Atari 2600 sq

History Of Video Games

  • Magnavox Odyssey

    Magnavox Odyssey
    World's first game console
    • Predates the Atari Pong home consoles
    • Prototype known as the “Brown Box” is
    now at the Smithsonian
    • 340,000 units sold
  • Pong

    Pong
    A coin-op arcade game
    by Atari Inc
    • Based on table tennis
    • First game to gain widespread
    popularity - launched the
    industry boom
    • Led to a successful patent-
    infringement lawsuit from the
    Magnavox Odyssey
  • Maze Wars

    Maze Wars
    One of the first FPS
    • Players wander in a maze
    • Used tile-based movement
    • Other players are eyeballs
    that can be shot or harmed
    • Players gain points for
    shooting other players and
    lose them for being shot
  • Gran Track 10

    Gran Track 10
    A single-player racing arcade
    game by Atari
    • Player races against the
    game clock, accumulating
    points
    • Early diode-based ROM was used
    • Controls, steering wheel, shifter,
    accelerator, and brake pedals
    were all firsts for arcade games
  • 1975-77 Magnavox Odyssey

    1975-77 Magnavox Odyssey
    Played cartridges
    • Keyboard; used for
    educational games, selecting
    options, or programming
    • First game was an instant
    classic: Quest for the Rings!
    • Excellent speech synthesis unit
    • Master Strategy Series – a fusion
    of board and video games
  • APF TV Fun

    APF TV Fun
    Pong clone manufactured by APF
    formally a electronics developer
    • Four built-in games (Tennis, Hockey,
    Single Handball, and Squash)
    • Had a speaker and two
    controller knobs
    • Powered by AC adapter or
    batteries
    • Limited success
  • Fairchild Channel F

    Fairchild Channel F
    The world's second cartridge-based
    video game console, after the Magnavox
    Odyssey
    • Sold for $169.95
    • Originally called Video
    Entertainment System
    (VES), but when Atari
    released VCS, it was
    renamed
  • Coleco Telstar

    Coleco Telstar
    By Coleco - AY-3-8500
    chip
    • Pong variants on a
    domestic television
    receiver and available to
    any manufacturer
    • Battery-powered and
    external components
    were required
  • Atari 2600

    Atari 2600
    Popularized game cartridges -
    popular in the 1980s
    • Originally Atari VCS; later
    changed to "Atari 2600" in
    1982, after the release
    of Atari 5200
    • Two joysticks, two paddle
    controllers, and a
    cartridge game - initially
    Combat later Pac-Man
  • Nolan Bushnell invents Atari

    Nolan Bushnell invents Atari
    Popularized game cartridges -
    popular in the 1980s
    • Originally Atari VCS; later
    changed to "Atari 2600" in
    1982, after the release
    of Atari 5200
    • Two joysticks, two paddle
    controllers, and a
    cartridge game - initially
    Combat later Pac-Man
  • Chuck E Cheese’s

    Chuck E Cheese’s
    First family entertainment
    centers aimed at young
    children
    • Pizza restaurant with
    arcade games,
    amusement rides, an
    animatronics show, climbing
    equipment, tubes, and slides
    • Helped improve the image
    of video games
  • Space Invaders 1 of 2

    Space Invaders 1 of 2
    Created in Japan - later
    licensed in US
    • Shooting game - players
    defeat waves of aliens
    with a laser and earn
    points
    • So successful it caused a
    temporary shortage of
    coins in Japan
  • Space Invaders (2 of 2)

    Space Invaders (2 of 2)
    Grossed $2 billion
    worldwide by 1982
    • Pixilated alien has
    become a pop
    culture icon, often
    used as a symbol
    representing video
    games as a whole
  • Intellivision

    Intellivision
    By Mattel Electronics at $299
    • Four games available and a
    pack-in game: Las Vegas
    Poker Blackjack
    • First to pose a serious
    threat to Atari
    • By 1982 over two million
    had been sold, earning Mattel
    a $100,000,000 profit
  • Asteroids

    Asteroids
    Popular and influential
    game - 70,000 sold by Atari
    • Vector display and 2D view
    • Control a spaceship in an
    asteroid field traversed
    by flying saucers
    • Object - shoot asteroids and
    saucers while not colliding or
    being hit by counter-fire
  • Pac Man (1 of 2)

    Pac Man (1 of 2)
    Namco - considered
    among the most famous
    arcade games of all time
    • Became a social
    phenomenon that sold
    related merchandise and
    inspired an animated
    television series and a
    top-ten hit single
  • Pac Man (2 of 2)

    Pac Man (2 of 2)
    Appealed to both
    genders
    • Generated more than
    $2.5 billion in quarters
    by the 1990s
    • Highest brand
    awareness of any video
    game character
  • Frogger

    Frogger
    Move frogs home by
    crossing a busy road and
    navigate a river - skillful
    players obtain bonuses
    • A classic - noted for its
    novel gameplay and theme
    • Used two Z80 processors
    • By 2005, sold 20 million
    worldwide, 5 million in the US
  • Donkey Kong (2 of 2)

    Donkey Kong (2 of 2)
    The hero and ape became
    two of Nintendo's most
    popular characters
    • Nintendo licensed to
    Coleco, which developed
    home console versions
    • Dominated the market in
    the 1980s and early 1990s
  • Donkey Kong (1 of 2)

    Donkey Kong (1 of 2)
    By Nintendo - platform
    • Move the character
    across a series of
    platforms while dodging
    and jumping over
    obstacles
    • Rescue a damsel in
    distress from a giant
    ape - Donkey Kong
  • Galaga

    Galaga
    Fixed-shooter game
    • Control a space ship while
    aliens fly in formation and
    come down at the player's
    ship to either shoot or collide
    • Players fire at enemies, and
    once all enemies are
    vanquished, at which point
    the player moves to the next
    stage
  • Tron

    Tron
    Game was based on the
    Disney movie
    • A computer hacker is
    trapped inside a digital
    world and forced to
    participate in
    gladiatorial-type games
  • Q-Bert

    Q-Bert
    By Gottlieb
    • Isometric platform with
    puzzle elements where
    the player controls the
    character from a third-
    person perspective
    • Object is to make all
    cubes the same color
    • Uses a joystick
  • Pole Position

    Pole Position
    Arcade racing by Atari
    • Most popular coin-op
    arcade game of 1983
    • Use a steering wheel
    and a gear shifter for
    low and high gears
    • Featured an
    accelerator and brake
    pedal.
  • Mario Brothers

    Mario Brothers
    By Nintendo – platform
    arcade
    • Full color
    • Mario, a Italian-American
    plumber, and his brother
    Luigi must defeat
    creatures from the
    sewers below New York
  • Tetris (1 of 2)

    Tetris (1 of 2)
    Tile-matching from the Soviet Union
    • Name is from the Greek numerical prefix
    tetra- four segments
    • Electronic Gaming Monthly's 100th issue
    had Tetris in first place as "Greatest
    Game of All Time“
  • Tetris (2 of 2)

    Tetris (2 of 2)
    For Commodore 64 and
    IBM PC
    • Sold more than 70
    million copies
    • In January 2010, it was
    announced that Tetris has
    sold more than 100 million
    copies for mobile phones
    alone since 2005
  • Video Game Crash (1 of 2)

    The delay of Atari's 7800 console left
    consumers hungry for the next big thing
    • A flood of consoles on the US market
    gave consumers too many choices
    • Poor game titles and too many games
    based on the movie ET
    • Introduction of personal computers like
    the Commodore 64
  • Video Game Crash (2 of 2)

    Millions of consumers shifted their
    intention to buy choices from game
    consoles to low-end computers that
    retailed for similar prices
    • The crash lasted two years. The market
    was revitalized due to the success of the
    Nintendo Entertainment System (NES)
    with its landmark title Super Mario Bros
  • NES

    NES
    8-bit console by Nintendo
    • Most successful of its time;
    sold over 60 million worldwide
    • Helped revitalize the US industry
    following crash of 1984 - set the standard
    for consoles
    • First console to play and openly court
    third-party developers
    • Slogan "Now You're Playing With Power!"
  • The Legend of Zelda

    The Legend of Zelda
    Fantasy action-adventure
    created in Japan and
    published by Nintendo
    • Link, a playable
    character, must rescue
    Princess Zelda
    • As of December 2011,
    sold 67.93 million copies
  • Sega Master System

    Sega Master System
    8-bit cartridge-based by
    Sega
    • The Master System was
    released as a direct
    competitor to the NES
    • Failed to topple
    Nintendo, but was
    popular in European
    markets
  • Atari 7800

    Atari 7800
    Replaced Atari 5200, and
    re-establish Atari's
    supremacy over
    Nintendo and Sega
    • Digital joysticks; fully backward-
    compatible with the Atari 2600;
    and affordable - $140
    • Designed to be upgraded to a
    home computer
  • Final Fantasy

    Final Fantasy
    Science fantasy RPGs
    • Franchise includes motion
    pictures, anime, printed
    media, and other merchandise -
    more than 100 million units sold
    • Known for innovation, visuals,
    full-motion videos, photo-
    realistic character models, and
    orchestrated music
  • Atari Lynx

    Atari Lynx
    World's first with a color
    LCD display by Atari
    • Advanced features and
    graphics, and
    ambidextrous layout
    • Failed to attract quality
    third-party developers,
    and was eventually
    abandoned
  • Nintendo’s Game Boy

    Nintendo’s Game Boy
    8-bit for $89.95
    • First successful handheld -
    predecessor of all other
    Game Boys
    • Originally bundled with
    Tetris
    • Sold 118.69 million
    worldwide
  • Sega Genesis

    Sega Genesis
    Supported over 900
    games
    • First 16-bit console to
    achieve notable market
    share - sold 40 million
    units worldwide
    • Direct competitor of the
    Super (SNES), although
    released two years earlier
  • Sega Game Gear

    Sega Game Gear
    Sega's response to the
    Game Boy; short battery
    life, lack of support, and
    lack of titles held it back
    • Third color console released
    • 8-bit color at $149.99
    • Full-color backlit screen
    with a landscape format
  • TurboExpress

    TurboExpress
    Most advanced of its time
    and could play games on a
    credit-card sized device
    called HuCards
    • 66 2.6 in. screen, displayed 64 sprites
    at once, 16 per scanline, in 482 colors
    from a palette of 512
    • Had 8 kilobytes of RAM $249.99
    • Could use as a video monitor
  • Sonic the Hedgehog

    Sonic the Hedgehog
    Platform by Sega
    • Successful; increased the
    popularity of Sega's console
    and established Sonic the
    Hedgehog as the company's
    mascot
    • Led to subsequent games in
    Sega's flagship Sonic the
    Hedgehog series
  • Super Nintendo

    Super Nintendo
    Advanced graphics and
    sound capabilities
    • Ran 3D graphics better,
    helping usher in 3D in
    the fifth generation
    • Best-selling of the 16-bit
    era
    • Remains popular well
    into the 32-bit era
  • Sony PlayStation

    Sony PlayStation
    32-bit by Sony
    • First of a series of PS
    consoles
    • First to ship 100 million
    units
    • PS2 released in 2000 is
    best-selling home console
    to date
    • Has a PlayStation network
  • Sega Saturn

    Sega Saturn
    32-bit - sold 9.5 million
    units worldwide
    • Powerful machine for the
    time, but its design made
    harnessing power difficult
    • Was the "other" system,
    running a distant third
    behind the Nintendo 64 and
    the PlayStation
  • Nintendo 64

    Nintendo 64
    Nintendo's third home
    console $199
    • 64-bit processor sold
    32.93 million units
    worldwide
    • Released Super Mario 64
    and Pilotwings 64
    • Slogan: "Get N, or get
    Out!"
  • Sega Dreamcast

    Sega Dreamcast
    First sixth-generation console
    • Successor to the Sega
    Saturn as a comeback
    effort
    • Was hailed as ahead of its
    time but failed to gather
    momentum when PS2 was
    released
    • Discontinued in 2001
  • Sony PlayStation 2

    Sony PlayStation 2
    Best-selling console
    in history, selling over
    150 million
    • Over 3870 game title
    are available
    • Produced for 12 years
  • Nintendo GameCube

    Nintendo GameCube
    Nintendo's fourth
    system used compact
    discs
    • Sold 22 million units
    worldwide
    • Discs are encrypted
    and unreadable by
    most DVD drives.
    • Discontinued in 2007
  • Microsoft Xbox

    Microsoft Xbox
    Microsoft's first
    console with 24
    million units sold
    • Allowed players to
    play online
    • $299.99
    • Discontinued in 2008
    • Followed by the Xbox
    360 and Xbox One
  • Xbox 360

    Xbox 360
    By Microsoft after the XBOX
    • Had problems at first
    • Xbox Live allows players to
    compete online and
    download content
    • Streams media from PC
    • Sold 80 million units
    worldwide - seventh
    highest-selling console
  • Nintendo Wii

    Nintendo Wii
    by Nintendo for a broader
    audience
    • As of 2012, the Wii led
    PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 in
    worldwide sales
    • 12/2009, broke sales record for
    a single month in the US
    • Notable features: controller,
    WiiConnect24, and Virtual
    Console.
  • PlayStation 3

    PlayStation 3
    Third by Sony after the PS2
    • First to use Blu-ray Disc
    • Can output high-definition
    video for games and
    movies in up to 1080p
    • Initially available in two
    configurations, 20 GB and
    the 60 GB model