Circus Charlie (lost build of cancelled Atari 2600 port of arcade action-platformer; 1984): Difference between revisions

From The Lost Media Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
No edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 21: Line 21:
==Reference==
==Reference==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
==See Also==
*[[Birthday Mania (found rare Atari 2600 game; 1984)]]
*[["Block moving game" (partially found builds of cancelled Atari 2600 game from Activision; 1983)]]
*[[The Core (partially lost Atari 2600 game; 1999-2001)]]
*[[Cosmic (partially found Atari 2600 game; existence unconfirmed; dates unknown)]]
*[[Crazy Cars (lost Atari 2600 port of Amiga game; existence unconfirmed; 1990)]]
*[[Edu Games (lost Atari 2600 games; mid 1980s-early 1990s)]]
*[[Home Vision (partially found Atari 2600 games from Taiwanese-Belgian game publisher; 1982-1983)]]
*[[The Incredible Hulk (lost build of cancelled Atari 2600 game; 1983)]]
*[[JimsToy (partially found Atari 2600 games from obscure developer; 1980s)]]
*[[Mr. Bill's Neighborhood (lost build of cancelled Atari 2600 game; 1983)]]
*[[Shove It! (lost build of cancelled CBS Atari 2600 game; existence unconfirmed; 1983)]]
*[[Smokey Bear (lost build of cancelled Atari 2600 game; 1983)]]
*[[Untitled Motorcycle Games (lost Atari 2600 games by David Crane; existence unconfirmed; early 1980s)]]


[[Category:Lost video games]]
[[Category:Lost video games]]
[[Category:Completely lost media]]
[[Category:Completely lost media]]

Revision as of 23:59, 30 October 2023

Circus Charlie Atari 2600 box cover.jpg

Promo box of the game.

Status: Lost

Circus Charlie is a 1984 action/platform game released by Konami for the arcade and later Commodore 64, MSX, SEGA SG-1000, ColecoVision and the Famicom.

An Atari 2600 version was in development by Parker Brothers but was cancelled after the company's video game division was shut down.[1]

Status

Little else is known about the port, it would have featured the four distinct screens on this version, was scheduled for release in September 1984 and the promo box was featured in a 1983 CES press kit.

No copies of the port are known to exist.

Gallery

Reference

See Also