字幕表 動画を再生する
Okay, so let's...
let's just put it on the table, here, okay?
E.T. is frequently cited as one of the worst video games in history.
I got to read a magazine that said that my game
was single-handedly responsible for the crash of the video game industry in the early 80s.
(laughing)
That's a good one.
People are reticent to ask me about it.
They think I'm very sensitive about it, you know,
"Oh my God, you did the worst game of all time, you know.
Don't you wanna hide?"
And it's like, no.
(Narrator) Howard Scott Warshaw.
He was a video game programmer for Atari in the early 80s.
He made some of the most beloved games for the Atari 2600.
[Howard] I made Yars' Revenge, then I followed that with
Raiders of the Lost Ark. I have had two
very successful games, both million sellers.
I truly believed that everything I touched, hopefully, was gonna
turn to gold because I was gonna put everything I had into it.
[Narrator] One fateful day, Howard received a call from the
CEO of Atari, asking him if he wanted to take on their
highest profile game ever, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial.
[Howard] And I said, "We definitely can do that."
[Narrator] But, there was one major caveat.
[Howard] It had to be something that related to the movie,
and it had to be doable in five weeks.
I mean, I had five weeks to do the game.
So I was working all the time.
(digital beeping) (upbeat music)
E.T. was gonna be a basic puzzle game
with some challenges that you run around to solve,
and if I redistribute the pieces among enough different,
random places, it makes a fresh challenge each time around and
bingo!
[Narrator] When it was released, E.T. was an immediate
success, selling over a million copies.
But a few months later, things started to turn.
[Howard] Retailers are starting to find that the game is not
moving, it's coming back, a lot of people are
disappointed with it.
[Narrator] Because of the poor planning and tight production
schedule, Howard failed to catch
a fundamental flaw in the game's design.
[Howard] There are too many times where you make a move,
you do something, and suddenly you wind up somewhere else.
Now, suddenly you're somewhere else,
and there's too many places in E.T. where the user
is disoriented, and that's a sin of which I am guilty,
and I have been serving penance.
[Narrator] Shortly after E.T.'s release,
the video game crash was in full swing.
Disappointing sales and mismanagement
forced Atari to restructure.
[Howard] And in the next couple of months,
Atari went from 10,000 employees to 2,000 employees.
[Narrator] During the turmoil,
Howard left the gaming industry for good.
He didn't think much about E.T. until nearly a decade later.
[Howard] Well, by the early 90s,
people started coming out with what a bad game E.T. was.
I was just kinda surprised anybody was actually even talking about it.
Good afternoon, some of those E.T. Atari games
unearthed at a New Mexico landfill are now up for sale.
Beaten up cartridges on eBay are going for hundreds of dollars a piece.
So we had a poll online,
Yeah.
Where fans could choose what game they wanted to see you
- play. -OK.
They chose this.
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial.
Even 30 years later, this obscure thing
that I did so long ago in just five weeks...
it's still generating excitement, enthusiasm.
I get emotional just talking about it now.
Because I just felt I was at the center of something
that is still meaningful.
And that is a huge success.
So when people ask me, you know, "Was E.T. a failure?"
I don't mind when people call it that,
but it'll never, it'll never be a failure to me.
(cheerful music)