The Ten Most Important Early Computer and Video Games
Today's gaming industry is a massive, MULTISEPTILLION
dollar entertainment juggernaut. But what are its roots? I thought I'd
take a trip back to the very dawn of gaming history and take a look at
the devices, inventions, and innovations that gave rise to our favorite
pastime.
If you're interested in this piece, for further reading I recommend checking out They Create Worlds, The Genesis of the Video Game, and Wikipedia's Early Video Game History entry, which were all sources of key info for this article.Cathode Ray Tube Amusement Device
- Developers: Thomas Goldsmith Jr. and Estle Ray Mann
- Release: 1947
- System: Cathode ray tube and oscilloscope
- Importance: The first interactive electronic game
Although a patent for the device was filed on January 25, 1947, and issued on December 14, 1948, the machine was never put into production, or shown to the public. Because it doesn't run on a computer, and consists of purely analog hardware, it's argued that the Cathode Ray Tube Amusement Device doesn't really fit the true definition of a videogame. However, I've included it on this list because although its rudimentary technology, it's nevertheless an objective-oriented interactive experience played on a screen, and I believe it should be considered a progenitor videogame.
Bertie the Brain
- Developer: Josef Kates
- Release: 1950
- System: "Addition" computer
- Importance: The first computer game with an AI opponent
The 12-foot-high machine featured a large overhead display lit by light bulbs to represent a Tic-Tac-Toe board, and players used an illuminated control pad mounted on its front to input moves, which the computer then responded to. The game had several difficulty levels and was apparently very hard to beat in its most challenging setting.
Like the Cathode Ray Tube Amusement Device, Bertie the Brain doesn't quite match the Oxford English definition of a video game because it doesn't have a screen or produce images that the player interacts with. But despite that, I think it fully deserves to be included on this list since it's a computer game that features an AI opponent.
NIM
- Developers: John Bennett and Raymond Stuart-Williams
- Release: 1951
- System: Ferranti NIMROD
- Importance: Early computer game
Like Bertie the Brain, NIMROD used light bulbs to represent the game's action. Moves were entered into the machine using a bespoke control panel and a bank of flashing lights enabled players to see the computer "think" as it calculated its response. Because of its lack of screen or projected images, NIMROD is the third game on this list that doesn't quite meet the standard dictionary definition of a video game, but it nevertheless represents an important step forward in the evolution of computer gaming.
Draughts
- Developer: Christopher Strachey
- Release: 1952
- System: Ferranti Mark 1
- Importance: One of the first computer game programs
Fortuitously, Strachey visited the University of Manchester in May 1951 and talked to Alan Turing, who'd just finished producing a programmer's handbook for the school's Ferranti Mark 1 computer. The machine had a larger memory capacity than the Pilot ACE, and with Turing's help, Strachey set to work transcribing his program to the more powerful computer. Just over a year later in July 1952, his efforts paid off, and the program finally became fully functional, enabling the machine to "play a complete game of Draughts at a reasonable speed."
Strachey's Draughts program was displayed via a simple CRT screen, making it one of the first-ever fully encapsulated video gaming experiences.
OXO
- Developer: Alexander Douglas
- Release: 1952
- System: EDSAC
- Importance: One of the first computer game programs
However, there are two major differences between this and Bertie the Brain. Firstly, OXO is a software program that was written for an existing computer, rather than being a custom-made machine, and secondly – and more importantly – the game was displayed on a 35 x 16 dot matrix CRT screen. Players input their moves using a rotary telephone dial, with each number representing a potion on the board, which the computer then responded to with its own move.
Although it doesn't feature moving images that the player interacts with, I still feel that, like Draughts, OXO should be considered one of the earliest video gaming experiences. But the big question is – which came first, OXO or Draughts? Despite spending quite some time researching the subject, I haven't been able to find an accurate date for exactly when in 1952 OXO was created. So for now – and maybe forever – this important detail of which was the first true computer game remains unresolved.
Tennis for Two
- Developer: William Higinbotham
- Release: 1958
- System: Donner Model 30
- Importance: The first two-player video game
The side-viewed game was displayed on an oscilloscope and featured the long horizontal line that represented the ground and a short vertical line that represented the net. Players used a pair of bespoke paddles to control the game, pressing a button to launch and hit the ball while turning the paddle to set its return angle. The game was a big hit at the public event, with hundreds of people lining up to play it. Indeed, Tennis for Two was such a success that Higinbotham upgraded it with a bigger screen and settings for different strengths of gravities for the same event the following year.
Tennis for Two has long been considered the first-ever video game, and indeed Higinbotham was called to testify in several court cases during the 70s and 80s in which lawyers unsuccessfully tried to have the game declared as prior art to invalidate Ralph Baer's television video game patents. However, while Tennis for Two is definitely one of the earliest examples of a video game, I feel that MIDSAC Pool ultimately gets the nod as the very first.
Spacewar!
- Developers: Steve "Slug" Russell, Martin "Shag" Graetz, Wayne Wiitanen, Bob Saunders, and Steve Piner
- Release: 1962
- System: DEC PDP-1
- Importance: The first shoot 'em up
Spacewar's gameplay was very simple, but a lot of fun: Each player took control of a spaceship – either "the needle" or "the wedge" – and flew around the single wrap-around screen attempting to eliminate the opposing ship by shooting and destroying it. Later, Martin Graetz and Dan Edwards added a hyperspace feature, as well as a gravity-exuding sun at the center of the screen that affected the trajectory of both the ships and their torpedoes.
Throughout the 60s and 70s, Spacewar was ported to pretty much every contemporary mainframe, minicomputer, and microcomputer available. Even arcade versions of the game were made, the most successful of which was Cinematronics’ 1977 iteration, Space Wars, which went on to sell 30,000 cabinets. Because of its proliferation, Spacewar is one of the most important and influential early video games, inspiring such releases as Galaxy Game, Computer Space, Star Control, and Asteroids.
If you're interested in seeing how Spacewar looked in its early days, here's the original 1962 code running on a Dec PDP-1 emulator in JavaScript.
Chase
- Developer: Ralph Baer
- Release: 1967
- System: Prototype Magnavox Odyssey
- Importance: Gave rise to the video game console
Its one game was hardwired into the system: Two players controlled dots that could chase each other around the screen. Although it was exceptionally simple, this prototype was enough to pique the interest of Sanders Associates' corporate director Herb Chapman, who approved $2500 funding for further research. Baer and Tremblay, along with Bill Harrison and Bob Rusch, continued to work on the device, and by 1968 – after producing seven iterations – finally completed what they called "The Brown Box". This prototype video game system was capable of playing several variants of Chase, Handball, Table Tennis, and Golf, and was also compatible with the light gun that Baer developed for the machine.
The Brown Box was shown to a variety of potential manufacturers, including Motorola and General Electronics, but it was ultimately Magnavox that signed the deal – giving rise to the Odyssey 1TL200, the
The Sumer Game
- Developer: Doug Dyment
- Release: 1968
- System: DEC PDP-8
- Importance: Antecedent resource management and city-building game
Although The Sumer Game isn't particularly well known, an expanded type-in listing of the game called Hamurabi was included in David Ahl's 1973 book, BASIC Computer Games. Thanks to budding hackers using it to learn how to program, many different variations of the game were created, and Hamurabi ultimately went on to be expanded into several different resource management games, including Kingdom, Dukedom, and Santa Paravia en Fiumaccio.
While it's true that The Sumer Game was predated by other economic and resource management games, most notably the 1966 IBM program, The Sumerian Game, Dyment's creation ultimately had a huge influence on the development of subsequent resource management games, and can be considered an antecedent to such titles as Sim City and Civilization.
very first home video game console that was launched in August 1972.
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