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The Dawn of the Home Console

In 1967, developers at Sanders Associates, Inc., led by Ralph Baer, invented a prototype multiplayer, multi-program video game system that could be played on a television. It was known as “The Brown Box.”  Baer, who’s sometimes referred to as Father of Video Games, licensed his device to Magnavox, which sold the system to consumers as the Odyssey, the first video game home console, in 1972. Over the next few years, the primitive Odyssey console would commercially fizzle and die out. Yet, one of the Odyssey’s 28 games was the inspiration for Atari’s Pong, the first arcade video game, which the company released in 1972. In 1975, Atari released a home version of Pong, which was as successful as its arcade counterpart. Magnavox, along with Sanders Associates, would eventually sue Atari for copyright infringement. Atari settled and became an Odyssey licensee; over the next 20 years, Magnavox went on to win more than $100 million in copyright lawsuits related to the Odyssey and its video game patents. In 1977, Atari released the Atari 2600 (also known as the Video Computer System), a home console that featured joysticks and interchangeable game cartridges that played multi-colored games, effectively kicking off the second generation of the video game consoles. Continue reading from The History Channel

Items from our Collection

Link to A History of Video Games in 64 Objects by World Video Game Hall of Fame in the Catalog
Link to Console Wars: Sega, Nintendo, and the Battle That Defined a Generation by Blake Harris in the Catalog
Link to Game On!: Video Game History from Pong and Pac-man to Mario, Minecraft, and More Dustin Hansen in the Catalog
Link to The Boy Who Thought Outside The Box: The Story of Video Game Inventor Ralph Baer by Marcie Wessels in the Catalog
Link to Power-Up by Chris Kohler in Freading
Link to Power Play: How Video Games Can Save the World by Asi Burak in the Catalog