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1974 in video games

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1974 in video games

Summary

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Zanussi Ping-O-Tronic console of 1974. Made in Italy
Zanussi Ping-O-Tronic console of 1974. Made in Italy

1974 saw the expansion of technology and public awareness of video games. A proliferation of companies creating commercial video games in the coin-operated amusement market attracted attention from the mainstream press. Coin-operated games began to diversify in content beyond Pong derivatives. The first three-dimensional games were developed for linked graphical terminals which were not widely commercialized. Some of the first efforts to create video game consoles after the release of Magnavox's Odyssey became available in the United States and Europe.

Events

  • January 31 – A fire destroys the factory of Allied Leisure in Hialeah, Florida. The company is forced to exit the video game industry temporarily.
  • April 15 – Magnavox and Sanders Associates file suit against Atari Inc, Bally Mfg, Chicago Dynamic Industries, Allied Leisure, and Empire Distributing for infringement of the patents related to the Odyssey by Ralph Baer and Bill Rusch. Magnavox’s wave of litigation would be highly consequential to the development of the video game industry.
  • June 21–23 – The program Ribbit from the University of Waterloo earns victory at the First Canadian Computer Chess Championship, running off of a Honeywell 6050. It later wins at the fifth U.S. American Computer Chess Championship, displacing the four time champion Chess 4.0.
  • July – Nakamura Seisakusho (later Namco) purchases Atari Japan for 296 million yen. The company becomes the exclusive distributor of Atari video games in Japan for several years – solidifying a long-term relationship between Atari and Namco.
  • August 5–8 – The first World Computer Chess Championship is held in Stockholm, Sweden. Kaissa, a program developed in the Soviet Union, earns first prize.
  • August 27 – Sega sponsors a national tournament of competitive video games called the All Japan TV Game Championships at three hundred locations throughout Japan.
  • September 15 – The New York Times runs an article covering the Pong boom titled “The Space Age Pinball Machine.”
  • November 1–3 – The Music Operators of America show is held in Chicago, Illinois. Notable video games at the show include Qwak! by Atari, Tank by Kee Games, and Baseball by Ramtek.

Financial performance

United States

Arcade

Total Video Game Cabinets: 40,000 units.**

Total Video Game Revenue (machine sales): $40.5 million.**

TitleArcade cabinet units (Lifetime)ManufacturerDeveloperGenre
Tanklast1=Baerfirst1=Ralph H.author1-link=Ralph H. Baerurl=https://archive.org/details/VideogamesInTheBeginningRalphH.Baer/page/n31/mode/2uptitle=Videogames: In the Beginningdate=2005publisher=Rolenta Pressisbn=978-0-9643848-1-1pages=11}}Kee GamesKee GamesMulti-directional shooter
Flim Flamdate=July 1976title=Meadows Games: from California to the Worldjournal=RePlayvolume=1issue=38pages=28–29}} (approximate)Meadows GamesMeadows GamesSports
Gran Trak 1010,000Atari Inc.Cyan EngineeringRacing
Gran Trak 204,500Atari Inc.Cyan EngineeringRacing
Clean Sweep3,500Ramtek CorporationRamtek CorporationSports
Baseball2,000Ramtek CorporationRamtek CorporationSports
Formula K2,000Kee GamesCyan EngineeringRacing
TV Basketball1,400Midway ManufacturingTaito CorpSports
Leader1,000Midway ManufacturingMidway ManufacturingSports
TV Flipper1,000Midway ManufacturingRamtek CorporationSports
Robot500Allied Leisure IndustriesAllied Leisure IndustriesSports
TV Pin Game500Chicago CoinExidySports
Qwak!250Atari Inc.Atari Inc.Light-gun shooter
Pin Pong250Atari Inc.Atari Inc.Sports
TV Goaleesup=yes}}Chicago CoinLeisure & Allied IndustriesSports

Indicates a sales number given by official company sources.

Home consoles

Total Console Unit Sales: 145,000–150,000 consoles.

Total Console Revenue (retail): $9–11.3 million.

TitleGame console units (1974)ManufacturerDeveloper
Odyssey129,000MagnavoxSanders Associates/Magnavox

Indicates a sales number given by official company sources.

Publications

  • August – Masumi Akagi publishes the first issue of the Japanese coin-operated amusement publication Game Machine. The magazine runs for 28 years.
  • December – The American publication Play Meter, devoted to coin-operated amusements, publishes its first issue. Founding editor is Ralph Lally II.

Notable releases

  • January – Dungeons & Dragons is released by Tactical Studies Rules. The pen-and-paper tabletop game is the origin of the role-playing game and would exert a major influence on video games, through the genres of RPGs and adventure games.

Arcade games

  • February – Taito’s Basketball by pioneering game designer Tomohiro Nishikado features the first human-shaped characters in a coin-operated video game. Midway licenses the game for release in North America as TV Basketball, making it the first Japanese video arcade game to be officially exported to the U.S.
  • March – Atari releases Gran Trak 10, a video driving game featuring advanced technology including a ROM to store graphics and course data. After initial manufacturing issues, the game becomes a massive success.
    • Meadows Games releases the enhanced ball-and-paddle game Flim Flam. It's among the most successful Pong clones, released in both upright and cocktail cabinet format.
  • May – Clean Sweep is released by Ramtek, a ball-and-paddle game featuring screen-clearing gameplay. It serves as an inspiration for Breakout.
  • August – Sega ships Balloon Gun in Japan, the first coin-operated video game utilizing a light gun. The method used is different from the Odyssey light gun, able to identify individual parts of the screen being shot.
  • October – Baseball by Ramtek is released. In addition to being the first coin-operated sports video game to authentically depict aspects of its play, it is the first video game to represent multiple characters with animation frames on screen at once.
  • November – Kee Games releases Tank. The game is a reinterpretation of Computer Space featuring custom controls and competitive gameplay. It becomes the best selling arcade video game released in 1974 in all and is seen as a defining moment for video arcade games. The game is later adapted to Atari's Video Computer System as Combat.
    • Taito releases Speed Race, a racing game featuring an early form of scrolling graphics. It helps pioneer 100 yen as a standard play price in Japan.
  • December – TV Pinball by Exidy introduces eliminating solid targets to ball-and-paddle games, preceding Breakout.

Computer games

  • The first version of Maze War is completed by three students at the NASA Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California for the Imlac PDS-1 terminal. The game is seen as the progenitor of the first-person shooter.
  • January – The science fiction economic strategy game Star Trader is first distributed by the People’s Computer Company via paper tape. It has a long-lasting legacy on computer systems, with subsequent iterations of the game expanding its design.
  • March – Jim Bowery develops Spasim for the PLATO IV system, a graphical space flight simulator. It is the first computer game to implement true 3D graphics, rather than fixed perspective. Spasim inspires a number of PLATO flight simulation games including Airace and Airfight.
  • The first version of the game Wander is developed by Peter Langston. It is the earliest example of a parser-based storytelling game; an early example of interactive fiction.

Hardware

Console

  • Magnavox releases the Odyssey in European markets.
  • July - Control Sales (sales arm of Universal Research Laboratories) sells the game console Video Action. It is a repurposing of Tennis Tourney by Allied Leisure, including a television and four potentiometer controls for $499 at retail. It is the second unique video game console available to consumers.
  • August – Schraeder Electronics begins selling Dixi Ping Pong in the Netherlands, utilizing a custom transistor-to-transistor logic console design.
  • October – Italian home appliance company Zanussi advertises the Ping-O-Tronic console. It features one-handed controllers.
    • Videomaster Ltd. of the UK sells Home T.V. Game, the first in a line of systems from the company.

Business

  • January 21 – Meadows Games is founded in Sunnyvale, California.
  • June – David Nutting and Jefferey Fredericksen found Dave Nutting Associates in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in the facilities of coin-operated games company Milwaukee Coin Industries. Dave Nutting Associates would create several important video games published by Midway Mfg including Gun Fight, Sea Wolf, Gorf, and Wizard of Wor.
  • July 10 – Kenzo Tsujimoto founds the coin-operated machine operator IPM Co. Ltd. The company later changes its name to Irem Corporation.
  • July 23 – Sega Enterprises Inc. is incorporated. This is made the parent company of the Japanese Sega Enterprises Ltd. which continues to operate.
  • September – Atari Inc. purchases Kee Games and makes Joseph Keenan the President of Atari. Atari continues to release games under the Kee Games label until 1978.
  • October 25 – North American Philips purchases a majority share in Magnavox.

Notes

References

References

  1. (1974-02-05). "Fire-Hit Hialeah Factory Expects To Resume Output Within the Month". The Miami Herald.
  2. (1974-04-15). "Complaint For Patent Infringement". Magnavox Company v. Chicago Dynamic Industries, et al..
  3. "Magnavox Co. v. Bally Mfg. Corp., 414 F. Supp. 891 (N.D. Ill. 1976)".
  4. (1974-06-14). "Kitchener-Waterloo Community Corner Calendar of Events". Waterloo Region Record.
  5. (1974-06-25). "Computer chess champion". Star-Phoenix.
  6. (1974-11-15). "College computer loses electronic chess match". Daily Sentinel.
  7. Smith, Alexander. (November 27, 2019). "They Create Worlds: The Story of the People and Companies That Shaped the Video Game Industry". [[CRC Press]].
  8. (1974-08-02). "Bob Prinsen". Middlesex Chronicle.
  9. (1974-08-09). "UW Chess Team Third". Waterloo Region Record.
  10. (1974-10-26). "Sega Hosts TV Game Tourney In Tokyo". Cash Box.
  11. Horowitz, Ken. (2024-08-19). "Golden Age Game Tournaments: Sega's Hockey TV – Sega-16".
  12. Range, Peter Ross. (1974-09-15). "The space age pinball machine". The New York Times.
  13. (1974-11-16). "coin machine news". Cash Box.
  14. (1976). "The Coin Operated and Home Electronic Games Market". Frost & Sullivan Inc..
  15. (2005). "Videogames: In the Beginning". Rolenta Press.
  16. (July 1976). "Meadows Games: from California to the World". RePlay.
  17. Wieder, Robert. (September 1974). "A Fistful of Quarters". OUI.
  18. McEwan, Charles E.. (1980-01-31). "Charles R. McEwan Deposition". Bally Manufacturing Corporation v. D. Gottlieb & Co., et al..
  19. Cognevich, Valerie. (1986-03-15). "Video-game industry still evolving". Play Meter.
  20. Neven, John F.. (1977-07-11). "Notice of Motion". Magnavox Company v. Chicago Dynamic Industries, et al..
  21. (1983). "The Electronic Games Market in the U.S.". Frost & Sullivan Inc..
  22. (February 1979). "Electronic Games & Personal Computers". Predicasts Inc..
  23. Fritsche, Robert E.. (1976-12-28). "Trial Transcript". Magnavox Company v. Chicago Dynamic Industries, et al..
  24. Peterson, Jon. (2024). "Playing at the World, 2E, Volume 1: The Invention of Dungeons & Dragons". The MIT Press.
  25. Akagi, Masumi. (2005). "アーケードTVゲームリスト国内•海外編(1971-2005)". アミューズメント通信社.
  26. Shaw, Mike. (1985-10-15). "East is East and West is East". Play Meter.
  27. Fries, Ed. (2017-06-14). "Fixing Gran Trak 10".
  28. (1974-03-30). "California Clippings". Cash Box.
  29. (1974-05-25). "Streaking is new Clean Sweep is Newer".
  30. (1974-11-02). "Ramtek Intro's Baseball Video Game at Expo". Cash Box.
  31. (2012). "Atari Inc.: Business is Fun". Syzygy Press.
  32. Moss, Richard. (2015-05-21). "The first first-person shooter".
  33. (January 1974). "tapes". People's Computer Company.
  34. Bowery, Jim. (2008-12-30). "Spasim (1974) The First First-Person-Shooter 3D Multiplayer Online Game".
  35. Ant. (2015-04-22). "Wander (1974) — a lost mainframe game is found!".
  36. Braun, David H.. (1974-06-14). "David Braun Deposition". Magnavox Company v. Chicago Dynamic Industries, et al..
  37. (1974-10-10). "Il Gioco-Sport di Moda". L'Europo.
  38. (1974-10-24). "Colour TV". Evening Post.
  39. (1974-09-21). "Atari Acquires Kee Games Factory; Keenan Prexy, Bushnell Chairman". Cash Box.
  40. (1974-10-30). "Philips Has 84.1% Of Magnavox". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
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