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Reading: Atari and Intellivision make up after 40 years, and it’s oddly wholesome
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Atari and Intellivision make up after 40 years, and it’s oddly wholesome

NADINE J.
NADINE J.
Oct 20

Atari is digging into gaming history and pulling off an unexpected crossover no one saw coming — it’s resurrecting the Intellivision, one of its fiercest rivals from the golden age of consoles. The new Intellivision Sprint, built in partnership with Plaion, mashes up late-’70s nostalgia with the kind of modern conveniences gamers have come to expect — think HDMI, wireless controllers, and a healthy dose of wood-grain flair.

If you ever played the original Intellivision, you’ll recognize the look instantly. The Sprint keeps the gold-and-black design and that vintage living-room charm but cuts the cable clutter that made the old system a chore to set up. It connects to your TV with a single HDMI cable and ditches wired controllers entirely. Those chunky dials and numeric keypads are still there, only now they’re rechargeable and go dock-to-charge instead of battery-swap-to-survive.

Even the controller overlays — those thin plastic cards you’d slide over the keypad to remind yourself which number fired the torpedo — are back. The Sprint ships with redesigned versions that keep the retro appeal while actually being readable in 2025 lighting.

Under the hood, it’s all plug-and-play simplicity. Forty-five games come preloaded, including Astrosmash, Boulder Dash, and a handful of sports titles that made Intellivision the go-to console for the pre-NES crowd. There’s no cartridge slot, but Atari added USB-A ports so you can expand the library or even connect original Intellivision controllers through an adapter if you’re feeling extra nostalgic.

The Intellivision Sprint drops December 5, 2025, for $149.99 — a fair price for a piece of playable gaming history that looks like it should be sitting next to a lava lamp and a stack of VHS tapes.

For Atari, it’s another chapter in its long-running mission to remix the past for a modern audience. And for anyone who grew up in the great 8-bit console wars, seeing Atari and Intellivision join forces feels like the retro-gaming equivalent of Mario and Sonic teaming up. It’s weird, it’s wonderful, and it’s proof that no rivalry ever really dies — it just respawns with HDMI output.

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