It may sound silly, but Atari 2600 may be the next big thing. Sure the graphics are dated, but all things have revival potential. As we see from retro haircuts, jeans and shoes that flow back into popular culture, cool is a state of mind. At the same time, let me use a real-world analogy on the opposite side of the opinion stream. I live near Colonial Williamsburg, where you can watch butter churning and old-timey folks living like folks did 400 years ago. You may think it's corny, but it looks authentic. With authenticity as your yardstick,
Activision Hits Remixed will rank quite high. It's a dead-on representation of the games that some of us played back in the day. There may be some optimization for certain parts of the interface, but the game content is raw 80's. At the same time, marveling at authentic material isn't always sustainable. Especially when you get into the re-enactment business, you have to think about replay value.
And what would an 80's revival be without some theme music? You'll find there isn't enough music on rotation to keep things from getting a little repetitive, but the logic is probably that you won't be logging ten hour sessions on these games. Even so, it would have been nice to have more music on tap. The sounds in the games are authentic, as much as bleeps and bloops can be. You'll laugh at some of what passed for music back in the day. We definitely had some themes from these games burned into our brains, which is amazing considering that the developers of cell ring-tones today have a far greater toolbox of tones and timbres.