The ROM is widely available as "Video Olympics (1977) (Atari).bin." Legally, you should own a physical copy of the cartridge, but given its ubiquity and age, it remains one of the most preserved pieces of software in gaming history.
Here is the story of how the most famous game in the world came to the most famous console in the world, and why the ROM file remains a digital artifact worth examining. If you download a ROM set for the Atari 2600, you won't find a file labeled "Pong." Instead, you will find Video Olympics . Why? pong rom atari 2600
Pong cannot be played correctly with a joystick. The Video Olympics ROM supports the Atari 2600’s paddle controllers (the twisting dials). Unlike emulated mouse controls or keyboard taps, a real emulator setup (like Stella) paired with a USB paddle simulates the analog drift of the original arcade game. The ROM’s programming handles the "jitter" of old analog potentiometers perfectly. The ROM is widely available as "Video Olympics