Video Game Trader Magazine | March 2008 |
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A History of Video Game Consoles Introduction the First Generation
A History of Video Game Consoles By Terry Amick – Gerald Long – James Schell – Gregory Shehan Introduction Today video games are a multibillion dollar industry. They are in practically all American households. They are a major driving force in electronic innovation and development. Though, you would hardly guess this from their modest beginning. The first video games were played on mainframe computers in the 1950s through the 1960s (Winter, n.d.). Arcade games would be the first glimpse for the general public of video games. Magnavox would produce the first home video game console featuring the popular arcade game Pong for the 1972 Christmas Season, released as Tele-Games Pong (Ellis, n.d.). The First Generation Magnavox Odyssey Rushed into production the original game did not even have a microprocessor. Games were selected by using toggle switches. At first sales were poor because people mistakenly believed you needed a Magnavox TV to play the game (GameSpy, n.d., para. 11). By 1975 annual sales had reached 300,000 units (Gamester81, 2012). Other manufacturers copied Pong and began producing their own game consoles, which promptly got them sued for copyright infringement (Barton, & Loguidice, n.d.). The Second Generation Atari 2600 Atari released the 2600 in 1977. Although not the first, the Atari 2600 popularized the use of a microprocessor and game cartridges in video game consoles. The original device had an 8-bit 1.19MHz 6507 microprocessor (“The Atari”, n.d.), two joy sticks, a paddle controller, and two game cartridges. Combat and Pac Man were included with the console. In 2007 the Atari 2600 was inducted into the National Toy Hall of Fame (“National Toy”, n.d.). -
Harmony Cartridge Online Manual
A new way to experience the Atari 2600. © Copyright 2009-2011 – AtariAge (atariage.com) Second printing Contents Introduction ____________________________________ 1 Getting Started with Harmony _______________________ 1 Harmony Firmware Upgrading ______________________ 3 Frequently Asked Questions ________________________ 5 Harmony File Extensions __________________________ 8 Harmony Technical Specifications ____________________ 9 Acknowledgments _______________________________ 9 Introduction The Harmony cartridge is a programmable add-on for the Atari 2600 console that allows you to load an entire library of games into a single cartridge and then select which title you want to play from a friendly, on-screen menu interface. It features an SD card interface, making it simple to access the large library of Atari 2600 software. The Harmony cartridge supports almost all of the titles that have been produced for the Atari 2600. It can also be used to run your own Atari 2600 game creations on a real console. The Harmony cartridge is flash-upgradeable, and will be updated to support future Atari 2600 developments. SD card slot Mini-B USB port Back edge of Harmony Cart This guide tells you how to make the most of your Harmony cartridge. It should be read thoroughly before the cartridge is used for the first time. Your Harmony cartridge will provide you with many years of Atari 2600 enjoyment. The following equipment is required to use the Harmony cartridge: 1) An Atari 2600, Atari 7800 or other Atari 2600-compatible console. 2) A Windows, Macintosh or Linux-based computer to transfer data onto the SD card. 3) An SD card adapter for your computer. 4) An SD or SDHC card up to 32GB capacity. -
List of Notable Handheld Game Consoles (Source
List of notable handheld game consoles (source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Handheld_game_console#List_of_notable_handheld_game_consoles) * Milton Bradley Microvision (1979) * Epoch Game Pocket Computer - (1984) - Japanese only; not a success * Nintendo Game Boy (1989) - First internationally successful handheld game console * Atari Lynx (1989) - First backlit/color screen, first hardware capable of accelerated 3d drawing * NEC TurboExpress (1990, Japan; 1991, North America) - Played huCard (TurboGrafx-16/PC Engine) games, first console/handheld intercompatibility * Sega Game Gear (1991) - Architecturally similar to Sega Master System, notable accessory firsts include a TV tuner * Watara Supervision (1992) - first handheld with TV-OUT support; although the Super Game Boy was only a compatibility layer for the preceding game boy. * Sega Mega Jet (1992) - no screen, made for Japan Air Lines (first handheld without a screen) * Mega Duck/Cougar Boy (1993) - 4 level grayscale 2,7" LCD - Stereo sound - rare, sold in Europe and Brazil * Nintendo Virtual Boy (1994) - Monochromatic (red only) 3D goggle set, only semi-portable; first 3D portable * Sega Nomad (1995) - Played normal Sega Genesis cartridges, albeit at lower resolution * Neo Geo Pocket (1996) - Unrelated to Neo Geo consoles or arcade systems save for name * Game Boy Pocket (1996) - Slimmer redesign of Game Boy * Game Boy Pocket Light (1997) - Japanese only backlit version of the Game Boy Pocket * Tiger game.com (1997) - First touch screen, first Internet support (with use of sold-separately -
Master List of Games This Is a List of Every Game on a Fully Loaded SKG Retro Box, and Which System(S) They Appear On
Master List of Games This is a list of every game on a fully loaded SKG Retro Box, and which system(s) they appear on. Keep in mind that the same game on different systems may be vastly different in graphics and game play. In rare cases, such as Aladdin for the Sega Genesis and Super Nintendo, it may be a completely different game. System Abbreviations: • GB = Game Boy • GBC = Game Boy Color • GBA = Game Boy Advance • GG = Sega Game Gear • N64 = Nintendo 64 • NES = Nintendo Entertainment System • SMS = Sega Master System • SNES = Super Nintendo • TG16 = TurboGrafx16 1. '88 Games ( Arcade) 2. 007: Everything or Nothing (GBA) 3. 007: NightFire (GBA) 4. 007: The World Is Not Enough (N64, GBC) 5. 10 Pin Bowling (GBC) 6. 10-Yard Fight (NES) 7. 102 Dalmatians - Puppies to the Rescue (GBC) 8. 1080° Snowboarding (N64) 9. 1941: Counter Attack ( Arcade, TG16) 10. 1942 (NES, Arcade, GBC) 11. 1943: Kai (TG16) 12. 1943: The Battle of Midway (NES, Arcade) 13. 1944: The Loop Master ( Arcade) 14. 1999: Hore, Mitakotoka! Seikimatsu (NES) 15. 19XX: The War Against Destiny ( Arcade) 16. 2 on 2 Open Ice Challenge ( Arcade) 17. 2010: The Graphic Action Game (Colecovision) 18. 2020 Super Baseball ( Arcade, SNES) 19. 21-Emon (TG16) 20. 3 Choume no Tama: Tama and Friends: 3 Choume Obake Panic!! (GB) 21. 3 Count Bout ( Arcade) 22. 3 Ninjas Kick Back (SNES, Genesis, Sega CD) 23. 3-D Tic-Tac-Toe (Atari 2600) 24. 3-D Ultra Pinball: Thrillride (GBC) 25. 3-D WorldRunner (NES) 26. 3D Asteroids (Atari 7800) 27. -
[Japan] SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 1000 Miglia
SCHEDA NEW PLATINUM PI4 EDITION La seguente lista elenca la maggior parte dei titoli emulati dalla scheda NEW PLATINUM Pi4 (20.000). - I giochi per computer (Amiga, Commodore, Pc, etc) richiedono una tastiera per computer e talvolta un mouse USB da collegare alla console (in quanto tali sistemi funzionavano con mouse e tastiera). - I giochi che richiedono spinner (es. Arkanoid), volanti (giochi di corse), pistole (es. Duck Hunt) potrebbero non essere controllabili con joystick, ma richiedono periferiche ad hoc, al momento non configurabili. - I giochi che richiedono controller analogici (Playstation, Nintendo 64, etc etc) potrebbero non essere controllabili con plance a levetta singola, ma richiedono, appunto, un joypad con analogici (venduto separatamente). - Questo elenco è relativo alla scheda NEW PLATINUM EDITION basata su Raspberry Pi4. - Gli emulatori di sistemi 3D (Playstation, Nintendo64, Dreamcast) e PC (Amiga, Commodore) sono presenti SOLO nella NEW PLATINUM Pi4 e non sulle versioni Pi3 Plus e Gold. - Gli emulatori Atomiswave, Sega Naomi (Virtua Tennis, Virtua Striker, etc.) sono presenti SOLO nelle schede Pi4. - La versione PLUS Pi3B+ emula solo 550 titoli ARCADE, generati casualmente al momento dell'acquisto e non modificabile. Ultimo aggiornamento 2 Settembre 2020 NOME GIOCO EMULATORE 005 SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 1 On 1 Government [Japan] SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 1000 Miglia: Great 1000 Miles Rally SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 10-Yard Fight SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 18 Holes Pro Golf SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 1941: Counter Attack SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 1942 SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 1943 Kai: Midway Kaisen SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 1943: The Battle of Midway [Europe] SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 1944 : The Loop Master [USA] SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 1945k III SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 19XX : The War Against Destiny [USA] SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 2 On 2 Open Ice Challenge SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 4-D Warriors SALA GIOCHI ARCADE 64th. -
Master List of Games This Is a List of Every Game on a Fully Loaded SKG Retro Box, and Which System(S) They Appear On
Master List of Games This is a list of every game on a fully loaded SKG Retro Box, and which system(s) they appear on. Keep in mind that the same game on different systems may be vastly different in graphics and game play. In rare cases, such as Aladdin for the Sega Genesis and Super Nintendo, it may be a completely different game. System Abbreviations: • GB = Game Boy • GBC = Game Boy Color • GBA = Game Boy Advance • GG = Sega Game Gear • N64 = Nintendo 64 • NES = Nintendo Entertainment System • SMS = Sega Master System • SNES = Super Nintendo • TG16 = TurboGrafx16 1. '88 Games (Arcade) 2. 007: Everything or Nothing (GBA) 3. 007: NightFire (GBA) 4. 007: The World Is Not Enough (N64, GBC) 5. 10 Pin Bowling (GBC) 6. 10-Yard Fight (NES) 7. 102 Dalmatians - Puppies to the Rescue (GBC) 8. 1080° Snowboarding (N64) 9. 1941: Counter Attack (TG16, Arcade) 10. 1942 (NES, Arcade, GBC) 11. 1942 (Revision B) (Arcade) 12. 1943 Kai: Midway Kaisen (Japan) (Arcade) 13. 1943: Kai (TG16) 14. 1943: The Battle of Midway (NES, Arcade) 15. 1944: The Loop Master (Arcade) 16. 1999: Hore, Mitakotoka! Seikimatsu (NES) 17. 19XX: The War Against Destiny (Arcade) 18. 2 on 2 Open Ice Challenge (Arcade) 19. 2010: The Graphic Action Game (Colecovision) 20. 2020 Super Baseball (SNES, Arcade) 21. 21-Emon (TG16) 22. 3 Choume no Tama: Tama and Friends: 3 Choume Obake Panic!! (GB) 23. 3 Count Bout (Arcade) 24. 3 Ninjas Kick Back (SNES, Genesis, Sega CD) 25. 3-D Tic-Tac-Toe (Atari 2600) 26. 3-D Ultra Pinball: Thrillride (GBC) 27. -
List of Turbografx16 Games
List of TurboGrafx16 Games 1) 1941: Counter Attack 28) Blodia 2) 1943: Kai 29) Bloody Wolf 3) 21-Emon 30) Body Conquest II ~The Messiah~ 4) Adventure Island 31) Bomberman 5) Aero Blasters 32) Bomberman '93 6) After Burner II 33) Bomberman '93 Special 7) Air Zonk 34) Bomberman '94 8) Aldynes: The Mission Code for Rage Crisis 35) Bomberman: Users Battle 9) Alice in Wonderdream 36) Bonk 3: Bonk's Big Adventure 10) Alien Crush 37) Bonk's Adventure 11) Andre Panza Kick Boxing 38) Bonk's Revenge 12) Ankoku Densetsu 39) Bouken Danshaku Don: The Lost Sunheart 13) Aoi Blink 40) Boxyboy 14) Appare! Gateball 41) Bravoman 15) Artist Tool 42) Break In 16) Atomic Robo-Kid Special 43) Bubblegum Crash!: Knight Sabers 2034 17) Ballistix 44) Bull Fight: Ring no Haja 18) Bari Bari Densetsu 45) Burning Angels 19) Barunba 46) Cadash 20) Batman 47) Champion Wrestler 21) Battle Ace 48) Champions Forever Boxing 22) Battle Lode Runner 49) Chase H.Q. 23) Battle Royale 50) Chew Man Fu 24) Be Ball 51) China Warrior 25) Benkei Gaiden 52) Chozetsu Rinjin Berabo Man 26) Bikkuri Man World 53) Circus Lido 27) Blazing Lazers 54) City Hunter 55) Columns 84) Dragon's Curse 56) Coryoon 85) Drop Off 57) Cratermaze 86) Drop Rock Hora Hora 58) Cross Wiber: Cyber-Combat-Police 87) Dungeon Explorer 59) Cyber Cross 88) Dungeons & Dragons: Order of the Griffon 60) Cyber Dodge 89) Energy 61) Cyber Knight 90) F1 CIRCUS 62) Cyber-Core 91) F1 Circus '91 63) DOWNLOAD 92) F1 Circus '92 64) Daichikun Crisis: Do Natural 93) F1 Dream 65) Daisenpuu 94) F1 Pilot 66) Darius Alpha 95) F1 Triple -
Videogames at the Library: Ahistoricalperspective
VideoGames at the Library: AHistoricalPerspective Gustavo Marfia∗,AlessandroAmoroso∗,MarcoRoccetti∗,GiulioBasile∗,ClaudioE.Palazzi† ∗ Dipartimento di Scienze dell’Informazione - Universit`adiBologna,Italia Email: {amoroso, marfia, roccetti}@cs.unibo.it † Dipartimento di Matematica Pura e Applicata - Universit`adegli Studi di Padova, Italia Email: [email protected] Abstract —We present an overview or the video games available at the Film Library of Bologna. This institution, in collaboration with the University of Bologna, has a whole collateral branch dedicated to the video games, as they can be considered a recreational activity somehow related to movies. This collection of video games conceptually starts from the ones that are strictly connected to movies, and then expands to a wider class of video games. A video game could be related with a movie either as its direct inspiration, its prequel or collateral plot, or also be created as a direct consequence of that movie. The expansion of the collection available in the Library includes a historical set of video games. In this paper we discuss the historical perspective of the relationship between technology and video games, providinga complete historical view of the video games by means of the titles and the consoles available in the Library. Several dedicated consoles are still in working conditions and could be used by the visitors of the Library. I. INTRODUCTION The collection of the Play Room of the Film Library of Bologna contains about 2000 video games, whose releases Fig. 1. Temporal distribution of games available at the Library with respect to the hardware platforms range from 1979, till the present date. -
161 in 1 Neogeo Multigame Cartridge
PCBs : 161 in 1 NeoGeo Multigame Cartridge 161 in 1 NeoGeo Multigame Cartridge Rating: Not Rated Yet Price: Sales price: $99.95 Discount: Ask a question about this product This amazing cart combines 161 of the best Neo Geo games onto a single Neo Geo cartridge. The cartridge uses a built-in OSD (On Screen Display) to first graphically navigate to the game you wish to play. Once finished playing, simply hold down Player 1 START button for 5 seconds to immediately return to the OSD game selection screen again. Description Game List: 1 SNK VS CAPCOM + 2 SNK VS CAPCOM RMX 3 SVC SUPER PLUS 4 KOF 94 5 KOF 94 + 6 KOF 95 7 KOF 95 + 8 KOF 96 9 KOF 96 + 10 KOF 96 EVO 11 KOF 97 12 KOF 97 2003 13 KOF 97 REMIX 14 KOF 97 PLUS 15 KING OF GLADIATOR 16 KOG PLUS 17 KOF 98 18 KOF 98 + 19 KOF 98 ULTIMATE 20 KOF 98 OROCHI 21 KOF 99 22 KOF 99 + 23 KOF 99 CN 24 KOF 2001 25 KOF 2001 PLUS 26 C.T.H.D 27 C.T.H.D SUPER PLUS 28 KOF 2002 29 KOF 2002 MAGIC 30 KOF 2002 MAGIC 2 31 KOF 2002 CN 32 KOF 2002 OROCHI 33 KOF 2002 LUAN 34 KOF 2002 SUPER 35 KOF 2002 SUPER 2 36 KOF 2003 37 KOF 2004 SE PLUS 38 KOF 2004 SE 39 KOF 2004 SMP 40 KOF 10TH 41 KOF 05 UNIQUE 42 KOF 05 UNIQUE 2 43 KOF 10TH EXTRA + 44 RAGE OF DRAGONS 45 RAGE OF DRAGONS + 46 STRIKERS 1945 + 47 STRIKERS 1945 + + 48 AERO FIGHTERS 2 49 AERO FIGHTERS 3 50 METAL SLUG 51 METAL SLUG + 52 METAL SLUG 2 53 METAL SLUG 2 + 54 METAL SLUG 3 55 METAL SLUG 3 + 56 METAL SLUG 4 57 METAL SLUG 4 + 58 METAL SLUG X 59 METAL SLUG X + 60 METAL SLUG 6 61 METAL SLUG 6 + 62 SUPER SIDEKICKS 2 63 SUPER SIDEKICKS 3 64 ULTIMATE 11 65 NEO-GEO -
Video Game Trader Magazine & Price Guide
Winter 2009/2010 Issue #14 4 Trading Thoughts 20 Hidden Gems Blue‘s Journey (Neo Geo) Video Game Flashback Dragon‘s Lair (NES) Hidden Gems 8 NES Archives p. 20 19 Page Turners Wrecking Crew Vintage Games 9 Retro Reviews 40 Made in Japan Coin-Op.TV Volume 2 (DVD) Twinkle Star Sprites Alf (Sega Master System) VectrexMad! AutoFire Dongle (Vectrex) 41 Video Game Programming ROM Hacking Part 2 11Homebrew Reviews Ultimate Frogger Championship (NES) 42 Six Feet Under Phantasm (Atari 2600) Accessories Mad Bodies (Atari Jaguar) 44 Just 4 Qix Qix 46 Press Start Comic Michael Thomasson’s Just 4 Qix 5 Bubsy: What Could Possibly Go Wrong? p. 44 6 Spike: Alive and Well in the land of Vectors 14 Special Book Preview: Classic Home Video Games (1985-1988) 43 Token Appreciation Altered Beast 22 Prices for popular consoles from the Atari 2600 Six Feet Under to Sony PlayStation. Now includes 3DO & Complete p. 42 Game Lists! Advertise with Video Game Trader! Multiple run discounts of up to 25% apply THIS ISSUES CONTRIBUTORS: when you run your ad for consecutive Dustin Gulley Brett Weiss Ad Deadlines are 12 Noon Eastern months. Email for full details or visit our ad- Jim Combs Pat “Coldguy” December 1, 2009 (for Issue #15 Spring vertising page on videogametrader.com. Kevin H Gerard Buchko 2010) Agents J & K Dick Ward February 1, 2009(for Issue #16 Summer Video Game Trader can help create your ad- Michael Thomasson John Hancock 2010) vertisement. Email us with your requirements for a price quote. P. Ian Nicholson Peter G NEW!! Low, Full Color, Advertising Rates! -
Newagearcade.Com 5000 in One Arcade Game List!
Newagearcade.com 5,000 In One arcade game list! 1. AAE|Armor Attack 2. AAE|Asteroids Deluxe 3. AAE|Asteroids 4. AAE|Barrier 5. AAE|Boxing Bugs 6. AAE|Black Widow 7. AAE|Battle Zone 8. AAE|Demon 9. AAE|Eliminator 10. AAE|Gravitar 11. AAE|Lunar Lander 12. AAE|Lunar Battle 13. AAE|Meteorites 14. AAE|Major Havoc 15. AAE|Omega Race 16. AAE|Quantum 17. AAE|Red Baron 18. AAE|Ripoff 19. AAE|Solar Quest 20. AAE|Space Duel 21. AAE|Space Wars 22. AAE|Space Fury 23. AAE|Speed Freak 24. AAE|Star Castle 25. AAE|Star Hawk 26. AAE|Star Trek 27. AAE|Star Wars 28. AAE|Sundance 29. AAE|Tac/Scan 30. AAE|Tailgunner 31. AAE|Tempest 32. AAE|Warrior 33. AAE|Vector Breakout 34. AAE|Vortex 35. AAE|War of the Worlds 36. AAE|Zektor 37. Classic Arcades|'88 Games 38. Classic Arcades|1 on 1 Government (Japan) 39. Classic Arcades|10-Yard Fight (World, set 1) 40. Classic Arcades|1000 Miglia: Great 1000 Miles Rally (94/07/18) 41. Classic Arcades|18 Holes Pro Golf (set 1) 42. Classic Arcades|1941: Counter Attack (World 900227) 43. Classic Arcades|1942 (Revision B) 44. Classic Arcades|1943 Kai: Midway Kaisen (Japan) 45. Classic Arcades|1943: The Battle of Midway (Euro) 46. Classic Arcades|1944: The Loop Master (USA 000620) 47. Classic Arcades|1945k III 48. Classic Arcades|19XX: The War Against Destiny (USA 951207) 49. Classic Arcades|2 On 2 Open Ice Challenge (rev 1.21) 50. Classic Arcades|2020 Super Baseball (set 1) 51. -
Jumpchain CYOA
Jumpchain CYOA Lights! Camera! Action 52! Make your selection now! You press the directional buttons and scroll to option 52. You don’t remember having this game in your possession, or if you do you haven’t paid it much thought in a while. Still, something compels you to press the button to start. A cutscene begins to play as you select the option. What fresh hell is this. You have received +1000 Cheetah Points to spend to prepare you for the ten years you will spend here. Level 1: A Brief Explanation Some time ago, a mad scientist by the name of Dr. Morbis killed a mother cheetah, then stole her three cubs for his mutational research. He named them Aries, Apollo, and Hercules, and wished for them to lead his planned army of Sub-Species mutants to greatness. However, when the good-hearted Cheetahmen learned of their creator’s evil plans, they turned against him and escaped. In retaliation, he created his Sub-Species army, and tasked them with his destruction of his failed expirements (sic). Your time here starts at the beginning of the Cheetahmen’s first adventure, after their run-in with the so-called Action Gamemaster. His story, however, does not mention Dr. Morbis, and he is never seen again. In fact, there is even another version where the goal of the Cheetahmen is simply to rescue three cheetah cubs captured by Dr. Morbis for his undefined nefarious plans. The time and place, beyond the Cheetahmen having been captured in Africa, is left undescribed. Level 2: Origins Each origin below possesses its own age range, a starting location, and a single set of perks and items which are discounted to it.