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You are here: Home / Archives for 1970s

1970s

Atarian Al Alcorn Inducted In The Amusement Industry Hall of Fame

April 12, 2024 By ausretrogamer

Pioneer Al Alcorn Honored with Amusement Industry Hall of Fame Induction

In a momentous tribute to his groundbreaking contributions, the esteemed engineer and computer scientist, Al Alcorn, has been inducted into the Amusement Industry Hall of Fame this year. Alcorn, renowned for his pivotal role in the inception of the iconic game Pong, joins the ranks of esteemed visionaries, including fellow Atarian Nolan Bushnell, a member of the inaugural class.

Alcorn embarked on his illustrious career at Ampex in 1968, where he initially delved into the development of a high-resolution video system. However, it was in 1972 that he embarked on a transformative journey with Bushnell and Ted Dabney at Atari. Together, they spearheaded the creation of Pong, a seminal milestone in the realm of video amusement games, heralding a new era of entertainment.

Reflecting on Alcorn’s indispensable role in shaping the landscape of gaming history, RePlay publisher Eddie Adlum remarked, “If you ask 10 operators today who programmed Pong back in the day, five would say Nolan Bushnell and the other five would say they don’t know. The answer, obviously, is Al Alcorn.” Working under Bushnell’s guidance, Alcorn meticulously engineered the circuitry that birthed the revolutionary machine in 1972, laying the foundation for the burgeoning video game revolution.

[L – R]: Ted Dabney, Nolan Bushnell, Fred Marincic and PONG creator, Allan (Al) Alcorn
In a testament to their innovative spirit, Bushnell and Alcorn experimented with unconventional concepts, such as embedding Pong circuitry into barrels, dubbing it “Barrel Pong.” However, it was the classic upright cabinet iteration that resonated most profoundly with audiences, establishing a paradigmatic standard for all subsequent video uprights.

Al Alcorn’s induction into the Amusement Industry Hall of Fame not only honours his extraordinary legacy but also underscores the enduring impact of his visionary ingenuity on the fabric of modern entertainment. As his pioneering achievements continue to inspire generations of creators and enthusiasts alike, Alcorn’s legacy remains indelibly etched in the annals of gaming history.


story & image source: RePlay Magazine

Filed Under: Announcements, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 1970s, 70s, Al Alcorn, Ampex, Atari, Atari VCS, Atarian, Classic Games, Nolan Bushnell, pong, Retro, Retro Gamer, Retro Gaming, retro gaming legend, retrogaming, Video Games, video gaming history

The Forgotten 1970s Toys

May 22, 2023 By ausretrogamer

Rhetty For History recently took a trip down nostalgia lane to bring us all the popular toys and games from the 1970s, noting that many had since been forgotten (well, not by us!).

The 1970s had a lot of toys for kids to choose from and some of those have remained popular to this day. Other toys weren’t so luck and some have been lost over time. In this video we will remember some of the 1970s forgotten toys!

We definitely remember games like The Hungry Hungry Hippos and Simon, but had definitely forgotten about The Bionic Woman board game, Lite Bright and Wooly Willy – did we even get any of these in Australia? Actually, there were quite a few games & toys from that era that induced nightmares too (not looking at you Jack-in-the-Box!).

Our fave toys from the 1970s were the Steve Austin action figure, the Kenner Star Wars action figures and pretty much every Matchbox car under the sun! We are probably forgetting some, but the ones we’ve mentioned are seared in our  hippocampus.

story source: laughingsquid




 

Filed Under: History, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 1970s, 70s, 70s Toys, Action Figures, Bionic Woman, board games, Charles Bronson, Geek, Hungry Hungry Hippos, Kenner, Matchbox cars, Mattel, oldschool, Retro, Rhetty For History, Star Wars, Steve Austin, Telstar, The Muppets, Toys

Film: ‘Pinball – The Man Who Saved The Game’

August 15, 2022 By ausretrogamer

Pinball movie

PINBALL (The Man Who Saved The Game) is based on the true story of Roger C. Sharpe, the GQ journalist and real-life pinball wizard who in 1976 single-handedly overturned New York City’s 35-year ban on pinball machines. With Roger onboard as the Executive Producer and Technical Consultant, we are assured that this will be an accurate account of the events in 1976 that saved the silverball game.

The “shot” that saved pinball
Roger Sharpe takes the shotsource: 40th Anniversary “He Called The Shot” Painting featuring Roger Sharpe

The film was officially selected and will make its world premiere in October at the 30th anniversary of the Hamptons International Film Festival (HIFF). The film festival takes place from October 7th to October 6th, 2022. If you are lucky enough to be able to attend, general admission tickets will go on sale beginning September 27th, 2022 – we so wish we could be there to watch this film!

Pinball Film movie poster

Pinball - The Man Who Saved The Game - movie posterimage source: Pinball Film




Filed Under: Announcements, Pinball Tagged With: 1970s, 70s, Austin and Meredith Bragg, HIFF, Mike Faist, new york, pinball, Pinball The Man Who Saved The Game, Reason TV, Retro, Roger Sharpe, Roger Sharpe saves pinball

Ausretrogamer Is 10 Years Old!

January 4, 2022 By ausretrogamer

Who would have thought that when we first started ausretrogamer.com in January 2012 that 10 years later we would still be here! Time certainly flies when you are having fun.

Today marks a major milestone for us at ausretrogamer as we have reached the magical decade mark! When starting our site and social media channels in 2012, we honestly didn’t have any expectations that we would still be around in 2022 – but we are glad that we are!

We have been pleasantly surprised over the years to find so many like-minded people who enjoy playing and talking about all the stuff we love, from obscure video games from the 1970s to those schoolyard-type discussions on which 8-bit computer was best (we all know it was the Commodore 64!).

Ausretrogamer has also allowed us to meet a lot of you in real life, either at events like PAX Aus or local pinball competitions or computing club events – which have been a priceless experience. We are humbled to call all of you our good friends. Nostalgia is a powerful force that binds us all – long may it continue!

To all the awesome folks that have contributed and to those that are still contributing content and everyone that engages with us, thank you very much – you all rock our world!

Looking forward to another decade full of retro gaming (and pinball) goodness! 😉




Filed Under: History, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Amiga, Arcade, Atari, ausretrogamer, Commodore, gamer, gaming, Geek, Neo Geo, nintendo, oldschool, pinball, Retro Gamer, Retro Gaming, sega, tbt, throwback, Vectrex, Video Games

What A Japanese Arcade From The 1970s Looked Like

October 19, 2021 By ausretrogamer

We love finding old raw footage from the golden age of arcade gaming. This time, it is from a Tokyo arcade parlour from 1979.

As we wind back the clock some 40+ years, this news story features Tokyo’s arcade parlour, World Game, as it stood in 1979! It is so awesome to see patrons pumping coins into arcade machines, like Space Invaders, just like we did all those years ago!


source: btm0815ma




 

Filed Under: History, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 1970s, 70s, 70s arcade, Arcade, Boing-Boing, Classic Arcade Gaming, coin-op, Japan, Japan arcades in the 1970s, Retro, Retro Gaming, retrogaming, Space Invaders, Tokyo, video, World Games, yen

LEGO IDEAS: Playable Space Invaders Arcade

July 9, 2021 By ausretrogamer

Another darn awesome Lego Ideas entry by Bricks Down Under that tickles our nostalgic nerve!

This playable Lego Space Invaders arcade game replica has the charm of the 1978 arcade machine that took the video gaming world by storm. We reckon Tomohiro Nishikado would be quite impressed too.

If you want this Lego Ideas Space Invaders to become a real Lego set you can buy from your fave retailer, make sure you go and vote for it now!


source: Bricks  Downunder

source: LEGO Ideas: Space Invaders




Filed Under: Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 1970s, Arcade, Lego, Lego arcade game, LEGO Ideas, Lego Ideas Space Invaders, Lego Space Invaders, Lego Space Invaders Arcade, Old School, oldschool, Playable Lego Space Invaders arcade game, Retro, Retro Gamer, Retro Gaming, retrogaming, shmup, Space Invaders, throwback

A Brief History of Women in Gaming: The 1980s

March 24, 2021 By ausretrogamer

It is awesome to see that The Strong (National Museum of Play) has a Women in Games Initiative and their International Center for the History of Electronic Games creating brilliant history exhibits, like A Brief History of Women in Gaming.

You can check out A Brief History of Women in Gaming: The 1980s on Google’s Arts and Culture forum, which showcases a plethora of amazing and talented women in the gaming industry, from the assembly line to the marketing department, this exhibit highlights how women have shaped the games industry through hard work, creative coding, artistic imagination, and business savvy. This exhibit tells this vital but underappreciated part of history!

source: Arts and Culture – Google

From Carol Shaw at Atari and then Activision, creating her best-selling game River Raid, Hope Neiman leading the Vectrex home game console manufacturer General Consumer Electronics’ marketing efforts in the early 1980s, to Gail Tilden creating and editing everyone’s seminal favourite magazine, Nintendo Power, this exhibit is brimming with amazing and talented women in gaming.

Check it out right now!

 

Filed Under: History, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 1970s, 1980s, Activision, Atari, Carol Shaw, Centipede, classic gaming, Colette Weil, Dave Nutting Associates, designers, Dona Bailey, editors, Evelyn Lim, Gail Tilden, gamers, GCE, Hope Neiman, Janice Hendricks, Margo Comstock, Mystery House, Nintendo Power, Phantasy Star, programmers, Reiko Kodama, River Raid, Roberta Williams, Sierra On-Line, tbt, The Strong, throwback, Vectrex, Women gamers, Women in Gaming

ABC News – This Day Tonight: Pinball Parlours (1976)

March 12, 2021 By ausretrogamer

We absolutely love archival footage from television broadcasters, especially footage from amusement centres (or as we used to call them, parlours) from back in the day!

The below video is from the popular segment on ABC News’ ‘This Day Tonight’, with this particular occasion focusing on Pinball Parlours in Australia in the mid 70s. This is very intriguing with some very enlightening discussions with Malcolm Steinberg (from Leisure & Allied Industries (LAI) and Timezone fame) about video gaming and pinball entertainment that are apt to this day.

So, how much did you spend on gaming back in the day? In 1976 a player might’ve spent as much as $5 (approx. $35 in today’s money) on amusement machines!


source: ABC NEWS via Facebook

 

Filed Under: History, Pinball, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 1970s, 70s, ABC iView, ABC NEWS, ABC TV, ABCTV, amusement centres, Arcade, Arcade Parlours, LAI, Malcolm Steinberg, parlors, pinball, Pinball History, Pinball Life, pinball machines, pinball parlour, pinball parlours, Pinball Press, pinball wizard, pinballpress, pinnie parlour, pinnies, Pins, Retro Gamers, RetroFocus, Timezone

Commodore PET Programs To Run In Your Browser

November 5, 2020 By ausretrogamer

If you have aged like a fine wine, you’ll remember Commodore’s PET (Personal Electronic Transactor) line of home/personal computers produced in 1977 by Commodore International.

For those of you longing for some Commodore PET computer action, here’s 340 (at the time of publication) Commodore PET programs that you can run in your browser!

 

Filed Under: History, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 1970s, 8bit, C64, classic computers, Commodore 16, Commodore 64, Commodore Computers, Commodore Max, Commodore PET, Old School, Plus/4, Retro Computers, retro computing, Retro Gamers, VIC20

Pinball Machines Almost Banned in 1978

August 8, 2017 By ausretrogamer

Just like the pinball prohibition era in the US, an Australian council (Heidelberg, Victoria) took it upon themselves to ban pinball machines. This ABC TV report from July 13 1978 shows how close our silverball pastime came to being driven out of milk bars, cafes and fish and chip takeaway shops!

If this ban had gone ahead, we may have required the pinball wizardry of Roger Sharpe to reverse the ban order! Luckily cooler heads prevailed.


source: ABC TV

 

Filed Under: History, Pinball, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 1970s, ABC, ABC TV, iView, Norm Beaman, pinball, pinball banned, Pinball banned in Australia, pinball machines, Pinball Press, Pinball Prohibition, pinball wizard, pinballpress, Roger Sharpe, Silverball

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