoted fans still creating and selling games for the system.

The Atari Lynx's most famous game has to be Chip's Challenge, which has since been converted onto the PC.

Contents

Technical specifications

  • Two CPU chips:
    • "Mikey" - 16 bit CMOS chip @ 16 MHz, 65C02 @ up to 4 MHz
    • "Suzy" - 16 bit CMOS chip @ 16 MHz
  • Graphics: 4096 color palette, 16 simultaneous, 160x102 standard resolution, 480x102 artificial resolution.
  • Unlimited number of sprites with collision detection and support for scaling, tilting and flipping (both horizontally and vertically)
  • Hardware-supported scrolling
  • Math Co-processor for multiplication and division
  • Audio Processor: 4 channel, 8-bit DAC, handled by "Mikey"
  • RAM: 64Kbyte
  • Storage: Cartridge - 128, 256 and 512Kbyte exist, up to 2Mbyte is possible.
  • Ports:
    • Headphone port (mini-DIN 3.5mm stereo; wired for mono on the original Lynx)
    • ComLynx (multiple unit communications, serial)
  • Screen: 3.5" diagonal
  • Battery holder (six AA) ~4-5 hours

Screenshots

Screenshot California Games
Screenshot Chip's Challenge
Screenshot Road Blasters
Screenshot Shanghai
California Games Chip's Challenge Road Blasters Shanghai
Epyx (1989) Atari/Epyx (1989) Tengen (1990) Mediagenic (1990)
Screenshot Turbo Sub
Screenshot Rampart
Screenshot Steel Talons
Screenshot Jimmy Connors' Tennis
Turbo Sub Rampart Steel Talons Jimmy Connors' Tennis
Atari (1991) Atari/Tengen (1992) Atari/Tengen (1992) Atari (1993)


See also

External links

  • Console Database http://www.consoledatabase.com/consoleinfo/atarilynx/index.html - Atari Lynx info
  • http://dmoz.org/Games/Video_Games/Console_Platforms/Atari/
  • Atari Lynx FAQ http://www.digiserve.com/eescape/showpage.phtml?page=a1
  • Information regarding development for the Lynx http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Byte/4242/lynx/



Last updated: 02-16-2005 09:15:43
Last updated: 02-24-2005 04:05:47