[quote name='nickerous']Got an Atari 5200 for Christmas in 1983. Had a blast with that system, but nothing prepared me for the NES. We had an arcade in town, but I never really went to it until I started driving in '91. Home systems were it for me. The 5200 was great until the controllers quit working. We sold it at a yard sale with 20 or so games. Sometimes I think I'd like to get the system again, but I have no where to store the beast. With the 5200, it was like, "ok, I guess I'll play some games" and the NES was "Don't bother me, I'm gaming here!"[/QUOTE]
Whoa-ho! Someone else with a 5200. That was the first system I ever got, I'm guessing it was mid-'85 so the system was already pretty much fading out, but I didn't know any better since I was only 6 years old. I got it because an older kid a few houses down wasn't into games anymore so he gave it to me. It was the original 4-port (gigantic) one but I don't recall ever having more than two controllers at a time.
Hated those controllers. Actually liked the design of them but they broke way too frequently. I remember it becoming pretty difficult to find controllers. At one point we ordered some replacements and it took forever to get them - literally a couple of months. Finally, coming home from school on my birthday that year, a UPS truck was just pulling in to the end of my street. I ran after it somehow knowing it had my controllers...and holy shit IT DID. Even though I know better, I
still have my suspicions that somehow may parents both got them to ship it at the proper time AND got that UPS truck to wait until I arrived at the bus stop before delivering the package.
The big shock to me...well, not to me, more my parents...was that when I wanted a 5200 game it was usually 10-15 bucks at Toys R Us. When I got an NES later on it jumped to the 50 dollar range. That slowed things down a little. Like said above though, I suppose the fact that it is barely more expensive now (and remember, some 16-bit era games were pushed up towards the 70-80 dollar range) makes it more palatable.
The system probably still works but the RF switch has long since died, and no working controllers on hand either. I occasionally fire up an emulator to mess with a few of them, but honestly with MAME and XBLA around for arcade titles there's really no reason to play something like Frogger or Jungle Hunt on the 5200. That said, Star Raiders still

ing rules. Mapping buttons to the Numpad on the keyboard is almost as good as having a 5200 controller for it.