1972 marked an important landmark in the history of the video game industry with the releases of Pong and the
Odyssey home console. Electronic games rose substantially in profile this year and a number of companies began to explore the distribution of video games on a larger scale.
Events
May 3 – Magnavox initiates their “Magnavox Profit Caravan” series of traveling shows to demonstrate all of their 1972 product line to their dealers and public, including the Odyssey. The first showing occurs in Phoenix, Arizona.[1]
May 24- At a showing in Burlingame, California, three representatives of
Nutting Associates including
Nolan Bushnell visit the showcase and play the demonstration unit. Bushnell takes particular note of the Odyssey game Table Tennis.[2][3]
June 26 – Bally Manufacturing formalizes an agreement with Nolan Bushnell for the creation of one video game and one pinball table for the company. Bushnell later describes the creation of a hockey game.[4] The term “video amusement game” is used – one of the earliest uses of the phrase “video game” in print.[5]
August –
Atari Inc. tests a prototype of Pong at Andy Capp’s Tavern (later the Rooster T. Feathers Comedy Club) in Sunnyvale, California.
August 13-15 –
Chess 3.0 wins the U.S. American Computer Chess Championship in Boston for the third consecutive year.[6]
September 14-16 – The Music Operators of America show is held in Chicago, Illinois. Nutting Associates displays Computer Space for the second year and For-Play Manufacturing showcases Star Trek. Nolan Bushnell attends and fails to interest Bill Nutting in manufacturing Pong.[7]
October 19 – The Intergalactic Spacewar Olympics competition is held at the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Project facilities in California. It is the first formal video game competition and is a central story in the December 7, 1972 issue of Rolling Stone written by Stewart Brand.[8]
November 24 – Nolan Bushnell files for US patent #3,793,483 relating to work developed for video game technology. The patent is issued in February 1974 and does not serve as an effective deterrent to video game copycats.[9]
October – The date of the first issue of the People’s Computer Company newsletter. They print type-in listings of games and other demonstrations in the
BASIC programming language, helping to spread games on
time-sharing networks.
Arcade
March – The second unit of the Galaxy Game is placed at the Tressider Student Union at
Stanford University in California. This version features two fiberglass cabinets with two players each, which can be linked to create a four-player game.[10]
October – Coin-operated games company For-Play Manufacturing in California releases Star Trek (1972), a presumed clone of Nutting Associates’ Computer Space.
November – Atari Inc. releases their game Pong, shipping it to local distributors in the Northern California area. The game becomes a hit in the local area and launches Atari’s business.
Consoles
September – Magnavox releases their Odyssey console in twenty-five major markets. It includes twelve games with the console. A light gun addon with additional games is sold separately. They manufacture 140,000 consoles their first year on the market.[10]
^"Agreed Statement of Facts". Magnavox Company v. Chicago Dynamic Industries, et al. US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. November 3, 1976. p. 13. Retrieved March 22, 2024.
^"Trial Transcript". Magnavox Company v. Chicago Dynamic Industries, et al. US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. January 5, 1977. pp. 1501–1505. Retrieved March 22, 2024.
^Bushnell, Nolan K. (July 10, 1972).
""Letter to John Britz"". Magnavox Company v. Chicago Dynamic Industries, et al. US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. Retrieved March 22, 2024.
^Britz, John A. (June 26, 1972).
"Royalty Agreement". Magnavox Company v. Chicago Dynamic Industries, et al. US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. Retrieved March 22, 2024.
^"Computer chess championship ends with '6400' winner". The Columbian. August 16, 1972. p. 14.
^Goldberg, Marty; Vendel, Curt (2012). Atari Inc.: Business is Fun. Syzygy Press.
ISBN978-0985597405.
^Brand, Stewart (December 7, 1972). "Spacewar, Fanatic Life and Death Among Computer Bums". Rolling Stone.
^US3793483A, Bushnell, Nolan, "Video image positioning control system for amusement device", issued 1974-02-19
^
abcdSmith, Alexander (2020). They create worlds: the story of the people and companies that shaped the video game industry. Boca Raton: CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group.
ISBN978-0-429-42364-2.
^"Magnavox will drop". Weekly Television Digest with Consumer Electronics. 14 (19): 9. May 13, 1974.
^Dear, Brian (2017). The friendly orange glow: the untold story of the PLATO system and the dawn of cyberculture. New York: Pantheon Books.
ISBN978-1-101-87155-3.
1972 marked an important landmark in the history of the video game industry with the releases of Pong and the
Odyssey home console. Electronic games rose substantially in profile this year and a number of companies began to explore the distribution of video games on a larger scale.
Events
May 3 – Magnavox initiates their “Magnavox Profit Caravan” series of traveling shows to demonstrate all of their 1972 product line to their dealers and public, including the Odyssey. The first showing occurs in Phoenix, Arizona.[1]
May 24- At a showing in Burlingame, California, three representatives of
Nutting Associates including
Nolan Bushnell visit the showcase and play the demonstration unit. Bushnell takes particular note of the Odyssey game Table Tennis.[2][3]
June 26 – Bally Manufacturing formalizes an agreement with Nolan Bushnell for the creation of one video game and one pinball table for the company. Bushnell later describes the creation of a hockey game.[4] The term “video amusement game” is used – one of the earliest uses of the phrase “video game” in print.[5]
August –
Atari Inc. tests a prototype of Pong at Andy Capp’s Tavern (later the Rooster T. Feathers Comedy Club) in Sunnyvale, California.
August 13-15 –
Chess 3.0 wins the U.S. American Computer Chess Championship in Boston for the third consecutive year.[6]
September 14-16 – The Music Operators of America show is held in Chicago, Illinois. Nutting Associates displays Computer Space for the second year and For-Play Manufacturing showcases Star Trek. Nolan Bushnell attends and fails to interest Bill Nutting in manufacturing Pong.[7]
October 19 – The Intergalactic Spacewar Olympics competition is held at the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Project facilities in California. It is the first formal video game competition and is a central story in the December 7, 1972 issue of Rolling Stone written by Stewart Brand.[8]
November 24 – Nolan Bushnell files for US patent #3,793,483 relating to work developed for video game technology. The patent is issued in February 1974 and does not serve as an effective deterrent to video game copycats.[9]
October – The date of the first issue of the People’s Computer Company newsletter. They print type-in listings of games and other demonstrations in the
BASIC programming language, helping to spread games on
time-sharing networks.
Arcade
March – The second unit of the Galaxy Game is placed at the Tressider Student Union at
Stanford University in California. This version features two fiberglass cabinets with two players each, which can be linked to create a four-player game.[10]
October – Coin-operated games company For-Play Manufacturing in California releases Star Trek (1972), a presumed clone of Nutting Associates’ Computer Space.
November – Atari Inc. releases their game Pong, shipping it to local distributors in the Northern California area. The game becomes a hit in the local area and launches Atari’s business.
Consoles
September – Magnavox releases their Odyssey console in twenty-five major markets. It includes twelve games with the console. A light gun addon with additional games is sold separately. They manufacture 140,000 consoles their first year on the market.[10]
^"Agreed Statement of Facts". Magnavox Company v. Chicago Dynamic Industries, et al. US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. November 3, 1976. p. 13. Retrieved March 22, 2024.
^"Trial Transcript". Magnavox Company v. Chicago Dynamic Industries, et al. US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. January 5, 1977. pp. 1501–1505. Retrieved March 22, 2024.
^Bushnell, Nolan K. (July 10, 1972).
""Letter to John Britz"". Magnavox Company v. Chicago Dynamic Industries, et al. US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. Retrieved March 22, 2024.
^Britz, John A. (June 26, 1972).
"Royalty Agreement". Magnavox Company v. Chicago Dynamic Industries, et al. US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. Retrieved March 22, 2024.
^"Computer chess championship ends with '6400' winner". The Columbian. August 16, 1972. p. 14.
^Goldberg, Marty; Vendel, Curt (2012). Atari Inc.: Business is Fun. Syzygy Press.
ISBN978-0985597405.
^Brand, Stewart (December 7, 1972). "Spacewar, Fanatic Life and Death Among Computer Bums". Rolling Stone.
^US3793483A, Bushnell, Nolan, "Video image positioning control system for amusement device", issued 1974-02-19
^
abcdSmith, Alexander (2020). They create worlds: the story of the people and companies that shaped the video game industry. Boca Raton: CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group.
ISBN978-0-429-42364-2.
^"Magnavox will drop". Weekly Television Digest with Consumer Electronics. 14 (19): 9. May 13, 1974.
^Dear, Brian (2017). The friendly orange glow: the untold story of the PLATO system and the dawn of cyberculture. New York: Pantheon Books.
ISBN978-1-101-87155-3.