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Region Key Explained
Although
Atari was born in the USA, the system and its games were eventually sold
in many countries throughout the world. Canada, Brazil, England, Germany,
Netherlands, Australia, and other countries all had thriving Atari users
and the dealers to support them. Some countries, such as Japan, had small
amounts of unique Atari products.
In North America and Japan, games were sold in NTSC video format. In
Europe and Australia, games were sold in PAL video format (SECAM was also
used in France and a few other countries in limited amounts). South America
uses a variety of formats and Brazil officially uses PAL-M. We've gone
beyond simply separating games by their video format to indicate what
region they were sold in. In some cases there is some crossover, particularly
with Europe and Australia, but in most cases these games were marketed
distinctly in different markets around the world. Here are some further
details about the Region Key:
Icon |
Region |
Description |
|
North America |
For our purposes, this basically means the
United States and Canada. Most games were sold in both countries,
although there are exceptions such as Sears
selling exclusively in the US, and many pirate games that were
primarily seen in Canada. To our knowledge, Mexico and other
North American Latin countries did not produce their own Atari
merchandise |
|
South America |
Brazil had a large Atari 2600 market, including
both black market companies and legitimate licensees. These
games can still be found today at flea markets just like everywhere
else in the world. They also show up on eBay from Brazilian
sellers, and on Brazilian auction sites. If you have cartridges
from any other South American countries, please contact
us. |
|
Europe |
Atari has had a successful life in Europe,
from the VCS to the ST line of computers. England, Germany,
France, Netherlands, Italy, Belgium, and other countries continue
to be home to many Atari fans. These games were sold in PAL
and SECAM format by a variety of companies. Many games were
sold in Europe that were not available anywhere else, making
them interesting to international collectors. |
|
Australia |
Australia had a strong 2600 scene led mainly
by HES.
Although some of games sold in Australia were also sold in Europe,
there were some small companies such as John Sands that sold
games exclusively in Australia. For purposes of our guide, only
games that were sold exclusively in Australia are listed with
this icon. |
|
Asia |
Japan was never a big market for Atari. The
2600 did have a brief life there, marketed under the name 2800,
but it couldn't compete with the Famicom and it was never very
popular. Other Asian countries such as Taiwan produced larger
numbers of what were probably black market games and exported
them to Europe and North America. We're unsure if Atari games
were actually available for sale in Taiwan or other Asian countries
besides Japan. If you have any knowledge of this, please contact
us. |
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