Galaxy Game

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Galaxy Game
Galaxy Game 1971 first arcade game.jpg
Galaxy Game at the Computer History Museum
Developer(s) Bill Pitts and Hugh Tuck.
Platforms PDP-11/20
Release date(s)

    Galaxy Game is one of the earliest known coin-operated computer/video games. It was installed at the Tresidder Union at Stanford University in September, 1971, two months before the official release of Computer Space, the first mass-produced video game.[1] Only one unit was built initially, although the game later included several consoles allowing users to play against each other.

    The game was programmed by Bill Pitts and Hugh Tuck. Like Computer Space, it was a version of the existing Spacewar!, which had been created in the early 1960s on the PDP-1 and had since been ported to a variety of platforms. The coin-operated game console incorporated a DEC PDP-11/20 with vector displays. The hardware cost around US$20,000 ($116,861.13 today). In June 1972 the hardware was improved to allow the processor to power four to eight consoles.[2]

    A game cost 10 cents or three games for 25 cents. It remained popular on campus, with wait times for players as long as an hour, until it was removed in May 1979 due to the display processor becoming unreliable.[2]

    The unit was restored in 1997 and is now in the collection of the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California.[3] In August 2010, the museum loaned the console to Google for display and gameplay at the Googleplex, their headquarters campus.[4]

    References

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    External links