Tetris (Atari Games)

Tetris
The North American console game cover was illustrated by Marc Ericksen.
Developer(s)Atari Games
Publisher(s)Atari Games (arcade)
Tengen (NES)
Designer(s)Ed Logg
Kelly Turner
Norm Avellar
Programmer(s)Ed Logg
Kelly Turner
Norm Avellar
Artist(s)Kris Moser
Composer(s)Brad Fuller
SeriesTetris
Platform(s)Arcade, Nintendo Entertainment System (NES)
ReleaseArcade
NES
  • NA: May 1989
Genre(s)Puzzle
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Tetris (styled TETЯIS) is a puzzle video game developed by Atari Games and originally released for arcades in 1988. It is based on Alexey Pajitnov's Tetris, and has the same gameplay as the computer editions. Players must stack differently shaped falling blocks to form and eliminate horizontal lines from the playing field. It has several difficulty levels and two-player simultaneous play.

In 1989, Atari Games released a port of its arcade version for the Nintendo Entertainment System, under its Tengen brand, though not licensed by Nintendo. Issues arose with the publishing rights for Tetris, and after much legal wrangling, Nintendo gained the exclusive rights to publish console versions, leaving Atari with only the rights to arcade versions. As a result, the Tengen game was at retail for only four weeks, with fewer than 100,000 copies sold, until Atari was legally required to recall and destroy any remaining inventory of its NES version.

Nintendo produced its own version of Tetris for the NES and a version for the handheld Game Boy. Both versions were commercially successful and Nintendo held the Tetris license for many years. The Tengen release has since become a collector's item due to scarcity. Various publications have since described Tengen's Tetris as superior in some ways to Nintendo's official NES release, especially because of its two-player simultaneous mode.