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Handheld game console
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==== Atari Lynx ==== {{multiple image|caption_align=center|header_align=center|direction=horizontal|perrow = 2 | align = left | total_width = 350 | footer = Atari Lynx I and II | image1 = Atari-Lynx-I-Handheld.jpg | width1 = 300 | height1 = 190 | image2 = Atari-Lynx-II-Handheld-Angled.jpg| width2 = 300 | height2 = 190 }} {{Main|Atari Lynx}} In 1987, [[Epyx]] created the Handy Game; a device that would become the Atari Lynx in 1989. It is the first color handheld console ever made, as well as the first with a [[backlight|backlit]] screen. It also features networking support with up to 17 other players, and advanced hardware that allows the zooming and scaling of sprites. The Lynx can also be turned upside down to accommodate [[Left-handedness|left-handed]] players. However, all these features came at a very high price point, which drove consumers to seek cheaper alternatives. The Lynx is also very unwieldy, consumes batteries very quickly, and lacked the third-party support enjoyed by its competitors. Due to its high price, short battery life, production shortages, a dearth of compelling games, and Nintendo's aggressive marketing campaign, and despite a redesign in 1991, the Lynx became a [[List of commercial failures in video gaming|commercial failure]]. Despite this, companies like Telegames helped to keep the system alive long past its commercial relevance, and when new owner Hasbro released the rights to develop for the public domain, independent developers like Songbird have managed to release new commercial games for the system every year until 2004's ''Winter Games''.{{clear}}
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