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For those of us who grew up in the '70s and '80s, video games weren't 
just a diversion; they were a lifestyle. Many of our most cherished 
memories revolve around that intellectual enchantress in fake woodgrain, the 
Atari 2600. And many of our most traumatic memories revolve around Mom 
turning off our 2600 in the middle of a game.
 Sure, there have been more advanced home gaming consoles since, but the 
2600 wasn't just a console. Mother, father, sister, brother, lover, 
confessor, priest  the 2600 was all that and more. And so, partially 
in honor of Atari founder Nolan Bushnell's 60th birthday, partially 
because we're a bunch of geeks, we present a month-long extravaganza of 
2600-related goodness.
 
 
 
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