intellivision lives
Intellivision lives on Nintendo DS
If you have any Nintendo DS system and a mere $14.99, you can now get you a sickeningly vast collection of Intellivision games. Intellivision Lives! has more than 60 games on it – more than my collection of Intellivision games as a child – and it includes half a dozen games made but never released more »
GameStop won’t carry Intellivision Lives! DS (update)
If you want to play over 60 classic Intellivision games on your DS, don’t go to GameStop. The store will turn you away at the door. The creators reported on both the Intellivision Facebook page and website that GameStop decided the DS version of Intellivision Lives! wasn’t for them. GameStop acknowledged that older gamers (over 30) may want it, but younger gamers probably wouldn’t so they don’t want it in the store. I guess they’re afraid having it on the shelf will taint surrounding games…
Intellivision Lives! on the DS thanks to Virtual Play
The Intellivision Lives! DS game is actually going to be released! Way back in 2005, Intellivision Lives! for the DS was shown off at E3 in the hopes of finding a publisher. Some showed interest, but ultimately decided against it because they didn’t think it would be profitable. Now Virtual Play has stepped up and said it will do it, so we’ll see the compilation game in September, 2010. Just in time for the 30th anniversary of the Intellivision console…
Ten games I most want to play on the iPad (Part 2)
Apple only last week started accepting iPad optimized app submissions, so who knows if our favorite games will be ready to go by April 3rd? Of course, that doesn’t prevent us from getting our hopes up. Last week, I offered a list of five games I’ve played on the iPhone that I’m now excited about playing on the iPad. In this article, I’ll list the five I’ve not yet played but certainly will when (if) an iPad version is made available.
Intellivision Lives: Exclusive interview with Keith Robinson
Before Sony first threw down against Microsoft, before Nintendo first battled Sega, there was Mattel Electronics vs. Atari. I was firmly entrenched in Intellivision’s corner, and when INTV Corp. went down swinging in 1991, I went down with them. But a group of Intellivision game developers (known as the Blue Sky Rangers) is actively working with the games that helped to launch an industry longer than 30 years ago.
Gamertell spoke with Keith Robinson at Intellivision Lives about this group of developers and the state of the gaming industry, then and now.















