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New Arcade Games - Page 144

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  • Pong-Tron II

    1973

    Pong-Tron II

    1973

    Sport
    Arcade
    Pong-Tron II is the follow-up to Sega's first arcade video game.
  • Super Soccer

    1973

    Super Soccer

    1973

    Sport
    Arcade
    Super Soccer is a ball-and-paddle game released by Allied Leisure in late 1973.
  • Soccer

    1973

    Soccer

    1973

    Sport
    Arcade
    Soccer is Taito's third ever video game release and the first developed internally. The game was designed by the highly influential Tomohiro Nishikado, who would later go on to create Space Invaders. Soccer is a ball-and-paddle game like Pong, but with a green background to simulate a playfield, allowing each player to control both a forward and a goalkeeper. The players can adjust the size of the players, who are represented as paddles on screen. It also has a goal on each side. Soccer is likely to be Japan's first original domestically produced video game, in comparison to Japanese Pong clones released earlier, including Sega's Pong Tron and Taito's Elepong. Since it was exported to Europe in 1973 it may also be the first Japanese video game to be released on the European continent.
  • Astro Race

    1973

    Astro Race

    1973

    Racing Arcade
    Arcade
    Taito's second ever video game. It is based on Atari's Space Race and, like Elepong, uses imported PC Boards in a Taito-constructed cabinet.
  • Pro Hockey

    1973

    Pro Hockey

    1973

    Sport
    Arcade
    Pro Hockey is an early sports arcade game from Taito.
  • Hockey

    1973

    Hockey

    1973

    Arcade
    Arcade
    Hockey was a PONG-clone by RamTeK featuring a somewhat different gameplay by introducing "forward" paddles which were moved simultaneously with the "goalie" paddles. Just like PONG ot got ported to various 1st generation consoles and was also one of the two build-in games for the Fairchild Channel F - the world's first 2nd generation console.
  • Gotcha

    1973

    Gotcha

    1973

    Puzzle Strategy Arcade
    Arcade
    Gotcha is a two-player maze game where the objective is to catch the other player. A maze is displayed on the screen. The first player controls the Pursuer which is represented by a square and the second player controls the Pursued which is represented by a plus sign. As the Pursuer moves closer and closer to the Pursued, an electronic beep sound increases in frequency to a feverish pitch until the Pursuer catches the Pursued. Each time, the Pursuer catches the Pursued, a point is scored and the chase starts over again.
  • Winner IV

    1973

    Winner IV

    1973

    Arcade
    A four-player ball-and-paddle sequel to Midway's Winner, which was released earlier in the year.
  • Pong-Tron

    1973

    Pong-Tron

    1973

    Sport
    Arcade
    Sega's first "video" arcade game. Unlike their earlier amusement games, it uses discrete logic as opposed to being electro-mechanical. The game used boards imported from the United States mounted in a Sega-produced cabinet.
  • Space Race

    1973

    Space Race

    1973

    Racing Arcade
    Arcade
    star 6.7
    Space Race is the second arcade game created by Atari and was released in July, 1973. The two players each control a rocket ship; the object of the game is to make it from the bottom of the screen to the top, while avoiding obstacles such as asteroids. Score is kept electronically and the background consists of a simple starfield.
  • Tennis Tourney

    1973

    Tennis Tourney

    1973

    Sport
    Arcade
    Allied Leisure's second game was a four-player version of Paddle Battle. It was the first four-player Pong-style game, predating Atari's own Quadrapong by two months.
  • Elepong

    1973

    Elepong

    1973

    Sport
    Arcade
    Taito's attempt at the arcade ping-pong game genre, and likely their first ever arcade game release. It uses imported Pong PC Boards in a Taito-produced cabinet.
  • Winner

    1973

    Winner

    1973

    Sport Arcade
    Arcade
    Midway's version of Pong, which unlike most Pong clones of the time was actually licensed from Atari.
  • Paddle Battle

    1973

    Paddle Battle

    1973

    Sport
    Arcade
    The first video game produced by Allied Leisure. It is a clone of Atari's pong, and was created by electronics firm Universal Research Laboratories more-or-less copying the board from a Pong machine Allied had purchased from a distrubutor.
  • Volly

    1973

    Volly

    1973

    Arcade
  • Killer Shark

    1972

    Killer Shark

    1972

    Arcade
    Arcade
    Killer Shark is a first-person light-gun shooter arcade game that was published by Sega in 1972. The objective of the game is for the player is to repeatedly shoot the approaching sharks. The arcade received moderate success, but gained considerable notoriety after it was featured in the 1975 movie Jaws, seen being played by a gamer at a local beachside arcade in the community of Amity Island. This bit of levity left a major impression on audiences and made Killer Shark the first, and most famous shark arcade game ever.
  • Play Ball

    1972

    Play Ball

    1972

    Sport
    Arcade
    Play Ball was produced by Gremlin in 1972. From flyer: "It's the most versatile, smoothest-action wall game - completely programmable with plug-in serviceability. Pitcher can throw Fast Ball, Curve, Slider or Change Up. Better scores points for Home Run, Triple, Double or Single. A Strike scores a point for the other team. Play Ball has proven to be a true contest of skill and it simulates interest and competition in both players and spectators. "
  • Computer Space

    1971

    Computer Space

    1971

    Shooter Arcade
    Arcade
    star 3.9
    Computer Space is a video arcade game released in 1971 by Nutting Associates. Created by Nolan Bushnell and Ted Dabney, who would both later found Atari, Inc., it is generally accepted that it was the world's first commercially sold coin-operated video game of any kind, predating the Magnavox Odyssey's release by six months, and Atari's Pong by one year. It was first location tested at The Dutch Goose in August 1971, then debuted at the MOA show on October 15, 1971, and then officially released in November 1971. Though not commercially sold, the coin operated minicomputer-driven Galaxy Game appeared around the same time, located solely at Stanford University.
  • Jet Rocket

    1970

    Jet Rocket

    1970

    Shooter
    Arcade
    An early 3D flight simulator game, released by Sega in 1970. It was an electro-mechanical arcade game, using video projection to display a 3D game world on screen. It features free-roaming, first-person flight shooting gameplay, making it the first primitive example of a flight simulator game, first-person shooter, and open world.
  • Indy 500

    1969

    Indy 500

    1969

    Racing
    Arcade
    A first-person arcade racing game released by Kasco in 1969. It was an electro-mechanical game using a form of video projection to display a racing track on a screen. It was a precursor to first-person racing video games.
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