MINECRAFT
The Note for Tom Hanks has a MINECRAFT player next to it — another gaming system where players can communicate anonymously. One victim testimones about him.
MINECRAFT also game about cubes. Cube of Saturn.
And
Atari have symbolic elements.
en.wikipedia.org
Founder Nolan Kay Bushnell (born February 5, 1943) is an American businessman and electrical engineer. He established Atari, Inc. and the Chuck E. Cheese's Pizza Time Theatre chain. Bushnell has been inducted into the Video Game Hall of Fame and the Consumer Electronics Association Hall of Fame, received the BAFTA Fellowship and the Nations Restaurant News "Innovator of the Year" award, and was named one of Newsweek's "50 Men Who Changed America." Bushnell has started more than twenty companies and is one of the founding fathers of the video game industry. He is on the board of Anti-Aging Games. In 2012 he founded an educational software company called Brainrush,[4] that is using video game technology in educational software.
Bushnell enrolled at Utah State University in 1961 to study engineering and then later business. In 1964, he transferred to the University of Utah College of Engineering, where he graduated with a Bachelor's degree in electrical engineering.[6] He was a member of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. He was one of many computer science students of the 1960s who played the historic Spacewar! game on DEC mainframe computers.
Direct satanism themes and symbolism in games too
en.wikipedia.org
Pong is the fist game and to learn their symbolic study Pizzagate also.
Also space themes which is actually direct to NASA programming center. There are more games about occult scripts and all of them I believe for MK Ultra made. Most games have wizards and Mario Bros have occult themed elements.
From 'Pong' to 'Space Invaders,' we're rounding up our picks for the top 10 Atari games of all time.
ew.com
2. Adventure (1979):
It may look painfully simplistic by modern standards, as your character is a square and the fierce dragons pretty much look like ducks, but for its time, Adventure was a revelation. It essentially created the action-adventure genre and was one of the first games to feature an easter egg.
(Game designer Warren Robinett hid his name in a secret room.) What it lacked in graphics, it more than made up for in imagination.
6. Pitfall! (1982):
Largely credited with creating the side-scrolling platformer genre,
Pitfall! was one of the most influential games of the Atari 2600. The sprawling adventure has you controlling Pitfall Harry, navigating jungle hazards as you swing over crocodiles, jump over scorpions and leap across the titular pits while collecting treasure. Without Pitfall Harry, there would be no Mario, and there might be no Jack Black, who was featured in the game’s commercial.
8. Q*bert (1983):
Another arcade port, Q*bert lost the cool isometric perspective but none of the addictive gameplay that made it such a classic. You play as a long-snouted, armless orange thing as you jump around a pyramid, trying to touch every cube while avoiding Coily the snake and other creatures. Get hit by an enemy and Q*bert curses “@!#?@!,” which is probably much nicer than what most players yelled at the screen. Though he hasn’t had any recent games, the iconic character showed up in last year’s animated hit