List of best-selling Atari 2600 video games

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Atari 2600 (previously known as the Atari VCS) was the most successful home system of its generation, and it was home to many popular games that sold millions of copies (a figure unheard of before). The best-selling video game on the console is Pac-Man, a port of the arcade game of the same name programmed by Tod Frye.[1] Originally created by Toru Iwatani and released in 1980, Pac-Man was later ported to many home video game consoles, beginning with the Atari 2600 in 1982.[2] Within months it became the best-selling home video game of all time, with more than 1.5 million units pre-ordered by customers before its release.[2] Pac-Man went on to sell over 8 million units worldwide.

An award plaque for River Raid selling over one-million copies for Activision given to Carol Shaw

The second best-selling Atari 2600 game is Space Invaders,[3] a port of the 1978 Taito arcade video game that was programmed by Rick Maurer, which was released in 1980 and became the first video game to sell a million copies.[4] It went on to sell over 6 million copies, was the best-selling game on the system (until Pac-Man), and is credited with increasing the VCS’s sales and popularity.[3]

At least 24 video games released on the Atari 2600 sold at least one million copies, of which 14 were developed and/or published by the console's manufacturer, Atari, Inc. Other publishers with multiple entries in the top 24 are Activision (six titles) and Imagic (three titles). Three of the games in the top 24 were programmed by David Crane, three by Howard Scott Warshaw, three by Rob Fulop, and two by Bradley G. Stewart.

Video games

More information Title, Developer / Publisher ...
List of best-selling video games on the Atari 2600
Title Developer / Publisher Arcade port Licensor Programmer(s) Release date Sales Ref.
Pac-Man Atari, Inc. Yes Namco Tod Frye March 16, 1982 8,095,586 [a]
Space Invaders Atari, Inc. Yes Taito Rick Maurer March 1980 6,252,229 [b]
Donkey Kong Coleco[c] Yes Nintendo Garry Kitchen July 1982 4,000,000 [6]
Pitfall! Activision No N/a David Crane April 20, 1982 4,000,000 [7][8]
Asteroids Atari, Inc. Yes N/a Bradley G. Stewart July 1981 3,832,886 [d]
Defender Atari, Inc. Yes Williams Electronics Bob Polaro June 1982 3,040,684 [e]
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial Atari, Inc. No Universal Pictures Howard Scott Warshaw December 1982 2,740,232 [f]
Ms. Pac-Man Atari, Inc. Yes Midway Manufacturing Mike Horowitz, Josh Littlefield February 1983 2,311,428 [g]
Demon Attack Imagic No N/a Rob Fulop March 1982 2,000,000 [10]
Night Driver Atari, Inc. Yes N/a Rob Fulop June 1980 1,990,643 [h]
Berzerk Atari, Inc. Yes Stern Dan Hitchens August 1982 1,870,642 [i]
Centipede Atari, Inc. Yes N/a Douglas B. Macrae, Josh Littlefield March 1982 1,815,661 [j]
Warlords Atari, Inc. Yes N/a Carla Meninsky May 1981 1,788,462 [k]
Breakout Atari, Inc. Yes N/a Bradley G. Stewart November 1978 1,678,965 [l]
Adventure Atari, Inc. No N/a Warren Robinett March 1980 1,000,000 [11]
Laser Blast Activision No N/a David Crane March 1981 1,000,000 [12]
Freeway Activision No N/a David Crane July 1981 1,000,000 [12]
Kaboom! Activision No N/a Larry Kaplan July 1981 1,000,000 [12]
Yars' Revenge Atari, Inc. No N/a Howard Scott Warshaw May 1982 1,000,000 [13]
Atlantis Imagic No N/a Dennis Koble July 1982 1,000,000 [1]
Cosmic Ark Imagic No N/a Rob Fulop August 1982 1,000,000 [10]
Megamania Activision No N/a Steve Cartwright October 1982 1,000,000 [1]
Raiders of the Lost Ark Atari, Inc. No Lucasfilm Howard Scott Warshaw November 1982 1,000,000 [13]
River Raid Activision No N/a Carol Shaw December 1982 1,000,000 [12]
Close

See also

Notes

  1. 7,271,844 in 1982. 684,569 in 1983.[3] 37,063 in 1986. 61,685 in 1987. 3,885 in 1988. 34,374 in 1989. 2,166 in 1990.[5]
  2. 1,318,655 in 1980. 2,964,137 in 1981. 1,373,033 in 1982. 435,353 in 1983.[3] 17,523 in 1986. 65,148 in 1987. 29,717 in 1988. 36,308 in 1989. 12,355 in 1990.[5]
  3. Published by Atari Corporation from 1987[5]
  4. 3.8 million up until 1982.[9] 7,503 in 1986. 8,558 in 1987. 12,120 in 1988. 11,558 in 1989. 4,705 in 1990.[5]
  5. 3,006,790 in 1982 (with at least 68,993 returned in 1983).[3] 2,298 in 1986. 6,160 in 1987. 24,741 in 1988. 695 in 1989.[5]
  6. 2,637,985 in 1982 (with at least 669,733 returned in 1983).[3] 1,138 in 1986. 88,338 in 1987. 3,131 in 1988. 9,586 in 1989. 54 in 1990.[5]
  7. 1,963,078 in 1983.[3] 35,719 in 1986. 138,400 in 1987. 125,266 in 1988. 38,597 in 1989. 10,368 in 1990.[5]
  8. 161,352 in 1980. 779,547 in 1981. 457,058 in 1982. 580,959 in 1983.[3] 84 in 1986. 7,227 in 1987. 4,416 in 1988.[5]
  9. 1,798,773 in 1982 (with at least 20,314 returned in 1983).[3] 2,046 in 1986. 54,444 in 1987. 15,170 in 1988. 209 in 1989.[5]
  10. 1,475,240 in 1982.[3] 49,774 in 1986. 150,572 in 1987. 107,168 in 1988. 21,973 in 1989. 10,934 in 1990.[5]
  11. 936,861 in 1981. 420,924 in 1982. 372,454 in 1983.[3] 11,412 in 1986. 6,370 in 1987. 38,504 in 1988. 1,865 in 1989. 72 in 1990.[5]
  12. 256,265 in 1980. 838,635 in 1981. 242,764 in 1982. 312,672 in 1983.[3] 7,060 in 1986. 1,680 in 1987. 19,889 in 1988.[5]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI