Luck Sent.
Trust me, the amount of luck finding cool Atari stuff doesn't quite balance out the cost of living in the Bay Area. It's a hefty price for the luck!

But those Gamers guys do sound like chumps. When I lived in Michigan, the best luck I had finding the fun stuff was at Gibraltor Trade Center, a big indoor flea market, garage sales, and computer trade shows. I'd say Towering Inferno was also my best find in those days!
One of the sad things about living out here, though, especially since I work in games now, is running across people from the old days who think they still have their old unfinished games and get you all excited. The numbers of times I've gone to someone's house to find out they threw out their old stuff, or it was lost in a fire, or their children sold their old games. A popular arcade distributor passed away about five years ago, and he had one of the only two player computer space games in existence, as well as a healthy number of original Pong arcade machines, serial numbers 13-19. He also had a Death Race, and a room full of vintage pinball and arcade glass, floor to ceiling. When he died, his kids decided to move their flavored ice business into the warehouse, and took every game on one side to ther other with a forklift, and just dropped them on top of the other games. When I got their with one of his old business partners, we wanted to cry. All these beautiful games that this guy had kept and restored were crushed, smashed, destroyed. The computer space was unrecoverable. The death race survived, but the glass room - All shattered, completely destroyed. There were custom shelves built to hold over the one thousand pieces of glass, all crushed. I did salvage serial#19 of Pong, though! Also, the kids did manage to sell a lot of his better games before the destruction, so I hope they went to good homes. Sad stuff. Someone also called me with "RealSports Golf." I argued that the game never was in production, but the guy swore up and down that it was. I got pretty excited - it didn't make sense, but I am in Atari country, afterall. When I got there, it was an unlabelled cart - good so far, I brought an Atari and we fired it up. It wasn't RealSports golf at all, but a copy of My Golf. What a let down.
Mike
Edited by MikeMika, Fri Jun 27, 2008 10:21 PM.