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Thread: 1976

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    Peach (Level 3) NeoZeedeater's Avatar
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    Default 1976

    On the subject of video games the 1970s decade has mostly become forgotten over the years, partly due to the age of gamers and partly due to the early 1980s improving upon its types of games. Still, I find it quite a fascinating era. This thread will focus on the gaming scene of 30 years ago. There was actually quite a lot going on.

    There were several consoles released in 1976. Atari launched a few versions of Home Pong allowing gamers to play the hit arcade game at home(technically the system debuted in 1975 with the Sears Tele-games version). Video tennis had been around in the home market since the Magnavox Odyssey in 1972 but it was never a huge success and by 1976 that console was no longer on the market. Home Pong sold for much less as well.


    Other Pong clones appeared that year too, the most successful being Coleco's Telstar. It included three game variations(tennis, hockey, and handball).


    Far more interesting though was the arrival of programmable consoles. Home Pongs and earlier systems were "dedicated" which means they had their games either built inside. They couldn't just program and release new games for them like with consoles as we know them today.

    The first programmable true cartridge-based consoles arrived in 1976 and a new era in home gaming had begun.

    Fairchild Camera & Instrument released their Video Entertainment System(VES) in North America in August. Hockey and Tennis were built into the system and various cartridges were sold separately. The VES was later remodeled and renamed the Channel F. The controller was a sort of paddle/joystick combo; it could be moved in four directions and the top portion rotated.


    RCA's programmable Studio II console was released in January 1977 just missing the 1976 Christmas season.

    A German company called Radofin released their 1292 Advanced Programmable Video System in 1976. It and its follow ups were licensed to other manufacturers throughout Europe, Australia and New Zealand. The controller consisted of a two direction analog joystick and a keypad.


    I haven't played the 1292 unfortunately. With so little information on the internet and the US-centric focus of most gaming history books it's difficult to determine the exact years of release for its games. I suspect most of its games came out post-'76 and so I will leave them out of the thread until I know for sure.

    Japan was behind the West in console gaming. From what I gather the only console over there at this point was the original Magnavox Odyssey which was released in Japan by Nintendo the previous year. I'm not totally sure of the year though. Nintendo doesn't mention the Odyssey in the company history on their website.


    Anyway, onto some of the games of 1976.


    --Sports and Fighting Games--

    While people were playing Pong and its variants at home, the arcade sports scene had evolved by this time with characters that somewhat resembled people instead of just moving squares.

    Tornado Baseball(Bally Midway)


    Fly Ball(Atari)

    Deluxe Baseball(Ramtek)


    Fighting games emerged in the arcades too. Sega had Heavyweight Champ which had boxing glove shaped controllers and cartoony characters.


    Project Support Engineering had the jousting game Knights in Armor.



    --Shooters--

    Kee Games/Atari's Tank 8 was an eight player colour sequel to their popular 1974 arcade game. I love Tank and I imagine it would be pretty awesome 8-player.


    *Note - In this era numbers after games' names usually refer to the number of players as opposed to later generations where they usually refer to sequels.

    On the VES, Videocart-2 consisted of Desert Fox and Shooting Gallery. Given that the tank game Desert Fox predates Atari's VCS game Combat I imagine it would have been impressive at the time. I like it.


    In Shooting Gallery you controlled a turret on the screen and had to shoot moving targets. You could adjust the speed and add a timer.



    Airplane duels were another popular type of shooter in the arcades that year.

    Ace(Allied Leisure)


    Biplane(Fun Games Inc.)


    Wings(Electra)

    Skywars(Micro Amusements)



    Taito's Avenger looks like some kind of vertical shooter.


    Squadron(Sega)


    I have been trying to trace the origins of the rail shooter genre. It's possible Meadows' coin op Cobra Gunship is one but it's hard to tell from pictures and descriptions.


    Atari's arcade game Starship 1 is the earliest rail shooter I have played. It might have been a 1977 release though. Klov.com lists it as 1976 but MAME has it as 1977.


    Midway's arcade game Sea Wolf had a periscope and involved moving around a crosshair to shoot enemies.


    Atari's Cops'n Robbers was a two-player scrolling shooter where you had to take out your opponent on the opposite side of the screen.



    --Gun Games--

    Light gun games had been around commercially in the early '70s with the Odyssey rifle but by 1976 they had faded from the console scene. However, the genre was alive in the arcades. I really wish I had access to playing these as I think the gun game genre tends to age well.

    Outlaw(Atari)


    Rock'n Bark(Sega)


    Attack(Taito)

    Claybuster(Model Racing)


    And although it's not technically considered a video game, Nintendo's projector-based game Wild Gunman deserves a mention as it got a video game version 8 years later.


    Sky Hawk and Shooting Trainer were other 1976 projector games by Nintendo.


    --Adventure and Roleplaying Games--

    These genres were still quite underground at this time. Consoles weren't advanced enough to handle them, arcades didn't suit them, and there wasn't really a personal computer market yet. Instead, they existed on mainframe computers such as those on university campuses.

    The text adventure genre is considered to have originated with Will Crowther's mainframe game Adventure/Colossal Cave/ADVENT(usually dated 1972 although some dispute that). In 1976, Don Woods overhauled the game adding in many new elements. This is considered the complete version and why both men get listed as authors.

    Similarly for RPGs in 1976, it seems the big thing was adding enhancements to the dungeon crawlers such as Gary Whisenhunt and Ray Wood's dnd/Avatar. The game originated in 1974 and was expanded on by Dirk and Flint Pellett in 1976 with new monsters and items added.

    There were at least a couple RPG-ish games prior to dnd such as pedit5 and m119h but they were deleted soon after creation. Dnd was also likely the first game to feature a boss enemy with its Golden Dragon. More info on dnd - http://www.armory.com/~dlp/dnd1.html

    I'm not sure what year this PLATO version of dnd is.



    --Maze Games and First-person Shooters--

    Maze games been around since the early days of mainframe gaming as well.

    Arguably the original first-person shooter, Maze War/Maze/The Maze Game not only networked several players for multiplayer action, it had a map you could toggle to. Talk about ahead of its time. While it didn't originate in 1976(I have seen it listed as 1973 and 1974) it was being improved and ported to other computer formats that year. This website has lots on info and videos - http://www.digibarn.com/history/04-V...War/index.html


    There were 2d maze games as well such as Bally's arcade release The Amazing Maze Game where the object was to exit the maze quicker than your opponent.


    Meadows' arcade game Lazer Command was a more maze-like approach on Tank.



    --Driving Games--

    It was big year for arcade racing games. Atari had Sprint 2, Le Mans and Indy 4.

    Sprint 2


    Indy 4


    Sega's Fonz was likely the first game based on a TV character.


    Stunt Cycle(Atari)


    Speed Race Twin(Taito)

    Moto-Cross(Sega)

    Mattel released their first of their line of handheld electronic games in 1976 with Auto Race. The car was just a red blip but I thought these old Mattel games were neat.


    First-person view racers appeared such as Atari's Night Driver and Bally Midway's 280 Zzzap.



    --Miscellaneous Games--

    Another type of game that originated in 1976 as far as I can tell is those multiplayer battles where players control snake-like things and the object is to outlive your opponents and get them to smash into walls.

    Gremlin's arcade game Blockade is usually credited as the first one although Bally Midway's Bigfoot Bonkers and Ramtek's Barricade date from the same year. This sub-genre was the inspiration for the light cycles in the 1982 movie TRON.

    Blockade


    Bigfoot Bonkers


    Videocart-1 for the VES had Tic Tac Toe, Shooting Gallery the drawing program Doodle and random drawing generator Quadradoodle.




    There were also video trivia and card games in 1976 arcades.

    Quiz Show(Kee Games)


    Trivia(Ramtek)

    Hit Me(Ramtek)


    Videocart-3 for the VES was Blackjack.


    Exidy released the first controversial video game, Death Race. This arcade game(inspired by the movie Death Race 2000) had the player running over "gremlins". It outraged some people who thought the game promoted violence and killing people with cars(sound familiar?). The game was mentioned on 60 Minutes and other news shows.


    One of the most influential games of the year was Atari's Breakout which breathed some fresh air into ball and paddle games with its single-player focus of eliminating blocks at the top of the screen.


    Cinematronics' arcade game Flipper Ball was similar.


    Also worth mentioning is that Breakout creators Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs founded Apple Computer in 1976 and Atari was bought out by Warner Communications.


    All in all, it was a pretty eventful year given how new and small the industry still was. It recapped the work of the early '70s and added new innovations. The shift to programmable consoles was significant and most of the genres we play today existed back then in some form.

    What are your thoughts on 1976 in gaming? Please add any other information or corrections. I wasn't born until late 1975 and didn't experience this time as a gamer first-hand. There's still plenty for me to learn about it.

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    Wow! Interesting read. I was born in '76 and really didn't get into the gaming scene until '80 or '81. It's really neat to see the games that were being played. Cool stuff!

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    drowning in medals Ed Oscuro's Avatar
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    Default Re: 1976

    GUN FIGHT HELL YEAH

    also I have a Death Race flyer, nifty

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    Strawberry (Level 2) JerseyDevil65's Avatar
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    Fun read, thanks for that.

    I was 11 in 1976, but I was into playing sports outdoors and never even knew stuff like that existed back then.

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    Pretzel (Level 4) ozyr's Avatar
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    Damn cool post. Thanks!!!


    Loved the picture of Sea Wolf. I used to play that this at a bar my dad used to go to. Plus the first job I ever worked at had Death Race in the basement arcade room. Never really got into it, but it was there! Back to Sea Wolf, this sucker used to eat lots of my quarters. I still like the game today, using MAME of course.

    Again, thanks for the big post, and plenty of outstanding pictures. Great read!

    P.S. As for the Channle F, I hate to say it, but I never got into that thing. Just not my cup of tea. Back then it was okay, now I just can't stand the thing. It is a piece of history, but one I don't care to think about. (sorry).

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    Apple (Level 5) mezrabad's Avatar
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    Nice post! Thanks for sharing your research!
    Chronogamer. Every game. Chronologically.
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    I have forgotten to feed my fish...

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    Peach (Level 3) ghostangelofcky's Avatar
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    Very cool neozeedeater, I always like ready your topics. I never knew nintendo promoted the ody. Small world

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    ServBot (Level 11) tom's Avatar
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    I turned 18, got my driving license, Mom got me a car, first thing I did was driving into the red light district with my mates. Hell yeah, fun times.

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    Kirby (Level 13) diskoboy's Avatar
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    Ahhh, Death Race. The first game to give video games a bad name. Definately tame by todays standards.

    And probably the rarest game I have ever had the privilige of playing.

    Check out Jaws 2 - in the scene where all the teens are in the bar, one of them is playing a Death Race machine.

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    Apple (Level 5) MrRoboto19XX's Avatar
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    Great post! Thats some good info, Id love to get my hands on that German console.
    Welcome to Macintosh.


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    I wonder how many (if any) of those Fonz arcade machines are still around?

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    Apple (Level 5) Retsudo's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JerseyDevil65
    Fun read, thanks for that.

    I was 11 in 1976, but I was into playing sports outdoors and never even knew stuff like that existed back then.
    Yeah, I was the same age back then.
    I got a Pong machine that year. I only could play that thing about 10 min at a time before getting bored.
    Now I remember why I spent most of my time outside back then.

    Like you JerseyDevil, most of those things I never heard of back in the days.

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    ah, the joy of dedicated consoles...

    nice read

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    drowning in medals Ed Oscuro's Avatar
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    Default Re: 1976

    Quote Originally Posted by Ed Oscuro
    GUN FIGHT HELL YEAH
    woops, MAME says it's January '75. Well, better earlier than later.

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    I didn't know there was a wild gunman projector game.. very cool. Seems like at least a few of the early nes releases were console versions of projector games then? At least wild gunman and duck hunt... anyone know of more?

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    Peach (Level 3) NeoZeedeater's Avatar
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    Thanks, guys.
    Quote Originally Posted by Bronty-2
    I didn't know there was a wild gunman projector game.. very cool. Seems like at least a few of the early nes releases were console versions of projector games then? At least wild gunman and duck hunt... anyone know of more?
    Are you sure they made a Duck Hunt projector game? I know there was an electromechanical gun game by Sega called Duck Hunt.

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    I'm sure as well,it was on Ebay not so long ago,brand new,and the guy asked $250 or so

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    RACES MINI MOTORCYCLES Videogamerdaryll's Avatar
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    Awesome thread....

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    This is a case of "you had to be there."

    It is not possible, even if one has time-travel capabilities, to truly appreciate many of these games, and the "entire scene," unless you were there, as it happened.

    First, there was Pong. It was new, and something different.

    Now, you have to remember, for a moment, that there wasn't anything else at that point. Therefore, ANYTHING else was really a big deal. When a Pong game with (gasp!) FOUR paddles came out, it was a huge deal!

    The simple racing games, those tank games, even those simple gun games, followed. Over the next several years, amazing advances, relative to Pong, were coming out.

    There's something else to consider here. Since it was not possible to hide behind the sort of graphics and sound of later years, to come out with something truly new and exciting, within the technical limitations of those days, required tremendous imagination. This is why the 1970s and part of the 1980s had such variety; it was a matter of survival.

    Vector games, color games, overlays...

    Then of course came...Space Invaders.

    At this point, some of the most popular games ever came out. Asteroids, Pac-Man, etc. Games were colorful, varied, and new. TEMPEST! Mr. Do!! Battlezone.

    But there was more to it than this. The entire surrounding culture of those days was altogether different. Since a true pop culture experience is interconnected, it is not possible, even in a perfect 1970s recreation of an arcade, to ever completely capture it. Even if you could time travel, you know what is to come- we didn't. And trust me, that alone would never allow you to know.

    It was an underrated decade, wasn't it?

    Stunt Cycle, anyone?

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    There is one of those Duck Hunt projector games on Ebay right now:

    http://cgi.ebay.com/Nintendo-Duckhun...QQcmdZViewItem

    Quite rare to see..maybe not $250 worth,but well, taking a look is free!

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