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Released by Parker Brothers in 1983.
Released by Parker Brothers in 1983.
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==Commodore Gameboy Color==
Released by Majesco in 2000.
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==Intellivision==
==Intellivision==
[[Image:QB INTV screen.png|thumb|left|screen]]
[[Image:QB INTV screen.png|thumb|left|screen]]

Revision as of 04:00, 13 May 2010

Atari 2600

Released by Parker Brothers in 1983. Re-released by Atari in 1988

Atari 5200 & Atari 800

Released by Parker Brothers in 1983. The 5200 and 800 versions are identical.

Colecovision

screen
box

Released by Parker Brothers in 1983.

Commodore 64

screen
box

Released by Parker Brothers in 1983.

Commodore VIC-20

screen
box

Released by Parker Brothers in 1983.

Commodore Gameboy Color

Released by Majesco in 2000.

Intellivision

screen
box

Released by Parker Brothers in 1983.

NES

screen
box

Released by Konami in 1989, under the Ultra Games label.

Odyssey 2

screen
box

Released by Parker Brothers in 1983, primarily in Europe.

Sega SG-1000 and SC-3000

screen
box

Released by Tsudaka Original in Japan for the Othello Multivision which is a Sega SG-1000 clone.

TI-99/4a

screen
box

Released by Parker Brothers in 1984.

Vintage handhelds

Parker Bros. table-top

Table-top
Display

Seeing the success that Coleco had with their table-top arcade conversions, Parker Brothers decided to enter the market with one of their licenses. The transition from graphics to fixed vacuum fluorescent display was pretty successful, since Q*bert does not require a lot of animation in order to portray the on-screen action. The game is vastly simplified obviously, with the only enemies present being the red balls and Coily. Still, the discs on the side of the pyramid are present and work the same way that they do in the arcade. The case design for table-top Q*bert is distinctly different from other arcade table-top conversions, but it still contains many of the decorations found on the original machine as decals. Parker Brothers did not produce any other arcade table-top conversions.

Nelsonic watch

Frogger watch

Nelsonic created a line of digital watches that were capable of playing video games, including Pac-Man and Frogger. The gameplay of the watch is a shortened version of the tabletop with one less row of cubes along the bottom of the cube, so it takes six less blocks to complete each stage.

Noteworthy

Atari 7800

Atari 7800 homebrew

A homebrew development started by Ken Siders in 2005. Still in development by August 2006, going under the title bonQ, and quite accurate by all accounts. Ken Siders has completed a very faithful homebrew of BurgerTime for the 7800

Commodore 64

File:Kanga C64.gif
Kanga
File:Cuddly cuburt 64.gif
Cuddly Cuburt

A Q*bert clone published by Future Computer Applications at an unknown time, but presumably shortly after Q*bert gained popularity. May only have been released in Europe. Ian Gray developed Cuddly Cuburt, which was published by Interceptor Software, also at an unknown time.

Game Boy

Game Boy

Released by Jaleco in 1992. This conversion is technically the start of the updates to the official arcade rules that feature new creatures and modified stage configurations beyond the original pyramid (which is featured in the first stage).