
| Dismac - BR 101 (Standard) |
| Detailed Game Information - Atari 2600 Module |
| TV format |
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Rarity |
Cart
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CiB
| Last changed n/a |
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| Gametitle | BR 101 | Class | Official release | ||||
| Company | Dismac | Genre | Arcade | ||||
| Series | Standard | Max. player | 2 | ||||
| Cartridge shell | Standard | Controller | Joystick | ||||
| Serial number | Programmer | Crane, David | |||||
| UPC code | Manual | ![]() |
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| Year | n/a | Screenshot | ![]() | ||||
| Country |
- Brazil |
md5 Hash / Size | 7b7b4ac05232490c28f9b680c72998f9 (2K)
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| Screenshots |
| Module Information |
| The BR-101 is one of the most important and longest (total length: approx. 4,800 km) federal highways (Rodovias Federais) in Brazil. It begins in Touros, Rio Grande do Norte state (in the north-east of Brazil) and ends in São José do Norte, Rio Grande do Sul state (in the south of Brazil). |
| Company Information |
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Dismac was a significant Brazilian consumer electronics company in the 1970s and 1980s. Among other products, the company produced Atari clones, which were replicas of the popular Atari gaming consoles. Dismac manufactured two well-known Atari clones: Dismac VJ-8900: Produced in 1990 A Brazilian clone of the Atari 2600 Dismac VJ-9000: Also from 1990 A re-release of the previous model Was shipped without the so-called 'Paddle Controllers' These consoles were part of a series of Atari clones produced in Brazil. Other Brazilian companies that manufactured similar products included CCE and Gradiente (owner of Polyvox), which produced officially licensed versions. The production of Atari clones in Brazil was common in the 1980s and early 1990s, as import restrictions made it difficult to directly sell foreign consoles. This led to a thriving market for local versions of popular gaming systems. |
| Relationship Information |