ATARI 7800...what could have been if released when ready in 1984. It would have meant “1” more purchase in the books from me instead of saving up my kid money for my 1st. computer...an ATARI 800XL.
I remember all the myths that floated around back then when I was a kid. A big one was that 2600 games played through the expansion pack would somehow magically become enhanced simply because it was attached to a Colecovision.
I owned Donkey Kong on Coleco vision and even for a dude with 2-3 games total. I’d struggle to string an hour of that game in one sitting. Having reminisced with emulator style ports of games like SF2, Bubble Bobble, Shinobi on Xbox360. The nostalgia vanishes almost instantly...’Yep, that’s Shinobi’ 😑
I remember this whole story. Even my 14-year-old mind at the time wondered if there was ANYONE in Coleco's legal department that said, "Uh, hey, you might want to check into copyright and patent infringement laws and all that before you put this expansion module out?" It blew my mind that they even considered doing it. But given that Coleco agreed to paying royalties to Atari for it, maybe that was the plan all along.
Atari swiped or ported a lot of arcade games they didn't license in the 1970s. I didn't realize that pretty much every cartridge from 1977-9 was previously an arcade game! Perhaps because video games were new they didn't think their victims would win in court. In the 1980s they started suing competitors like Activision for making games for the Atari, and Imagic for making Demon Attack, a likely successful Phoenix ripoff. I think the company trademarked the name Space Invaders but not its gameplay, so anybody could make a knock-off.
Personally , I prefer separate paddles and joysticks . The Kraft Mazemaster joystick is my goto as most are fully rebuildable and very comfortable . Gemini joystick/paddles used metal comb style contacts and soft traces inside that wear out , not a fan of the way they're made , the contacts get dirty really quickly and when one part of it wears out you toss it into the parts bin . You also had to use a splitter cable when playing a paddle game with the Gemini paddle which were hard to come by and expensive for many years . They were a good idea poorly executed .
I thought it was cool, but from playing side scrollers like pit fall the controller started drifting left permanently, something I see today in my kids’ switch controllers.
I completely forgot this existed. I remember my family had one when I was a kid... quite literally, a memory I haven't thunk of in 35 years, it's a bizarre feeling. Thanks for posting this!
I owned a Gemini as my first system, before we got the Atari 7800 and then you couldn't find games for them anywhere. Those Gemini controllers were really neat, but very hard on the thumbs over a day of gaming.
I had the ColecoVision with the expansion module. That was a game changer back then. It was also great that you could use Atari joysticks. I didn't hate the Coleco controllers like most seem to, but using the Atari ones gave it a more authentic experience.
Have never seen the Atari expansion in person. Just after it was released, cheap Atari clones were available and, well, they were cheaper than the expansion module.
I was thinking it would only allow the Atari controllers for Atari games, and that for Colecovision games you would still need the Coleco controller. Kinda like the add on for the Atari 5200. It allowed for 2600 controllers but only for the 2600 games. You still needed a 5200 controller to play the 5200 games.
@@Lightblue2222 Had the Colecovision and often used 2600 sticks with Colecovision games. They used the same 9-pin connector. The only problem was the Coleco needed the keypad buttons for starting games so you'd have to leave one of those controllers plugged in to the second player port. But it worked fine otherwise. We played a lot of River Raid on Coleco using an Atari stick.
I had completely forgotten about the Gemini... but still have the Coleco I got for Christmas in 1983. Also still have the Turbo expansion and the expansion 1.
My sister and I used to own the Gemini Video Game System video game home console system back in the proverbial day, as we got it for Christmas back in the mid-1980's (along with _Donkey Kong_ as the pack-in video game title). My parents couldn't afford the NES, or even (apparently) the Atari 2600 or the ColecoVision video game home console systems at the time. I still have a Gemini Video Game System video game home console system and some Atari 2600 video games to this very day that my aunt and uncle bought in the 1980's but hardly ever used and later (very early 2000's) gave to me, as the original one that I had there no longer worked there (although most of the *_original_* Atari 2600 video game cartridges that my sister and I got over the years still worked in the Gemini Video Game System that my aunt and uncle gave to me, so I actually have duplicate video game titles for many of the Atari 2600 video games in my collection).
These things made it all the way to Australia. We got a Gemini as a 'shared' Christmas present. I believe it came with Wizard of Wor as the packaged game.
@@Johnmightbehere Loved it. I didn't have a huge collection of games but did get more eg. Moon Patrol etc. I really liked the controller though the plastic broke off over time leaving the spring but it did mean controllers like the Epyx 500xj become the controller of choice for me later on.
I had 2 of the Canadian version - one in which my sister and I got for Christmas in 1985; and one that I got from my aunt and uncle way back in 2000, who hardly ever used it, as my original one no longer worked there - and *_may_* still have both of them to this very day; although the original one that my parents bought for me and my sister hadn't been working for over 3 decades now, so I may have gotten rid of it (but not the original Atari 2600 video game cartridges that my sister and I got back in the proverbial day while we were still playing on the original Gemini Video Game System video game home console system unit).
I was in my early teen years when the Gemini was released. While I was vaguely aware of it, most of my friends either had Colecovision with the expansion, or had the Atari VCS. At that point, most people who had simply the Atari were curious about how good the Atari 5200 was, and hoping it could compete with or surpass the Colecovision in terms of graphics and sound. As we all now know, the 5200 fell flat, and a lot of people like me ended up getting a Commodore 64 instead of waiting for another game system to come out. My buddies and I were all buttering up our parents (as we we either freshmen in high school or were about to be) to get us a computer so we could do papers in high school, and have a system that would replace the old Atari. Because of people like my friends and I, alot of business went to Commodore, not Atari, or Coleco. Other kids ended up going towards Apple with their families as well. This huge migration though was a big part of the perception of the video gaming crash. I can tell you, none of us quit gaming at all, we had just switched to a better system, and it happened to fall under the "computer" category.
I remember they had Atari 400/800 in Middle School, perhaps to get kids to want it? I didn't realize the 5200 was the same tech-level as the computers, but Atari's internal rivalry prevented them from having compatible games. Several people in comments of this and other videos said they had an Atari computer, so why buy the 5200 when the games were the same? Coleco and Mattel knew that computers would be the next thing, but they totally botched their own attempts to turn their consoles into a computer.
I was a 8 y/o kiddo back then and I had one Gemini which was given to me as a Bday present. Most of my friends had already Intellevision or CollecoVision after having 1st Atari. When we switched to PC's in 1985, Commodore 64, Atari ST and even Apple II's/III plus were seen as toys/consoles and didn't have a good rep in my city/country back then. 1st Macintosh 128K in 1984 started changing this trend. By 1985, it was either the Epson Equity I+ or a IBM PC, later a PS/2 because it was expensive enough to justify it as a gift for a 11 year old, an optional hard drive was as expensive as the computer itself. Then, in 1990 I got my first PC to myself around Latest Intel 486DX/33 processor, never shared with my brothers and sisters and it changed my life for good. I was forced to upgrade to a 486DX-66 PC to be able to play Doom on all its glory during Christmas of 1993. I bought a Sound Blaster 16 sound card also that gave a new dimension on PC Games.
The Gemini was my childhood gaming console. I truly loved it. I had the Canadian Version with Moustrap included. It was just a Pac-Man clone, but it remains one of my favorite games with all its quirks. I finally parted with it about 20 years ago. This video really brought out the nostalgia for me. Almost NO ONE remembers the Gemini. But I will always remember it fondly. Thank you for bringing this memory back for me.
Back then we just set up all of our consoles and uses a radio shack switch to choose which one would be displayed. We had three, Sears Tele-games Video Arcade, Sears Tele-games Super Video Arcade and the ColecoVision. Damn I miss those days.
My family used something like that to switch to and from video game mode to cable T.V./VCR mode for the Gemini Video Game System video game home console system on the T.V. back in the 1980's. However, we didn't need it anymore there once we got the NES in the very early 1990's as the NES used something different there.
Great video, shame you didn't show the insides of the gemini, show what was different between it and the expansion module! But still enjoyed the video!!! Kudos!
Love your channel bud. Found it yesterday and it’s all I’ve watched in my little spare time. Gaming history is my favorite part of gaming and I look forward to more
The Gemini was our first "Atari" console. It was the Canadian version and it came with Donkey Kong and Mouse Trap. The thing I remember the most about it is the control stick ripping up my hands while playing Decathalon. The system didn't last very long though, I'm guessing the cheaper price was reflected in the build quality as it died after only 2-3 years, and we replaced it with a 2600 Jr.
I remember my father bringing this home after work one day when I was a kid! I wanted an Atari and ended up with this. Being 6 years old, it took me a bit to figure out it basically was an Atari and once that sunk in, I was so psyched!
I lived through those times and had an Atari 8 bit home computer rather than a console. I vaguely remember that Coleco had an adapter to play 2600 games. This was a fun video. Thanks.
As well as using the ColecoVision for power and video output, I believe the expansion module #1 also used the crystal in the ColecoVision to drive its clock.
This was literally the very first video game console that I ever owned (I had played the Atari 2600 before at a cousin's house before but never actually owned one). My parents got one for me for my 10th birthday. It came with the Donkey Kong and Mouse Trap pack-in cartridges. I even remember the cheesy commercials they used to show on tv with the greasy biker doo-wopp dudes comparing the 2600 to the Gemini. Good times.....goood times......
ahh, Mouse Trap was so good. I had one of these as well with the combo game. Had a 2600 as well. Not sure why we got the Coleco as I don't think the Atari was broken..
funny thing is when the coleco beat atari in court the decision was quoted verbatim in court 10 years later by galoob for the game genie when Nintendo sued them
It's funny how Coleco defeated Atari in court but decided to pay them royalties on every clone they made anyway. I guess Coleco felt charitable and wanted to donate money to Atari. Either that or they didn't really win. Which makes more sense to you?
Young people these days don't know the pain of waiting to receive a video game. I remember ordering games on cassette for my Commodore 64 through the mail. It would take 4-6 weeks to get the game in my mailbox. Then it would be 10-15 minutes to load the game on a tape drive and half the time it would get an error and you would have to rewind the whole cassette and start over. Then after playing the game, you had to turn off your C-64, because if you didn't turn them off, they would fry the CPU because they got too hot. Get off my lawn!!!
I had one of the original Atari adapters, got it along with the ColecoVision console as a replacement for my Atari, which I then sold to a friend. Kept some of my favourite 2600 games and simply played them on my Coleco. Good times.
Between my friends at the time; we had all the models Intellivision, Atari2600, Colecovision, Gemini, Vextrek. I had the Gemini, later upgraded to C=64
I put on my cub scout uniform, banged on doors after Christmas asking to remove Christmas Trees- which I just threw in this drainage ditch, made $100, bought the Atari expansion for my celecovision for $69, sold my old Atari with only combat for $20. Great times!
Columbia version of Gemini new to me- thanks for the heads up! Assuming the only difference are the stickers, ie circuit boards and chips are identical, I have no big desire to get one, other than if found at yard sale/thrift. The Gemini and Atari consoles of the post crash 80s highlight the doldrums of the 80s video game market in North America. Yes, the NES made its debut and owned the video game market after 1985, coupled with a few others like the Sega Master System, but all Atari did in the video game space was constantly milk the 2600 with more console redesigns, and repackage their 70s 8 bit computer into the XE Game System, and constantly re-release the same titles ported to mediocre consoles like the 7800. It took until the 90s for the Jaguar and Lynx to hit the market (yes Lynx technically in 1989) which were both groundbreaking tech-wise, but never got big market share. 1985 through the early 90s was ruled by 16 bit computers like the Amiga and Atari ST, or for lower incomes, leftover 8 bit machines like the C64 or Atari bit, Tandy or early PC clone 8088 machines. All these had lots of games that could be copied for cost conscious consumers (Legalities aside), plus the idea of having a "real" computer to do at least word processing.
Really awesome video, excellent production value, interesting content. I am old enough to remember the Colecovision and the legal battle with Atari so it brings back a lot of memories of me as a kid wanting a Colecovision.
The way I remember it the expansion module #1 was not really that big a deal. I got one eventually but the 2600 games sucked at that point when the module came out. The Colecovision, intellivision, Commodore 64 and Atari 800 series of games were WAY better so the only reason we got the expansion module is so you could play some of the activision games, your buddies old games and the games you could pick up for a dollar in the bargain bins at toys R us etc. But, it was pretty insane that they got away with it! I remember scratching my head on how they were allowed to pull that off when I was a kid 😆
I never had a collecovision. But I remember it was so much more advanced than the 2600, at the time I didn't understand why anyone with a collecovision would even want to bother playing 2600 games.
That's my thought. They should have had an adapter for Atari 400/800 games, instead. But as some people said, the Atari would break and they would buy a replacement in the adapter to play what they already had. My Atari had to go for repairs sometime in 1982-3.
I had one of these when I go was a kid. Good looking design. The controller is the best of it's generation. I use it for anything from Atari, Coleco vision, commador 64, ect ect.
It's too bad Atari didn't make a controller like that, except combining the joystick and steering controller. There were at least 3 arcade games that used steering: Tron, Wild Western and Tempest, as well as the games that came before and after Indy 500. But since you had to own Indy 500, they wouldn't make new games that used steering controllers. Paddles tended to get jittery over time and we bought 3rd-party ones. I took all mine apart a few years ago to clean, but didn't get them back to "factory settings."
I had a chance to buy a Gemini for about $80 several years ago at an "antique store" in Arkansas. It was the only booth focused on games with lots of Famicom and other not-common-in-the-US stuff. There was a Gemini and I almost bought it. I also got a Colecovision off a classmate in the late 90s including the expansion. And at one point got a Vectrex from another classmate. Ugh, if only I'd known what these would be worth one day...
This lawsuit was going on almost concurrently with apple vs. frankin which was filed in may of 1982 while atari vs. coleco was filed in december of that same year.
My family owned a Colecovision and had owned a 2600 before that, before someone stole it. We didn't fully appreciate how great the Coleco was at that time. NOW I understand and feel proud to have owned one. But the Gemini confused the hell out of us back in the day. We could not understand what it was. Sure they said it played 2600 games but the idea of a totally different console playing those games just made no sense. We didn't get it at all. I laugh at it now, because of course it's really doing exactly what it says it is doing and we would have figured it out if we read the darn box or something. I dunno. Stupid truth: we eventually sold the Coleco and got a new console: the updated look sleek 2600 Atari released in the 80s. Like I said, we didn't appreciate the Colecovision when we had it.
I don't know how old you are, but the comment you make at around 5:30 about this being the "Early days".....well.... Coleco knew what they were doing. It wasn't a grey area. I was a teenager then, and if you would look at the magazines of the day, it was covered. companies would steal something popular if they could. It happens today. Companies are always backwards engineering competitors stuff.
Coleco didn't reverse engineer the Atari - they just literally built an Atari with the same chips and sold it. There's a big difference between that and reverse engineering. And that's why this case was settled and others went on to make precedents.
@@seth8629 maybe too literal, my point is that companies are always trying to make money. They will buy a competitors device, maybe not backwards engineer, but to see how it works, and either copy it outright or backwards engineer it. My point is that this (copying in any form) isn't new and Coleco knew what they were doing.
Didn't have the Expansion Module for my Coleco back in the day but I grabbed one on Ebay close to 10 years ago when they were even cheaper. Was more for the interesting novelty of it all, I'd still rather hook up my VCS to play those games.
My memory is foggy on the Gemini, but I remember the controller being much easier and precise than a non worn-in Atari controller. That’s right - a new Atari joystick had to be broken in because they were stiff, difficult to use, and they hurt your hands with long play. Gemini made previously hard to play games a breeze.
There are some UA-cam tutorials on how to make your own teleprompter with a cheap android tablet, some pieces of wood, mirrored glass, black cloth, and a few other ingredients. I built one myself. That way you could read from your script without having to look off to the side.
All of these consoles fell short in one way or another, but the 2600 was the one I had and played the most of other then the magnavox odessey 2, Have you done a video on that one? I'd sure watch it
@@PianoMan-hx3ev "Can I be in your video?" "Sure, I need someone to shake his head, wag his finger, pull his hair, and put his hands up like he doesn't know anything."
I never heard of a Gemini system back then. Of course I was a young kid back then. Never heard of a video game crash until over 30 years later. However, when my Atari controllers bit the dust, we did buy the Gemini joysticks to use on it.
yep I had one. That was my first game console and yes the price made my mother get it. It was 50 bucks at Zayre while the Atari was 150-250 bucks with NO PADDLES. I'm looking to get another one but the prices for this system on ebay are outrageous and its not even a collector's item. The Columbia House version is the collector's item, RIP Coleco, Columbia House, Zayre and Sears
Now I want to search my parents house for my coloeco vision and expansion module. The expansion module was a big selling point for the Vision but I had did my homework and knew what that console offered so I was super excited for it. I got it as soon as it came out and played the hell out of it.
I remember seeing the ad for the Gemini back then in the sears catalog, and I had the Atari 2600, but the picture showed it having an actual Colecovision cartridge in the slot, so I thought at 98 dollars it was a cheap version of the Colecovision , and that I had a chance to actually get it for christmas and play actual colecovision games because I knew the actual system was expensive. well, now I know for sure it was a clone , thank you for putting that misconception to rest for me. great video.
I've got a Columbia Home Arcade . I paid $60 for it on ebay a few years ago . I also picked up three or four Coleco Geminis for like $20 a piece because nobody wanted them a couple of years ago . A lot of them have broken solder joints now and are sold as untested or for parts so if you're looking to buy one , I would only look at fully tested consoles unless it's super cheap and you're willing to fix it .
Great vid. Although I never owned a Coleco Gemini “back in the day”, I bought one on EBAY a few years ago. I prefer it to the “original” Atari VCS. It is compact, and has a clear video signal. The controllers are iffy, but it will take any VCS controller. I later acquired one with composite video output as well. The Gemini is a very viable “retro” way to play 2600 games. If you are a Colecovision fan, it’s a no-brainer. Expansion Module 1 was also a no-brainer if you owned a Colecovision and wanted to play 2600 games. It is slightly less viable a means nowadays due to the relative shortage of “working” Colecovision consoles.
They do and it's distracting. But I'm pretty impressed that he presents the content well. If I was looking off to the side like that trying to read something I'd end up with a migraine.
The ColecoVision was the gift that would keep giving back then. As kid, the expansion port seemed as if it had infinite possibilities making the gaming system seem as if it would never become obsolete. Ah,....the mind of a child,....
Dude: I love your videos, I love the content, Your voice and diction are great and I even love your set. But could you please move your monitor or teleprompter in front of you, so you don’t have to look to god knows where or what? It’s so distracting that it takes me out of the experience. Thanks.
Good video, one of my favorite types of videos, video game history is fascinating and it's cool to hear others take on this subject. Heard the story a few times and you did good, giving information that i hadn't heard before. SUBSCRIBED You, PatmanQC and Friday Night Arcade are a few of the underground channels I've found this year. Keep it up
@@NewsmakersGames I've been asking my fellow collectors and one of them have two Gemini. The highest number of the two is #143554 so they made at least that many. Mine is #424
They should had made another one too and make it compatible with not only 2600 and Colecovision games but also Intellivision games too. They could call it the Coleco Genesis.
So eventually coleco and atari did agree in that coleco will pay atari royalty’s for selling their expansion module and the germini console,so what was first iligal from coleco turned out to be later legalized later on🙏
Gemini marketing was confusing. It was made by Coleco but not a colecovision. The two systems would be on the same page in a catalog. I had the colecovision but not the expansion or the Gemini. Wanted them, but you couldn't pry the colecovision out of my cold dead hands.
I had the Gemini. I didn't like the 2600 joystick, but I did like the Gemini's. Also, I really wanted a Colecovision, but I could never talk my folks into it. We did have an Intellivision tho (and later upgraded to the Intellivision 2, when the first one wore out). And for the record(s), (pun inevitable), I had more than one account with Columbia House while in college (having an address at school and one at home), and I never had any problems with them whatsoever, nor ftm with any other mail-order music company I joined, except paying them off because I was young and irresponsible.
Having a video of you holding the Donkey Kong cartridge for the 2600 in front of a Coleco Expansion Module is hilarious. Colecovision's version of Donkey Kong was shockingly good compared to other systems - very close to the arcade. And, Coleco's pursuit of the Donkey Kong license spelled Atari's doom. Atari had reached an agreement with Nintendo to distribute the NES in the US as an Atari product, letting them take care of North American marketing. But when Atari went to CES and saw a nearly arcade-perfect version of Donkey Kong running on a Colecovision, they presumed Nintendo was offering this deal to Coleco, too, in order to get a better deal. So Atari, in it's pride, bailed on the deal, which would have meant surviving the Atari 2600 Crash and then distributing the best-selling console of the next generation. Nintendo just decided to handle its own NA business instead. But ironically, it was all over nothing - the Colecovision programmers did this as an R&D exercise and hadn't even discussed this port with Nintendo at the time, this was arranged later.
no mention of the Coleco Telstar / Atari Pong market competition of the previous gen ? * context does matter * the court decisions just placed precedents. you could have mentionned the actual race for arcade port licenses & how coleco screwed Atari over with DK / DKjr ?
We had a Gemini after our 2nd 2600 died. Played Armor Ambush and Space Attack a lot on it. Controllers were great as you could switch to Warlords or Kaboom! and not have to unplug.
I never had an Atari...although many of my friends did. I got a Coleco Gemini for Christmas in maybe 1984? Pretty sure it was that Sears bundle with Mouse Trap and Donkey Kong. It was a long time ago but that sounds very familiar. Good times! Maney hours killed playing that.
We have a couple really cool videos planned for you guys but we really want to know which system YOU want to see us cover next!
Vectrex or the Atari 5200
👍 great video
ATARI 7800...what could have been if released when ready in 1984.
It would have meant “1” more purchase in the books from me instead of saving up my kid money for my 1st. computer...an ATARI 800XL.
@@F1JV yup and laserdisc add on for Atari 7800 1984 had port for it
Atari Lynx or Jaguar would be cool to see.
Insanity is buying the Gemini to play Atari Donkey Kong on the COLECOVISION
I remember all the myths that floated around back then when I was a kid. A big one was that 2600 games played through the expansion pack would somehow magically become enhanced simply because it was attached to a Colecovision.
The Gemini was a stand alone clone. It wasn't a Colecovision module. Though the VCS "Expansion" module is capable to work on its own.
I owned Donkey Kong on Coleco vision and even for a dude with 2-3 games total. I’d struggle to string an hour of that game in one sitting.
Having reminisced with emulator style ports of games like SF2, Bubble Bobble, Shinobi on Xbox360. The nostalgia vanishes almost instantly...’Yep, that’s Shinobi’ 😑
I remember this whole story. Even my 14-year-old mind at the time wondered if there was ANYONE in Coleco's legal department that said, "Uh, hey, you might want to check into copyright and patent infringement laws and all that before you put this expansion module out?" It blew my mind that they even considered doing it. But given that Coleco agreed to paying royalties to Atari for it, maybe that was the plan all along.
Atari swiped or ported a lot of arcade games they didn't license in the 1970s. I didn't realize that pretty much every cartridge from 1977-9 was previously an arcade game! Perhaps because video games were new they didn't think their victims would win in court. In the 1980s they started suing competitors like Activision for making games for the Atari, and Imagic for making Demon Attack, a likely successful Phoenix ripoff. I think the company trademarked the name Space Invaders but not its gameplay, so anybody could make a knock-off.
I loved the Gemini joystick. It was a lot more comfortable to use than Atari's. I even used it for my Commodore 64.
I still have my controllers, after a good cleaning they work as good as new.
Perfect combo of joystick,roller and size
worked for my Amiga also ! :D
Personally , I prefer separate paddles and joysticks . The Kraft Mazemaster joystick is my goto as most are fully rebuildable and very comfortable . Gemini joystick/paddles used metal comb style contacts and soft traces inside that wear out , not a fan of the way they're made , the contacts get dirty really quickly and when one part of it wears out you toss it into the parts bin . You also had to use a splitter cable when playing a paddle game with the Gemini paddle which were hard to come by and expensive for many years . They were a good idea poorly executed .
I thought it was cool, but from playing side scrollers like pit fall the controller started drifting left permanently, something I see today in my kids’ switch controllers.
I completely forgot this existed. I remember my family had one when I was a kid... quite literally, a memory I haven't thunk of in 35 years, it's a bizarre feeling. Thanks for posting this!
I owned a Gemini as my first system, before we got the Atari 7800 and then you couldn't find games for them anywhere. Those Gemini controllers were really neat, but very hard on the thumbs over a day of gaming.
I had the ColecoVision with the expansion module. That was a game changer back then.
It was also great that you could use Atari joysticks. I didn't hate the Coleco controllers like most seem to, but using the Atari ones gave it a more authentic experience.
Have never seen the Atari expansion in person. Just after it was released, cheap Atari clones were available and, well, they were cheaper than the expansion module.
I was thinking it would only allow the Atari controllers for Atari games, and that for Colecovision games you would still need the Coleco controller.
Kinda like the add on for the Atari 5200. It allowed for 2600 controllers but only for the 2600 games. You still needed a 5200 controller to play the 5200 games.
@@Lightblue2222 Had the Colecovision and often used 2600 sticks with Colecovision games. They used the same 9-pin connector. The only problem was the Coleco needed the keypad buttons for starting games so you'd have to leave one of those controllers plugged in to the second player port. But it worked fine otherwise. We played a lot of River Raid on Coleco using an Atari stick.
@@LatitudeSky that's cool to know. That means it should also work with the Sega Genesis controller, since that's what I use for my 2600.
I had completely forgotten about the Gemini...
but still have the Coleco I got for Christmas in 1983.
Also still have the Turbo expansion and the expansion 1.
My sister and I used to own the Gemini Video Game System video game home console system back in the proverbial day, as we got it for Christmas back in the mid-1980's (along with _Donkey Kong_ as the pack-in video game title). My parents couldn't afford the NES, or even (apparently) the Atari 2600 or the ColecoVision video game home console systems at the time. I still have a Gemini Video Game System video game home console system and some Atari 2600 video games to this very day that my aunt and uncle bought in the 1980's but hardly ever used and later (very early 2000's) gave to me, as the original one that I had there no longer worked there (although most of the *_original_* Atari 2600 video game cartridges that my sister and I got over the years still worked in the Gemini Video Game System that my aunt and uncle gave to me, so I actually have duplicate video game titles for many of the Atari 2600 video games in my collection).
These things made it all the way to Australia. We got a Gemini as a 'shared' Christmas present. I believe it came with Wizard of Wor as the packaged game.
Did you like it? Also, did you buy any other games for it?
@@Johnmightbehere Loved it. I didn't have a huge collection of games but did get more eg. Moon Patrol etc. I really liked the controller though the plastic broke off over time leaving the spring but it did mean controllers like the Epyx 500xj become the controller of choice for me later on.
I had a Gemini when I was a kid... my parents won it as a door prize, the rest is history! Canadian version! Loved the controller!
I had 2 of the Canadian version - one in which my sister and I got for Christmas in 1985; and one that I got from my aunt and uncle way back in 2000, who hardly ever used it, as my original one no longer worked there - and *_may_* still have both of them to this very day; although the original one that my parents bought for me and my sister hadn't been working for over 3 decades now, so I may have gotten rid of it (but not the original Atari 2600 video game cartridges that my sister and I got back in the proverbial day while we were still playing on the original Gemini Video Game System video game home console system unit).
Still have my original Colecovison with ALL the expansion modules in full working order...
So do I!
Sell them to me. Sell me your children...
Can you post pictures of them?
@@Playpool1 I'll have to work on that. They are packed away right now. .
Loving these retro vids... Keep em coming brings me back to my childhood...
I was in my early teen years when the Gemini was released. While I was vaguely aware of it, most of my friends either had Colecovision with the expansion, or had the Atari VCS. At that point, most people who had simply the Atari were curious about how good the Atari 5200 was, and hoping it could compete with or surpass the Colecovision in terms of graphics and sound. As we all now know, the 5200 fell flat, and a lot of people like me ended up getting a Commodore 64 instead of waiting for another game system to come out. My buddies and I were all buttering up our parents (as we we either freshmen in high school or were about to be) to get us a computer so we could do papers in high school, and have a system that would replace the old Atari.
Because of people like my friends and I, alot of business went to Commodore, not Atari, or Coleco. Other kids ended up going towards Apple with their families as well. This huge migration though was a big part of the perception of the video gaming crash.
I can tell you, none of us quit gaming at all, we had just switched to a better system, and it happened to fall under the "computer" category.
I remember they had Atari 400/800 in Middle School, perhaps to get kids to want it? I didn't realize the 5200 was the same tech-level as the computers, but Atari's internal rivalry prevented them from having compatible games. Several people in comments of this and other videos said they had an Atari computer, so why buy the 5200 when the games were the same?
Coleco and Mattel knew that computers would be the next thing, but they totally botched their own attempts to turn their consoles into a computer.
I was a 8 y/o kiddo back then and I had one Gemini which was given to me as a Bday present. Most of my friends had already Intellevision or CollecoVision after having 1st Atari. When we switched to PC's in 1985, Commodore 64, Atari ST and even Apple II's/III plus were seen as toys/consoles and didn't have a good rep in my city/country back then. 1st Macintosh 128K in 1984 started changing this trend. By 1985, it was either the Epson Equity I+ or a IBM PC, later a PS/2 because it was expensive enough to justify it as a gift for a 11 year old, an optional hard drive was as expensive as the computer itself. Then, in 1990 I got my first PC to myself around Latest Intel 486DX/33 processor, never shared with my brothers and sisters and it changed my life for good. I was forced to upgrade to a 486DX-66 PC to be able to play Doom on all its glory during Christmas of 1993. I bought a Sound Blaster 16 sound card also that gave a new dimension on PC Games.
The Gemini was my childhood gaming console. I truly loved it. I had the Canadian Version with Moustrap included. It was just a Pac-Man clone, but it remains one of my favorite games with all its quirks. I finally parted with it about 20 years ago. This video really brought out the nostalgia for me. Almost NO ONE remembers the Gemini. But I will always remember it fondly.
Thank you for bringing this memory back for me.
Back then we just set up all of our consoles and uses a radio shack switch to choose which one would be displayed.
We had three, Sears Tele-games Video Arcade, Sears Tele-games Super Video Arcade and the ColecoVision. Damn I miss those days.
My family used something like that to switch to and from video game mode to cable T.V./VCR mode for the Gemini Video Game System video game home console system on the T.V. back in the 1980's. However, we didn't need it anymore there once we got the NES in the very early 1990's as the NES used something different there.
You dad must have “went into plastics” lol.
Lol, I had the Atari adaptor which was great since I went from Odyssey 2 to Colecovision.
At this time, Brazil was Full of Atari Legal clones manufacture locally
I love these videos. I was putting in long hours that year and missed all these shenanigan's
Glad you like them!
Great video, shame you didn't show the insides of the gemini, show what was different between it and the expansion module! But still enjoyed the video!!! Kudos!
Hello you
Ai edgy one!
Atari threw stones from their glasshouse and then went bankrupt.
Love your channel bud. Found it yesterday and it’s all I’ve watched in my little spare time. Gaming history is my favorite part of gaming and I look forward to more
I had a Columbia House branded Atari when I was growing up. I actually liked getting games through the mail that way.
I want an Atari but my mom show up with a Gemini instead back in 1983 with Donkey Kong and Mouse Trap included.
coleco machines all looked like 8-track players, which was so "in" for mid 80s, lol
When vampires get UA-cam channels.
Subbed. Really like the way you explain things and you have a calming voice; your knowledge of the subject shows through.
He is disturbing tonlook at but being blind he does well
The Gemini was our first "Atari" console. It was the Canadian version and it came with Donkey Kong and Mouse Trap. The thing I remember the most about it is the control stick ripping up my hands while playing Decathalon. The system didn't last very long though, I'm guessing the cheaper price was reflected in the build quality as it died after only 2-3 years, and we replaced it with a 2600 Jr.
I remember my father bringing this home after work one day when I was a kid! I wanted an Atari and ended up with this. Being 6 years old, it took me a bit to figure out it basically was an Atari and once that sunk in, I was so psyched!
You’re on fire buddy! Got something great to watch after work. Keep this golden stuff rolling! Thanks brother!
A lot of the credit should go to my dad, who owns many of the classic systems we cover, and to our editor Christian!
Just came across your channel! I love it!
I've subscribed. Keep them coming!
Hello from Las Vegas NV!
Interesting video, but can I suggest lowering the music volume or changing the music so it's not the same 10-second loop throughout?
My brother and I we receive this console game from our grand parent back in time
I lived through those times and had an Atari 8 bit home computer rather than a console. I vaguely remember that Coleco had an adapter to play 2600 games. This was a fun video. Thanks.
Loved the gemini joystick/paddle. Best joystick of the systems at that time. I used to plug it into my master system later on
As well as using the ColecoVision for power and video output, I believe the expansion module #1 also used the crystal in the ColecoVision to drive its clock.
This was literally the very first video game console that I ever owned (I had played the Atari 2600 before at a cousin's house before but never actually owned one). My parents got one for me for my 10th birthday. It came with the Donkey Kong and Mouse Trap pack-in cartridges. I even remember the cheesy commercials they used to show on tv with the greasy biker doo-wopp dudes comparing the 2600 to the Gemini. Good times.....goood times......
ahh, Mouse Trap was so good. I had one of these as well with the combo game. Had a 2600 as well. Not sure why we got the Coleco as I don't think the Atari was broken..
funny thing is when the coleco beat atari in court the decision was quoted verbatim in court 10 years later by galoob for the game genie when Nintendo sued them
It's funny how Coleco defeated Atari in court but decided to pay them royalties on every clone they made anyway. I guess Coleco felt charitable and wanted to donate money to Atari. Either that or they didn't really win. Which makes more sense to you?
@@rbrtck Sounds like a settlement like Activision made after their lawsuit, so they could put the name "Atari" on their cartridges.
Young people these days don't know the pain of waiting to receive a video game. I remember ordering games on cassette for my Commodore 64 through the mail. It would take 4-6 weeks to get the game in my mailbox. Then it would be 10-15 minutes to load the game on a tape drive and half the time it would get an error and you would have to rewind the whole cassette and start over. Then after playing the game, you had to turn off your C-64, because if you didn't turn them off, they would fry the CPU because they got too hot. Get off my lawn!!!
I bought one game on cassette for my VIC-20: Scramble, and didn't buy any more; cartridges or nothing.
I had one of the original Atari adapters, got it along with the ColecoVision console as a replacement for my Atari, which I then sold to a friend. Kept some of my favourite 2600 games and simply played them on my Coleco. Good times.
Between my friends at the time; we had all the models
Intellivision, Atari2600, Colecovision, Gemini, Vextrek.
I had the Gemini, later upgraded to C=64
I put on my cub scout uniform, banged on doors after Christmas asking to remove Christmas Trees- which I just threw in this drainage ditch, made $100, bought the Atari expansion for my celecovision for $69, sold my old Atari with only combat for $20.
Great times!
Columbia version of Gemini new to me- thanks for the heads up!
Assuming the only difference are the stickers, ie circuit boards and chips are identical, I have no big desire to get one, other than if found at yard sale/thrift.
The Gemini and Atari consoles of the post crash 80s highlight the doldrums of the 80s video game market in North America.
Yes, the NES made its debut and owned the video game market after 1985, coupled with a few others like the Sega Master System, but all Atari did in the video game space was constantly milk the 2600 with more console redesigns, and repackage their 70s 8 bit computer into the XE Game System, and constantly re-release the same titles ported to mediocre consoles like the 7800. It took until the 90s for the Jaguar and Lynx to hit the market (yes Lynx technically in 1989) which were both groundbreaking tech-wise, but never got big market share.
1985 through the early 90s was ruled by 16 bit computers like the Amiga and Atari ST, or for lower incomes, leftover 8 bit machines like the C64 or Atari bit, Tandy or early PC clone 8088 machines. All these had lots of games that could be copied for cost conscious consumers (Legalities aside), plus the idea of having a "real" computer to do at least word processing.
I actually had a Gemini system, because my brothers Atari broke or something,..I forgot what happened. nut I had one!
Really awesome video, excellent production value, interesting content. I am old enough to remember the Colecovision and the legal battle with Atari so it brings back a lot of memories of me as a kid wanting a Colecovision.
I remember seeing all of this happen but I was a kid so I didn't really understand what was going on. Excellent explanation!!
I still have a Gemini complete in box
Cool combo paddle+joystick controllers
Nice retro gaming piece to have in a collection
The way I remember it the expansion module #1 was not really that big a deal. I got one eventually but the 2600 games sucked at that point when the module came out. The Colecovision, intellivision, Commodore 64 and Atari 800 series of games were WAY better so the only reason we got the expansion module is so you could play some of the activision games, your buddies old games and the games you could pick up for a dollar in the bargain bins at toys R us etc. But, it was pretty insane that they got away with it! I remember scratching my head on how they were allowed to pull that off when I was a kid 😆
I never had a collecovision. But I remember it was so much more advanced than the 2600, at the time I didn't understand why anyone with a collecovision would even want to bother playing 2600 games.
That's my thought. They should have had an adapter for Atari 400/800 games, instead. But as some people said, the Atari would break and they would buy a replacement in the adapter to play what they already had. My Atari had to go for repairs sometime in 1982-3.
I had one of these when I go was a kid. Good looking design.
The controller is the best of it's generation. I use it for anything from Atari, Coleco vision, commador 64, ect ect.
It's too bad Atari didn't make a controller like that, except combining the joystick and steering controller. There were at least 3 arcade games that used steering: Tron, Wild Western and Tempest, as well as the games that came before and after Indy 500. But since you had to own Indy 500, they wouldn't make new games that used steering controllers. Paddles tended to get jittery over time and we bought 3rd-party ones. I took all mine apart a few years ago to clean, but didn't get them back to "factory settings."
Very well done and informative video. Really enjoyed your presentation. You have a new subscriber
What is so interesting to your top left that you keep staring at? If it's cue cards, they're in the wrong spot, brother.
I had a chance to buy a Gemini for about $80 several years ago at an "antique store" in Arkansas. It was the only booth focused on games with lots of Famicom and other not-common-in-the-US stuff. There was a Gemini and I almost bought it.
I also got a Colecovision off a classmate in the late 90s including the expansion. And at one point got a Vectrex from another classmate. Ugh, if only I'd known what these would be worth one day...
This lawsuit was going on almost concurrently with apple vs. frankin which was filed in may of 1982 while atari vs. coleco was filed in december of that same year.
This is correct! Qe've extensively covered Frankin over on our tech channel if anyone is curious to learn more!
My family owned a Colecovision and had owned a 2600 before that, before someone stole it. We didn't fully appreciate how great the Coleco was at that time. NOW I understand and feel proud to have owned one. But the Gemini confused the hell out of us back in the day. We could not understand what it was. Sure they said it played 2600 games but the idea of a totally different console playing those games just made no sense. We didn't get it at all. I laugh at it now, because of course it's really doing exactly what it says it is doing and we would have figured it out if we read the darn box or something. I dunno. Stupid truth: we eventually sold the Coleco and got a new console: the updated look sleek 2600 Atari released in the 80s. Like I said, we didn't appreciate the Colecovision when we had it.
I don't know how old you are, but the comment you make at around 5:30 about this being the "Early days".....well.... Coleco knew what they were doing. It wasn't a grey area. I was a teenager then, and if you would look at the magazines of the day, it was covered. companies would steal something popular if they could. It happens today. Companies are always backwards engineering competitors stuff.
Coleco didn't reverse engineer the Atari - they just literally built an Atari with the same chips and sold it. There's a big difference between that and reverse engineering. And that's why this case was settled and others went on to make precedents.
@@seth8629 maybe too literal, my point is that companies are always trying to make money. They will buy a competitors device, maybe not backwards engineer, but to see how it works, and either copy it outright or backwards engineer it. My point is that this (copying in any form) isn't new and Coleco knew what they were doing.
Didn't have the Expansion Module for my Coleco back in the day but I grabbed one on Ebay close to 10 years ago when they were even cheaper. Was more for the interesting novelty of it all, I'd still rather hook up my VCS to play those games.
My memory is foggy on the Gemini, but I remember the controller being much easier and precise than a non worn-in Atari controller. That’s right - a new Atari joystick had to be broken in because they were stiff, difficult to use, and they hurt your hands with long play. Gemini made previously hard to play games a breeze.
Coleco stole from Atari as like you said, it is like the Playstation having an X Box expansion slot.
They used OFF THE SHELF parts. That is the reason Coleco won. Clear and simple.
@@3dtexan890 Sure, that is why Coleco is a powerful company today.... except they don't exist. Neither does Atari. It is all relative.
Except Microsoft privately probably wouldn't care except in terms of marketing, they seemingly often don't make money on the consoles, only the games.
@@3dtexan890 As in the video, they effectively sourced a clone part to replicate the TIA chip.
Wow, I never knew aything about this curious system, good work dude!
I had this when I was 14, thinking of getting one again, just for nostalgia, great video
My family had a Columbia Home Arcade. I had no idea it was so rare.
Very nice video, keep up the good work!
There are some UA-cam tutorials on how to make your own teleprompter with a cheap android tablet, some pieces of wood, mirrored glass, black cloth, and a few other ingredients. I built one myself. That way you could read from your script without having to look off to the side.
Sunglasses are also a cheap alternative.
Then again, just using a static image works for a couple of UA-cam channels too.
I love learning new things about old systems. I never heard of the Gemini.
What a riot!
"pun intended, the riot chip"
All of these consoles fell short in one way or another, but the 2600 was the one I had and played the most of other then the magnavox odessey 2, Have you done a video on that one? I'd sure watch it
Thank you for bringing me back to my youth!
That brings back memories, the Gemini was our console back in the day....
Non of these videos would be the same without the guy in the blue shirt shaking his head.
I thought that was his friend. That's a stock video to use as filler, like the guy grabbing his hair?
@@sandal_thong8631 Most certainly.
@@PianoMan-hx3ev "Can I be in your video?"
"Sure, I need someone to shake his head, wag his finger, pull his hair, and put his hands up like he doesn't know anything."
I never heard of a Gemini system back then. Of course I was a young kid back then. Never heard of a video game crash until over 30 years later. However, when my Atari controllers bit the dust, we did buy the Gemini joysticks to use on it.
yep I had one. That was my first game console and yes the price made my mother get it. It was 50 bucks at Zayre while the Atari was 150-250 bucks with NO PADDLES. I'm looking to get another one but the prices for this system on ebay are outrageous and its not even a collector's item. The Columbia House version is the collector's item, RIP Coleco, Columbia House, Zayre and Sears
Sears is still in business though it looks like they want to just have online sales & independently owned outlets...RIP most malls.
@@F1JV right!!!
I never knew that these even existed and I was born in 1973. Lots of my friends had Atari and coleco systems
Cool video I approve of your choice of the vader 2600
Now I want to search my parents house for my coloeco vision and expansion module. The expansion module was a big selling point for the Vision but I had did my homework and knew what that console offered so I was super excited for it. I got it as soon as it came out and played the hell out of it.
I remember seeing the ad for the Gemini back then in the sears catalog, and I had the Atari 2600, but the picture showed it having an actual Colecovision cartridge in the slot, so I thought at 98 dollars it was a cheap version of the Colecovision , and that I had a chance to actually get it for christmas and play actual colecovision games because I knew the actual system was expensive. well, now I know for sure it was a clone , thank you for putting that misconception to rest for me. great video.
It wasn't a Colecovision cartridge in the Gemini. It was the Coleco cartridge for the 2600 in the Gemini.
This is the first console I’ve ever played on! Thanks for the memories.
I've got a Columbia Home Arcade . I paid $60 for it on ebay a few years ago . I also picked up three or four Coleco Geminis for like $20 a piece because nobody wanted them a couple of years ago . A lot of them have broken solder joints now and are sold as untested or for parts so if you're looking to buy one , I would only look at fully tested consoles unless it's super cheap and you're willing to fix it .
Great vid. Although I never owned a Coleco Gemini “back in the day”, I bought one on EBAY a few years ago. I prefer it to the “original” Atari VCS. It is compact, and has a clear video signal. The controllers are iffy, but it will take any VCS controller. I later acquired one with composite video output as well. The Gemini is a very viable “retro” way to play 2600 games. If you are a Colecovision fan, it’s a no-brainer. Expansion Module 1 was also a no-brainer if you owned a Colecovision and wanted to play 2600 games. It is slightly less viable a means nowadays due to the relative shortage of “working” Colecovision consoles.
These are all great! I only knew one person that had the gemini but we played it a lot.
I'm glad to see you are doing well
Is this guy blind? His eye seem to float around at different angles
@@davidtaylor9999 Eh, if he is blind he won't see my comment anyway.
They do and it's distracting. But I'm pretty impressed that he presents the content well. If I was looking off to the side like that trying to read something I'd end up with a migraine.
@@jayhays8267 No, but his interpreter will read it aloud if you spell correctly.
Very cheeky of Coleco to call their legally distinct clone console “gemini” as in “twin”
The ColecoVision was the gift that would keep giving back then. As kid, the expansion port seemed as if it had infinite possibilities making the gaming system seem as if it would never become obsolete. Ah,....the mind of a child,....
Dude: I love your videos, I love the content, Your voice and diction are great and I even love your set. But could you please move your monitor or teleprompter in front of you, so you don’t have to look to god knows where or what? It’s so distracting that it takes me out of the experience. Thanks.
This.
Honestly thought he was blind or close to it
The Susanna Hoffs of UA-camrs.
I actually like that. It's weird and makes the video more interesting, IMO.
I was feeling the same way. I was too busy trying to figure out why he wasn't looking at the camera to listen 🤷♀️
The generic background music needs to go man. Especially with such a little loop! Once you notice it it's really not fun to listen to you...
Gemini was my first video game system, got Donkey Kong & Mouse Trap included.
Good video, one of my favorite types of videos, video game history is fascinating and it's cool to hear others take on this subject. Heard the story a few times and you did good, giving information that i hadn't heard before.
SUBSCRIBED
You, PatmanQC and Friday Night Arcade are a few of the underground channels I've found this year. Keep it up
agreed they should have flipped the cart slot around.
Would you happen to know how many Gemini systems were made/sold? I have one with a very low serial number and it got me curious on how many were made.
One of our systems has a serial putting it around the 18000 unti and the other around 6000.
@@NewsmakersGames I've been asking my fellow collectors and one of them have two Gemini. The highest number of the two is #143554 so they made at least that many. Mine is #424
They should had made another one too and make it compatible with not only 2600 and Colecovision games but also Intellivision games too. They could call it the Coleco Genesis.
So eventually coleco and atari did agree in that coleco will pay atari royalty’s for selling their expansion module and the germini console,so what was first iligal from coleco turned out to be later legalized later on🙏
Gemini marketing was confusing. It was made by Coleco but not a colecovision. The two systems would be on the same page in a catalog. I had the colecovision but not the expansion or the Gemini. Wanted them, but you couldn't pry the colecovision out of my cold dead hands.
I had the Gemini. I didn't like the 2600 joystick, but I did like the Gemini's. Also, I really wanted a Colecovision, but I could never talk my folks into it. We did have an Intellivision tho (and later upgraded to the Intellivision 2, when the first one wore out). And for the record(s), (pun inevitable), I had more than one account with Columbia House while in college (having an address at school and one at home), and I never had any problems with them whatsoever, nor ftm with any other mail-order music company I joined, except paying them off because I was young and irresponsible.
Because of Gaming Historian’s video on the console, I used to think that this was legal at the time, but nope.
Having a video of you holding the Donkey Kong cartridge for the 2600 in front of a Coleco Expansion Module is hilarious. Colecovision's version of Donkey Kong was shockingly good compared to other systems - very close to the arcade. And, Coleco's pursuit of the Donkey Kong license spelled Atari's doom. Atari had reached an agreement with Nintendo to distribute the NES in the US as an Atari product, letting them take care of North American marketing. But when Atari went to CES and saw a nearly arcade-perfect version of Donkey Kong running on a Colecovision, they presumed Nintendo was offering this deal to Coleco, too, in order to get a better deal. So Atari, in it's pride, bailed on the deal, which would have meant surviving the Atari 2600 Crash and then distributing the best-selling console of the next generation. Nintendo just decided to handle its own NA business instead. But ironically, it was all over nothing - the Colecovision programmers did this as an R&D exercise and hadn't even discussed this port with Nintendo at the time, this was arranged later.
no mention of the Coleco Telstar / Atari Pong market competition of the previous gen ?
* context does matter *
the court decisions just placed precedents.
you could have mentionned the actual race for arcade port licenses &
how coleco screwed Atari over with DK / DKjr ?
We had a Gemini after our 2nd 2600 died. Played Armor Ambush and Space Attack a lot on it. Controllers were great as you could switch to Warlords or Kaboom! and not have to unplug.
I never had an Atari...although many of my friends did. I got a Coleco Gemini for Christmas in maybe 1984? Pretty sure it was that Sears bundle with Mouse Trap and Donkey Kong. It was a long time ago but that sounds very familiar.
Good times! Maney hours killed playing that.
Wher eis this guy looking? What is wrong with his eyes? It was too distracting to watch.
He's reading his script off of a screen.
We had the sears telegames version. I would really like to have one of those again.