Games Historian Uncovers Forgotten Console “So Rare, It Might Not Even Exist”
Image via Video Game History Foundation/YouTube
Games journalist/historian/archivist Frank Cifaldi has been waging a war against technological obsolescence with his nonprofit, The Video Game History Foundation. Cifaldi’s work as a preservationist prioritizes the gaming history most at risk of disappearing: obscure games, delicate magazines, misplaced source codes. On his foundation’s blog, Cifaldi chronicles the ephemera rescued from the clutches of entropy: the lost NES version of SimCity; the first videogame TV commercials; and the original reviews for the worst videogame ever, Atari’s E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial.
One buzzy discovery Cifaldi broke on Twitter last week highlighted a gaming artifact “so rare it might not even exist”: the TV Guide Quizmaster plug & play console.
Okay strap in, folks, we’re doing a super deep dive into uber-obscure video game research. Let’s talk about something so rare it might not even exist, the TV Guide Quizmaster plug & play console. pic.twitter.com/83msCbvNLK
— Frank Cifaldi the Last (@frankcifaldi) August 1, 2019
Plug & plays were a briefly popular noughties console type. All they consisted of was a plastic controller and a wire that connected to the TV. The controller itself contained the game, and with a few batteries, voila, a game could be up and running in a matter of minutes. It was painless, and it was cheap.
As Cifaldi documents, many of these plug & plays used cloned NES hardware sourced from Chinese manufacturers. That means, technically, many of these games are NES ports, and some of them are even original NES games: a surprising and understudied afterlife for the classic console.