Read Replay: The History of Video Games Online
Authors: Tristan Donovan
Year released: 1976
Origin: USA
Type: Kit computer
Created by microprocessor firm MOS Technology prior to its purchase by Commodore International.
Konix Multisystem
Manufacturer: Konix
Year released: Never released
Origin: UK
Type: Home console
Was to be a UK rival to the Megadrive and Super NES.
Its peripherals were set to include a light gun with recoil and the Power Chair, a motorised seat designed to mimic the hydraulics used in arcade games such as Out Run. Also known as the Slipstream. Its release was cancelled in August 1989.
L
Lisa
Manufacturer: Apple Computer
Year released: 1983
Origin: USA
Type: Personal computer
The first personal computer with a graphical user interface.
M
Macintosh
Manufacturer: Apple Computer
Year released: 1984
Origin: USA
Type: Personal computer
The first popular personal computer with a graphical user interface.
Magnavox Odyssey
Manufacturer: Magnavox
Year released: 1972
Origin: USA
Type: Home console
The first video game console, developed by Sanders Associates
as the Brown Box. Sold with plastic overlays to put over the TV screen to enhance its primitive graphics. It was also home to the first light gun controller, Shooting Gallery.
Magnavox Odyssey2
Manufacturer: Magnavox, Philips
Year released: 1978
Origin: USA
Type: Home console
Released in Europe as the Philips Videopac G7000 (Ph
ilips C52 in France). Also released in Brazil as the Philips Odyssey.
Magnavox Odyssey3
Manufacturer: Magnavox, Philips
Year released: 1983
Origin: USA
Type: Home console
Never released in North America but did get a brief release in Europe as the Philips Videopac G7400.
Magnavox Odyssey 100
Manufacturer: Magnavox
Year released: 1975
Origin: USA
Type: Home console
The first of several home Pong consoles relsed by Magnavox.
Master System
Manufacturer: Sega
Year released: 1985
Origin: Japan
Type: Home console
Outsold the NES in Europe. Also popular in Brazil, where it was distributed by Tec Toy. Originally released in Japan as the Sega Mark III.
MBX Expansion System
Manufacturer: Milton Bradley
Year released: 1983
Origin: USA
Type: Personal computer add-on
Originally planned as a stand-alone console, Milton Bradley eventually turned the MBX into an add-on for the TI-99/4A home computer. Featured speech synthesis, voice recognition and an analogue joystick that also allowed 360o rotation. Discontinued almost as soon as released after Texas Instruments quit the home computer market. Versions for the Atari VCS 2600 and Atari 5200 consoles were also mooted.
Megadrive
Manufacturer: Sega
Year released: 1988
Origin: Japan
Type: Home console
Called the Genesis in North America. The Sega CD add-on, also known as th
e Mega CD, allowed users to play CD-ROM games.
Merlin
Manufacturer: Parker Brothers
Year released: 1978
Origin: USA
Type: Handheld game
Multi-game handheld that doubled as a musical instrument. Created by former NASA scientist Bob Doyle.
MicroVision
Manufacturer: Milton Bradley
Year released: 1979
OrigiSA
Type: Handheld console
The first handheld console. Created by Jay Smith who later designed the Vectrex console.
MK14
Manufacturer: Science of Cambridge
Year released: 1977
Origin: UK
Type: Kit computer
Clive Sinclair’s first venture into the computer business.
MSX / MSX2
Manufacturer: Various (designed by ASCII Corporation and Microsoft Japan)
Year released: 1983
Origin: Japan
Type: Personal computer
Touted as a home computer standard and produced by a bewildering number of manufacturers across the world including Casio, Daewoo, GoldStar, Hitachi, Panasonic, Philips, Sony, Spectravideo and Yamaha (to name just a few). The MSX2, the second generation version of the computer, was introduced in 1986. Eventually the line was discontinued in 1995.
N
Nascom 1
Manufacturers: Nascom Microcomputers
Year released: 1977
Origin: UK
Type: Kit computer
An early British computer.
NEC PC-6001
Manufacturer: NEC
Year released: 1981
Origin: Japan
Type: Personal computer
Released in North America as the NEC TREK.
NEC PC-8001
Manufacturer: NEC
Origin: Japan
Type: Personal computer
One of the earliest home computers made in Japan.
NEC PC-8801
Manufacturer: NEC
Year released: 1981
Origin: Japan
Type: Personal computer
Popular Japanese computer throughout the 1980s, also known as the PC88.
NEC PC-9801 / NEC PC-9821
Manufacturer: NEC
Year released: 1982
Origin: Japan
Type: Personal computer
Japanese rival to the PC that was popular well into the late 1990s before losing out to the PC. The PC-9821Ra43 model, the last in the line, was released in 2000.
NEMO
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Year released: Never released
Origin: USA
Type: Home console
Used VHS video cassettes rather than cartridges for its games. NEMO (Never Ever Mention Outside) was the console’s working name. Hasbro abandoned the January 1989 launch of the console as the Control-Vision in late 1988.
Neo Geo
Manufacturer: SNK
Year released: 1990
Origin: Japan
Type: Home console
Very expensive home version of SNK’s coin-op video game technology. Game cartridges cost upwards of $200 at the time. The rarest now sell to collectors for more than $1,000. In 1994 SNK released a CD-ROM version of the console.
NES
Manufacturer: Nintendo, Sharp
Year released: 1983
Origin: Japan
Type: Home console
Called the Famicom in Japan. The Famicom Disk System, released in Japan i
n 1986, allowed owners to play and save games on floppy disks. Sharp released the Twin Famicom, a combined Famicom and Famicom Disk System, in the same year.
Nintendo 64
Manufacturer: Nintendo
Year released: 1996
Origin: Japan
Type: Home console
Introduced analogue joysticks and vibration features to console joypad controllers.
Nintendo DS
Manufacturer: Nintendo
Year released: 2004
Origin: Japan
Type: Handheld console
Dual-screen reinvention of the handheld console with an in-built microphone, wireless multiplayer gaming and a stylus for interacting with its touch screen.
Nokia 6610
Manufacturer: Nokia
Year released: 2002
Origin: Finland
Type: Mobile phone
One of the first mobile phones that could connect to the internet. Nokia went on to launch the N-Gage mobile phone game console in 2003. In 2005 Nokia turned the N-Gage brand into a game download service for its smartphones.
O
Oil Panic
Oric-1
Manufacturer: Tangerine Computer Systems
Year release: 1983
Origin: UK
Type: Personal computer
Successful in France but not in the UK. Quickly succeeded by the Oric Atmos in 1984.
P
Panasonic FZ-1
See 3DO Interactive Multiplayer
PC
Manufacturer: Various
Year released: 1981
Origin: USA
Type: Personal computer
Created by IBM using off-the-shelf technology, which allowed other companies to
produce copies without the fear of legal action. By the end of the 1980s IBM PC compatibles made by rival firms were outselling IBM’s own PCs. Microsoft’s MS-DOS and Windows operating systems became the common software standard for PCs and, after initial success in the business market, the PC spread into homes as people adopted multimedia and, later, internet technology.
PC Engine
Manufacturer: NEC
Year released: 1987
Origin: Japan
Type: Home console
Created in collaboration with Japanese games publisher Hudson Soft. Called the TurboGrafx-16 in North America. The TurboGrafx-CD briefly became the most widespread CD drive format in Japan.
PCjr
Manufacturer: IBM
Year released: 1984