If you want to watch the famously bad 1956 Sci-Fi film Plan 9 from Outer Space, you have several options on both free and paid streaming services. The film has been archived, restored, and documented by people who care about the history of cinema. The same canât be said about the similarly horrible 1993 Atari Jaguar game Cybermorph (does âwhere did you learn to fly?â ring any bells?). For years, experiencing that curious piece of gaming history required buying an aging Jaguar or emulating it. But while Plan 9 has a wealth of scholarship about its history, few have tried to give Cybermorph its historical due.
Well, few except for Digital Eclipse, a game developer that works to document, emulate, and enhance classic video games. The team has spent the last few years creating some of the most lauded pieces of classic gaming collections. The company produced anthologies for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and other venerable IPs like Capcomâs Street Fighter and Mega Man games and the Samurai Shodown series on the NeoGeo. Their latest release, Atari 50: The Anniversary Celebration, featuring over 100 classic game emulations plus supporting material and interviews, might be the most comparable thing games have ever come to creating a documentary of their own medium.
Mike Mika, Digital Eclipseâs longtime president, told Gizmodo in an interview that if you want to show what things were like in the past, you have to find a balance between making things playable, and showing off what made these products special in the first place, warts and all.
âWeâre trying to simulate and emulate those flaws in that kind of hardware to allow these games to run like they did before,â he said. But more than that, they need to decide just how much old jank is worth including. For Mika, itâs most important that those holding the controller can âplay [these games] in a way that itâs the game they remember, and less than the game that it was.â
Atari 50 is more than just a modern emulator of major Atari releases from the 2600 up through the beleaguered Atari Lynx handheld and the poor, poor Jaguar. Through design documents and video interviews with the gamesâ original developers, Digital Eclipse wanted to show that more than the games are worth preserving. The very ideas, art, and struggles that went into making classic games remain the same as other mediums, even if the scale of game development is magnitudes bigger than before.
Chris Kohler, Digital Eclipseâs editorial director, said that in todayâs environment, anybody with a real inclination to play a game from an arcade or Nintendo NES can go online, download an emulator or ROM, and enjoy. You can probably find some old design documents floating around the internet, but what it all lacks is context.
âThe term that weâve landed on to differentiate our workâitâs like an interactive documentary,â Kohler said. So instead of just giving people a game and some loose bits of game trivia, the team wants to offer a kind of timeline for users to understand what it takes to create these works. In Atari 50, the game selection might include a developer interview along with an arcade flier, all providing more information on why and how the game is what it is. In some cases, the company even included an image of a gameâs original code, such as the incredibly short codebase for the entirety of the Atari 2600 version of Combat.
âNostalgia only carries you so far,â Mika said. âWhat all of this extra material does is paint a picture and shows people who might not be familiar with the property or the franchise or the company why these sorts of games are important.â
âThereâs great books about the history of video games,â Kohler added. âThereâs films, thereâs documentaries in which people sit down and tell the real story. But video games are this great storytelling medium. Why canât video games be the medium through which we tell the stories about the history of video games?â
What kind of tech lets you preserve older games?
Digital Eclipse, was first founded as a studio in 1992 and focused on emulating arcade games from the â70s and â80s. Later in the decade, the team specialized in making arcade emulations for the Game Boy Color. After a few splits and mergers at the company, some former Eclipse employees formed Other Ocean Interactive which later revitalized the Digital Eclipse brand.
In the years since it was formed, game emulation has changed dramatically. Itâs harder to emulate a more recent console than it is an older one, especially when they start to use multi-core processors.
Take the Atari Jaguar for example. It came to North America in 1993 and was marketed as the first 64-bit home system thanks to its twin 32-bit processors. Unfortunately for both the company and consumers, it was notoriously error-prone and even when you could get games to run, they were notoriously awkward to control and buggy. Mika said itâs difficult to emulate the platform, but there are still fondly-remembered titles like Tempest 2000 that deserve to be recognized.
âBecause it was the early days ⊠there was no concept of bitmaps or anything like that,â Mika said. Despite its size, a Gameboy Color released in â98 can be more complex than a SNES released in 1991 because of the increased complexity of the built-in display.â
But more importantly for a developer like Digital Eclipse, there are very, very few games that still have the original source code lying around. Without that, the team needs to start an âarcheological processâ of trying to find anything the team could have for reference. Building an emulation usually requires looking at the ROM, or read-only memory found on the games themselves. This is where the term âemulationâ comes from, developers try to recreate the game logic and present it in a way that is close to or âbetterâ than the original.
The company uses its own proprietary tools it called the Eclipse Engine to recreate these old pieces of software. The ROM is just the start, as the devs need to disassemble the games and understand the logic behind the original design. The engine can give the developers a rundown of everything thatâs happening at the moment in the gameâs emulation, but Mika said it also allows them to go in and make modifications on the fly. Their system can âdraw inâ enemies and objects into the world. It can interleave sound effects and music, all to see what best matches the game developersâ original intent.
âWithout source or with source only as reference, we had to go and figure out how to hack these games,â Mika said. âBy the end of this process, we came up with a list of features that are like this is what the product is about. Then we spend a large amount of time trying to understand how we can push these games and add features to them in a way thatâs very natural.â
But then the task becomes modifying it and making it compatible with modern consoles and televisions without changing things dramatically. The Eclipse Engine can spit out builds that would be compatible with a PlayStation 5, a Nintendo Switch, and the PC separately, though the developers still need to see if the game plays fine when 12 FPS is bumped up to 30 or 60 or if the game is at all compatible on a widescreen format. For Tempest 2000, the company allows users to run it at 60 frames per second.
In terms of visuals, things get even more complicated as old CRT televisions tended to blend the lines of images. What we think of âpixel artâ is more of how these pixelated images are represented by more modern television screens. Sometimes, old-school designers created colors knowing that a CRT would blend certain pixels together. Digital Eclipse needs to go in and either add a filter or otherwise make the pixels match the color the developer originally intended.
There are times Digital Eclipse has actually added cut content to games, especially if they manage to get their hands on the source code. The companyâs 2021 Disney Classic Games Collection included levels that were originally cut from the 1993 Sega Genesis game Aladdin that the team was able to reconstruct. The Blizzard Arcade Collection included artwork that one developer told the team was originally removed because it would have caused the gameâs age rating to go up. In interviews with devs for the Samurai Shodown NeoGeo Collection, the Eclipse team learned there was an entire version of the game, finished, but never released.
âItâs a lot,â Kohler said. âWeâre a small, scrappy team of developers that tries to punch above our weight. Itâs difficult to do that level of detail for every single game in a collection. Itâs just something we are constantly thinking about.â
What can both designers and regular folks learn from older games?
The companyâs former Head of Restoration Frank Cifaldi said back in 2019 that the companyâs goal was to become the âCriterion Collectionâ for video games. Just like Criterionâs work restoring and redistributing classic films, revitalizing old games is for the sake of scholarship as much as enjoyment.
Just 30 years ago, when graphical detail wasnât the name of the game, video games needed both strong art direction and even stronger gameplay to stand out, Mika said. But beyond the simple pleasure of classic arcade titles or even sophisticated CRPGs, the extra material included in Digital Eclipse titles paints a more severe picture of game development. Labor disputes, developers not given credit for games, designers fighting back against publishersâ whimsâall things developers are still regularly tackling today.
âNothing ever changes,â Kohler said. âYou literally have people sitting down from the very beginnings of the video game industry telling stories from the early 1970s about conflicts between management and labor, about design versus business and art, and itâs all just the same fights and the same problems that we have today.â
Jason Cirillo, one of Digital Eclipseâs software engineers, told Gizmodo that he knows making games has always been very hard. But still, even as a kid, and later a young man, he never had to think about how the games were made. Instead, to any young person growing up with them, these games were just âpure magic.â Then you learn about who may have been smoking weed at work or getting into it with the publisher over their game, and then you âfinally put a face to the person that actually created hours and hours of your own childhood fun.â
IP rights are still a major hurdle for emulation
Even in Atari 50, there were several big or important games missing because of who owned the intellectual property. The classic arcade game Star Wars or the infamous 2600 flop that was E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial are important moments in Atariâs history, but neither made the cut even if they are mentioned in some of the insider interviews.
âOne of the hardest aspects of what we do outside of the development of the work is dealing with licensing,â said Stephen Frost, Digital Eclipseâs head of production. âUnless we can prove that somebody owns every aspect of a game, we canât actually publish it or develop it.â
Frost said back in the â70s and â80s, few publishers thought their games would have any kind of long shelf life. IPs end up falling into a rabbit hole of ownership. Sometimes contracts will grant rights to now-defunct companies or individuals who passed away, and then nobody has any clue who still has ownership.
Though Cifaldi has since moved on to the nonprofit Video Game History Foundation, in previous talks at the Game Developers Conference, the historian said that some game publishers have been incredibly hostile to the idea of game emulation. Nintendo in particular has been antagonized by anybody simulating its classic game lineup. In 2018, the company called emulators and ROMs âthe greatest threat to date to the intellectual property rights of video game developersâ in a copyright lawsuit against several ROM sites. At the same time, Nintendo and the Sonic franchise have been particularly reliant on emulators in order to re-release old classics.
Opinions on emulators have changed to some degree. It may be getting easier to convince companies to re-release games, especially as weâre now three years into the 30-year nostalgia cycle. The Digital Eclipse teamâs other recent release, The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Cowabunga Collection, revamps 13 TMNT games, including several of the franchiseâs fondly-remembered â90s beat-em-ups. That was done in collaboration with publisher Konami and Nickelodeon. Those IP holders were jumping in front of other major TMNT releases for this year, so they had an incentive to collaborate, but these are all separate companies looking to hold onto the rights of their old work. Will publishers ever loosen up enough to allow collections that focus on whole consoles at once? What about a collection that analyzes the evolution of first-person shooters?
Thanks to companies like Disney, copyright has extended far past the first 1790 copyright lawâs terms. Current U.S. copyright law says that works receive protection for the life of the original author plus an additional 70 years or 95 years for a corporate copyright. Super Mario Brothers was first copyrighted in 1985, meaning it wonât be until the 2090s before the first edition of Nintendoâs flagship franchise enters the public domain. In that way, changes to copyright law may be the best way to expand artistic preservation.
âAnd I think, as a company, ourselves, weâre actively trying to break down barriers to allow [more game preservation] to happenâto focus on broader topics that involve multiple companies, and multiple IPs,â Mika said. âThe dream is, 10 years from now, we do something thatâs more broadly themed, that involves a myriad of different companies, and theyâre all okay with working with each other.â
âYou know, thatâs at least the hope,â he added.