In June 1995, former Mattel Electronics programmers led by Keith Robinson started the
Blue Sky Rangers Intellivision website.
Blue Sky Rangers being a
nickname given to the Mattel Electronics programmers in a
TV Guide magazine article from the 1982 June 19 issue. The website provides the history of the Intellivsion games and credits the programmers and artists. It was well received with fans asking how the games can be played on their computers. In 1997, Intellivision Productions, Inc. was formed by former Mattel Electronics programmers Keith Robinson and Stephen Roney with the purchase of the rights to the Intellivision and its games. At the same time, a student in Michigan named Carl Mueller Jr. was independently working on
reverse engineering the Intellivision. With the help of Intellivision
ROM dumps from Sean Kelly and then William Moeller and Scott Nudds, Mueller Jr. was able to create the first Intellivision
emulator that plays the games on a modern computer. Kelly was fortunate to have two Intellivision prototype cartridges with standard 8-bit
EPROMs as opposed to the more complex memory mapped
ROMs used by ordinary cartridges. Moeller and Nudds were able to dump the Intellivision embedded executive control software and graphic ROMs, as well as build a cartridge reader to dump any Intellivision cartridge. Mueller Jr.'s
MS-DOS emulator and a
Macintosh emulator created by Intellivision Productions' Steve Roney would be used in the free Intellipack downloads so anyone could play select Intellivision games on their computers for the first time in 1997. The Intellivision for PC/Mac Volume 2 download, also of 1997, was the first release of
Deep Pockets Super Pro Billiards, the last game programmed for the Intellivision in 1990, but unreleased by INTV Corporation. They would also be used to play the original Intellivision games in the Intellivision Lives! PC/Mac CD-ROM edition released in 1998 by Intellivision Productions. ==PC and Macintosh system requirements==