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Film director Zak Penn shows a box of a decades-old Atari 'E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial' game found in a dumpsite in Alamogordo, N.M. Joe Lewandowski, a consultant for the film companies that documented the dig, says the online auction of 100 Atari games, which ended Thursday, Nov. 13, 2014, generated $37,000. The "E.T." game, still in its original box, sold for $1,537. Image Credit: AP

What some have called the worst video game ever made has fetched thousands of dollars for a New Mexico city.

An old E.T. The Extraterrestrial game cartridge drew the highest bid among 100 Atari games auctioned on eBay by Alamogordo officials.

The games were part of a cache of some 800 Atari video games buried more than 30 years ago in a landfill and dug up in April.

Joe Lewandowski, a consultant for the film companies that documented the dig, says the online auction, which ended on Thursday, generated $37,000 (Dh135,800).

The E.T. game, still in its original box, sold for $1,537.

Atari reportedly buried the 1982 game in after it was dubbed a flop.

Alamogordo owns the cartridges because they came from the city’s landfill.