Chronology of
Arcade Video Games

Copyright © 2006-2008 Ken Polsson
internet e-mail: kpolsson@islandnet.com
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URL: http://www.islandnet.com/~kpolsson/arcade/

This document is an attempt to bring various published sources together to present a timeline about Arcade Video Games.

References are numbered in [brackets], which are listed here. A number after the dot gives the page in the source.

Last updated: 2008 June 26.


1970-1982 1983-1991 1992-1999 2000-end

1970

(month unknown)
  • Nolan Bushnell completes his Computer Space video game machine. One player competes in a space ship against the machine controlling flying saucers. Despite the name, the machine does not incorporate a computer. Nutting Associates, a small arcade games manufacturer, agrees to build and market it. [89.6] [94.103]
  • Nutting Associates releases the Computer Space coin-operated (25-cents) arcade video game, making this the first commercial video game. (1500 machines are made, but the game is not popular with players. Nolan Bushnell makes about US$500 in royalties.) [89.6,80] [124.135] (1971 [371.67] [746.48]) (2000 machines made [94.103])

1972

November 29
  • Atari ships the Pong stand-alone coin-operated video game. The Pong game debuts in Andy Capp's Tavern in Sunnyvale, California. (About 10,000 units are sold, making this the first commercially-successful video game.) [1] [2] [32.178] [76.144] [89.8] [94.106] [124.135] [371.67]

1974

(month unknown)
  • Atari releases the Gran Trak arcade video game, the first video car-racing game controlled by a steering wheel attached to the cabinet. [124.138]
September
  • To date, there are about 100,000 coin-operated video game machines in the USA. [83.VI.94]
November
  • The annual Amusement and Music Operators Association convention is held. Atari delivers the Tank arcade game. Tank is the first game to use ROM chips to store graphics data. [89.14] [124.139]

1976

(month unknown)
  • Atari introduces the Breakout coin-operated video game. (15,000 machines are sold over its lifetime.) [94.106]
  • Exidy introduces the Death Race coin-operated video game. The object of the game is to run down "gremlins". (The National Safety Council calls it "sick, morbid, and insidious".) [87.12] [89.16]

1978

March
  • Nintendo releases the Computer Othello arcade game. [865.128]
June 5
  • Taito introduces the Space Invaders game, in Japan. Original name was Space Monsters, created by Toshihiro Nishikado. (Over 350,000 machines are sold world-wide over its lifetime.) [4.46] [22.34] [89.xvi] [94.109] [297.36] (April 1979 [7.258])
October
  • Midway releases the Space Invaders arcade video game in the US. [389.94]
  • Atari releases the trakball-controlled Football arcade game. [389.94]
(month unknown)
  • The annual Amusement and Music Operators Association convention is held. Cinematronics unveils Space Wars, the first coin-operated video game with vector-generated graphics. The game, created by Larry Rosenthal, is a duplication of the original Spacewar game of 1962. Rosenthal received several patents for the technology. [89.7,16]
  • Cinematronics releases the Space Wars video game to arcades. [16.68]
Year
  • Sales of video arcade games during the year: US$50 million. [281.39]
  • Market share of coin-operated games: Atari 70%. [89.20]
  • Cinematronics makes US$6 million for the year, from sales of 10,000 Space Wars machines. [89.18]

1979

(month unknown)
  • Atari develops the Asteroids computer game. [9.78]
  • The annual Amusement and Music Operators Association convention is held. Atari delivers the Asteroids video game. (100,000 units are sold world-wide over its lifetime.) [9.78] [89.23] [94.109] [274.58]
Year
  • During the year, about US$930,000 is spent in coins on coin-operated video games. [94.S6.101]

1980

(month unknown)
  • In the case of Aladdin's Castle arcade versus the city of Mesquite, Texas, the US Federal Appeals Court for the Fifth Circuit in New Orleans rules that playing arcade video games is an activity protected under the First Amendment of the US Constitution. City council of Mesquite had issued an ordinance barring players under age 17 without parents to play video games. [55.C8] [106.7] [111.A15]
October
  • Midway Manufacturing introduces the Pac-Man video game. The game was created at Namco by Toru Iwatani. (Within a year, 100,000 machines are sold for US$200 million in revenue, with the machines taking in US$1 billion in quarters. Over seven years, 293,822 units are sold. In 2005, the game is added to the Guiness Book of World Records book as "most successful coin operated game" in history.) [89.43] [95.S3.21] [305.37] [456.S3.21] [597] [682.77]
November
  • Atari sponsors the First National Space Invaders Competition, in New York. Bill Heineman of Whittier, California, scores 165,200 to win an Asteroids Table Top Video Game. [4.44]
  • The annual Amusement and Music Operators Association convention is held. Gremlin shows Nichibutsu's Moon Cresta video game. Taito of America introduces Stratovox, the first talking video game. Centuri releases Amstar's Phoenix and Eagle video games. Midway Manufacturing introduces Namco's Pac-Man and Rally-X video games. Williams Electronics introduces the Defender video game. [89.24] (Defender introduced in October [113.D4])
  • Atari releases the Battle Zone arcade game. [667.182]
December
  • Nintendo of Japan begins exporting coin-operated video games to the United States. [273.102]

Year
  • Unit sales of coin-operated video games in the United States during the year: US$500 million. [273.98]
  • During the year in the US, US$3.8 billion in coins is spent on coin-operated video games. [89.xix] (US$2.8 billion [94.S6.101])

1981

May
  • Atari completes work on the Centipede arcade video game. [89.65]
(month unknown)
  • Nintendo releases the Donkey Kong video game. The first location in the USA to host one of the games is the Spot Tavern in Seattle, Washington. The hero Mario was originally called Jumpman. [44.TD7] [89.29] [124.49] [672.148]
  • Midway releases the Ms. Pac-Man game. Original game title was Crazy Otto. (100,000-115,000 units are sold in its lifetime.) [304.142] [305] [672.148] [682.77]
  • Sega/Gremlin introduces the Frogger video game. [89.29] [672.148]
  • A man dies of a heart attack while playing Berzerk in a video arcade. This is the first video game-related death. [685.136]
  • Namco releases the Galaga arcade video game in the US. [304.148] [672.148]
  • Atari releases the Centipede arcade video game in the US. (50,000 units are sold during its lifetime, second best for Atari.) [672.148]
  • Centuri releases the Vanguard arcade game in the US. [672.148]
October 10
  • At the Citicorp Center in Manhattan, New York, Atari sponsors an open tournament of arcade games. Frank Cretella scores 118,740 in Asteroids, setting a new national record. [93.45]
October 28
  • At the Expocenter in Chicago, the Atari Coin-Op $50,000 World Championship is held, over five days. Participation is only 250 players, on expectations of 10-15,000. [94.102] [672.150]
November 14
  • In Washington, D.C., Atari sponsors a week-long international finals tournament in arcade video game playing, including contestants from ten European countries. [93.45]
November 19
  • President Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines bans video games in the country, because of parent and teacher complaints regarding youth morality. [96.23] [278.51]
(month unknown)
  • The annual Amusement and Music Operators Association convention is held. Taito America introduces the Qix and Lock 'n' Chase video games. Atari introduces Tempest, Atari's first color vector graphics game, second in the industry to Sega Enterprises's Space Fury. Exidy shows the Mouse Trap video game. Williams Electronics shows the Make Trax video game. Stern shows the Turtles video game. Centuri shows the Round Up video game. Nichibutsu shows the Frisky Tom video game. Nintendo shows the Donkey Kong video game. Sega Enterprises shows the Frogger video game. [89.30,42] [672.148]
  • Steve Juraszek plays arcade game Defender for 16 hours and 34 minutes on one quarter, scoring a world record 15,963,100 points. [278.49]
December
  • The city council of Oakland, California, votes to ban minors from arcades during school hours and after 10 PM weeknights, 12 PM weekends. [89.122]
Year
  • During the year, Bally's Midway Manufacturing Division sells 96,000 machine sales of Pac-Man, for US$200 million profit on revenues of US$1.2 billion. [55.C8] [60.S2.13] [109.D1] [672.148]
  • Arcade video game revenue for the year: US$5-5.7 billion. [89.xix,138] [278.49] [672.148] (US$7 billion [281.39]) (US$8 billion [53.D1])
  • Unit sales of video game machines for the year: 4.5 million. Revenue: US$1-1.2 billion. [58.D5] [63.21] [278.49] [287.110] [672.148]
  • During the year, Atari ships 50,000 Centipede video game machines. [89.143] [161.S3.19]

1982

February 8
  • Council of Bradley, Illinois, bars children under 16 from playing video arcade games. [292.7]
February 9
  • The Boston suburb of Marlborough, Massachusettes, passes an ordinance barring the use of video games by anyone under age 18 during school class hours or late at night, and bans placement of the games within 1500 feet of public schools. [108.14] (February 8 [292.7])
February 23
  • The US Supreme Court announces it will not decide on the Mesquite versus Alladin's Castle case. The Federal Appeals Court must determine if the circumstances of the case are specific to the Texas constitution, in which case the US Supreme Court would have no jurisdiction. [89.128] [111.A15]
March
  • Stern releases the Frenzy arcade video game. [89.188]
May 3
  • Walt Disney Productions files a suit against Williams Electronics for infringing Disney's Tron trademark, by the arcade video game Robotron. [118.D5]
June 15
  • New York state Supreme Court justice Thomas Galligan rules that New York City could limit locations of video game arcades, saying that the games are not protected by the First Amendment of the US Constitution. [129.B3]
June 17
  • Atari grants Centuri exclusive worldwide rights to manufacture and distribute the Tunnel Hunt arcade game. [130.D4]
June (month)
  • Number one arcade game at end of June: Zaxxon by Sega Enterprises. [59.D4]
July 9
  • Bally Manufacturing debuts the TRON arcade game. [59.D4]
July
  • Paramount airs television commercials promoting Sega Enterprises's Zaxxon arcade game. This is the first television commercial for an arcade game. [59.D4]
Year
  • Arcade video game shipments for the year: 480,000. [53.D9] [145.C11]
  • Arcade video game revenue (from coins) for the year: US$7.3 billion. [53.D1] [145.C11]
  • Sales of arcade video game machines during the year: US$4.5 billion. [305.37]

End of 1970-1982. Next: 1983.
The complete timeline can be purchased in a PDF file for US$10 from the author.

You can pay now directly via PayPal. When I receive notification from PayPal, I will email you the PDF file. or send me an email to request my mailing address to mail payment.

1970-1982 1983-1991 1992-1999 2000-end


A list of references to all source material is available.

Other web pages of interest:

  • Chronology of Video Game Systems
  • Chronology of Nintendo Video Games
  • Chronology of Sega Video Games
  • Top Selling Video Games by Month
  • Video Game References in Pop Culture
  • Polsson's Garage Sale - Video Games
  • Ken P's Today in History
  • Last updated: 2008 June 26.
    Copyright © 2006-2008 Ken Polsson (email: kpolsson@islandnet.com).
    URL: http://www.islandnet.com/~kpolsson/arcade/
    Link to Ken P's home page.


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