@ Gentlegamer - I moved your post over to this ET landfill specific one to not get the other sidetracked.
I am a little aback at someone saying there was never a controversy or mystery here. Yes, there were stories at the time, and there were rebuttals from people at Atari at the time as well. What happened was indeed a topic of conversation, as this very thread and others like it attest to. Here is an Atariage thread.
http://atariage.com/forums/topic/66637-ataris-landfill-adventures-i-now-have-the-proof-its-true/Here is a Scopes page is testament that it was worth investigating as Urban Legend or Reality.
http://www.snopes.com/business/market/atari.aspHere is a quote from Scopes that says what happened there is still unclear:
Scopes wrote: Exactly what Atari buried in that New Mexico landfill remains a subject of dispute, and in recent years various sources have challenged the notion that what Atari dumped there was millions of unsold E.T. game cartridges (or other unsold game titles). According Goldberg and Vendel, the New Mexico site was actually used for disposal of a relatively small amount of unused and faulty stock and parts for cartridges, consoles, and computers from the company's El Paso plant, which was being retooled and automated to focus on the of manufacture of game consoles and home computers rather than the production of game cartridges (the latter operation being shifted to Asia). While Atari did bury some millions of units of unsold game cartridge overstock, that (unpublicized) action took place near the company's headquarters in California, not in New Mexico: Read more at
http://www.snopes.com/business/market/a ... H2ePzcA.99
I respect your opinion that you yourself were and are of the opinion that millions of ET cartridges were dumped there, and there was not a mystery, but its clear that opinion was not universal. Enough people held (or hold) a contrary opinion to say, yes, there is a controversy. Maybe 'urban legend' was a bad choice of words, as we are not talking about the lady putting her poddle in a microwave to dry it or something, so maybe "Fact or Fiction" is a better turn of phrase.
Mysteries are some of the best conversations in any field or hobby. If you like aviation history, its Amelia Earhart. If you like politics, it was Deep Throat. If you like true crime, who was Jack the Ripper. People offer theories, and write articles, or even mount expeditions. Solving it is fun, but that ends the fun. No one cares who was Deep Throat anymore, we know who it was and why they did it. That's a good end to the story, but it ends the story.
If everyone was so sure millions of ET cartridges were buried there, then the excavation in 2014 and its subplot for the AVGN movie would not have been as interesting.
If you want to convince me that the story was true, that's fine. Convince away, as I respect you and I will try to listen and learn. However, if you want to convince me that there was never a question at all, then that's a big revisionist. There certainly was a question as to what happened, and the question is an important part of video game literacy.