Copyright (c) 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000 Samuel N. Hart
All Rights Reserved
|
[
Back /
Geekcomix / Mail
Sam ] - Next Stop
-
First Generation Systems, 1972-1977
First Generation Terminology
America was
introduced to the first home video game system on a Sunday night television
broadcast hosted by Frank Sinatra. Released by Magnavox and named "Odyssey"
this system was little more than a few logic switches, and not considered
a microcomputer by the industry. The Odyssey was the result of years of
negotiations between Ralph Baer and various players in the television manufacturing
industry. 1,
2
This was not, however, the first time that Americans had seen a videogame.
Pong, created by Nolan Bushnell and Al Alcorn (founder and first employee
of Atari), had been around for nearly a year in the arcades. Thus videogames
were not new. However, a system to play video games in the privacy of your
own home had never been seen before.
Nolan Bushnell
was not to be outdone, and with simplicity as his motto, he reproduced
his popular arcade Pong for home use. Atari Pong, the home version, consisted
of one simple unit. It had built in paddles, a built in speaker, and preprogrammed
with Pong. Unlike Baer's Odyssey, which had twelve games built in, separate
controllers, and graphic overlays, Atari Pong was considered concise by
the video game consumer. At this time, consumers did not feel a need to
spend more on a system simply because it had more games. It was a common
complaint among consumers that systems with multiple games only had one
or two desirable games. Thus, Atari Pong and the over sixty Pong knock-offs,
would dominate the market until 1977 when it would be replaced by the VCS,
another Atari system. 2
The Video Game Infrastructure Phenomenon,
Part 1
The Video Game Infrastructure Phenomenon, Part
2
[ Back
/ Geekcomix / Mail
Sam ] - Next Stop
-
Copyright (C) 1996-1997, Sam Hart, hart@geekcomix.com
All trademarks are properties of their respective companies.
|