Jump to content

FORUMS

National Inventors Month: The Invention of 'Pong'

National Inventors Month Pong Ralph Baer Nolan Bushnell Allan Alcorn

12 replies to this topic

#1 Xoanon

    Community Rep.

  • Members
  • PipPip
  • 83 posts
  • Facebook: Link
  • LocationMontreal

Posted 09 August 2012 - 05:01 AM

Hi guys! Community Manager Mike here, a while back the guys at Piranha Games and Infinite Game Publishing decided we wanted to commemorate National Inventors Month and showcase the people and technologies that have paved the way for the modern gaming industry. I hope you like this little piece on the invention of Pong. Cheers! - Michael

--

To celebrate National Inventors Month we are taking a look at the inventions which lead the way to modern PC gaming. This week we are looking at the invention of Pong, one of the first video games ever made.




Let’s go back…waaay back to 1972, August ’72 to be exact. Ralph Baer’s Magnavox Odyssey hits store shelves with ‘Tennis’ (a full three years earlier than Atari’s home version of Pong). Sales of the Odyssey were hampered by the misconception that the system would only work on Magnavox television sets, as a result the Odyssey and ‘Tennis’ fails to hit mainstream audiences, paving the way for Atari.

Posted Image

The original Pong (named ‘Tennis’) being played on the Magnavox Odyssey



Pong’s creation and development came about almost entirely as a fluke. Atari co-founder Nolan Bushnell assigned newly hired developer Allan Alcorn a simple one-off sports game to test his skills, the result was a tennis based game dubbed Pong. The title is a reference to the ‘beeps and boops’ sounds the game utilizes to simulate the ball hitting the paddle. The game was never expected to make the light of day, but the Atari founders were impressed by Alcorn’s work and decided to try and launch the game.

Bushnell takes his game to pinball giant Bally to try and sell the concept, he is immediately rejected. Undeterred, he installs a Pong prototype at a local bar in Sunnyvale, CA. Alcorn and Bushnell are amazed to find the game stuffed with quarters and unable to operate within a few hours. Spurred on by this initial success Atari decides to manufacture and distribute the Pong arcade game themselves. Renting an abandoned roller skating rink Atari begins making ‘Pong’ arcade cabinets to an ever increasing list of demanding clients. In 1972 alone Atari sells 8,500 machines (in a market where 2,000 pinball machine sales is considered a ‘hit).

Posted Image

Nolan Bushnell and his Pong cabinet




Two years later, in 1974 Atari employees Bob Brown and Harold Lee propose a home version of Pong, able to be hooked up to any TV set. However, retailers are skittish over the short life of Magnavox's TV-based Odyssey game and the system languishes in the Atari labs. In 1975 they cut a deal with Tom Quinn, head purchaser for the sporting goods department at national retailer Sears, to sell the system under the Sears Tele-Games label. The order is for 150,000 units. By Christmas, Atari's US$100 home PONG console becomes Sears biggest selling item, with reports of people waiting outside stores for hours to get one.

In 1976 Nolan Bushnell sells Atari to Warner for $28 million, with Joe Keenan as President and Bushnell pocketing $16 million and the title of CEO.

Ralph Baer and the makers of the Magnavox Odyssey filed suit against Atari and its affiliated companies in 1974, claiming that Atari had infringed on Baer's patents and his concept of electronic ping-pong based on detailed records Sanders kept of the Odyssey's design process dating back to 1966. Other documents included depositions from witnesses and a signed guest book that demonstrated Bushnell had played the Odyssey's table tennis game prior to releasing Pong. Bushnell decided to settle with Magnavox out of court. Magnavox offered Atari an agreement to become a licensee for US$0.7 million. Other companies producing "Pong clones"—Atari's competitors—would have to pay royalties. In addition, Magnavox would obtain the rights to Atari products developed over the next year.

Pong has appeared in several facets of popular culture. The game is prominently featured in episodes of television series: That '70s Show, King of the Hill, and Saturday Night Live. In 2006, an American Express commercial featured Andy Roddick in a tennis match against the white, in-game paddle.


Other video games have also referenced and parodied Pong; for example Neuromancer for the Commodore 64 and Banjo-Kazooie: Nuts and Bolts for the Xbox 360. The concert event Video Games Live has performed audio from Pong as part of a special retro "Classic Arcade Medley". Frank Black's song "Whatever Happened to Pong?" on the album Teenager of the Year heavily references the game's elements.

As debate still rages on what game can truly be considered the ‘first’ ever created, many video game fans and historians are all in agreement that Pong holds a special place in our hearts. Now, insert coin and AVOID MISSING BALL FOR HIGH SCORE!

Play Pong Online: http://www.bafta.org...ine,678,BA.html
Play Plasma Pong: http://download.cnet...4-10511143.html

Souces: Wikipedia.org, YouTube.com, Thedoteaters.com

#2 Adridos

    Member

  • Members
  • PipPip
  • 8848 posts
  • LocationHiding in a cake, left in green city called New A... something.

Posted 09 August 2012 - 05:05 AM

Why didn't you start with the first video game ever and then move on to the first hit, the Pong? :huh:

#3 JFlash49

    Member

  • Members
  • PipPip
  • 541 posts
  • LocationKingston

Posted 09 August 2012 - 05:49 AM

Woot Woot!! Go PONG! :)

#4 Xoanon

    Community Rep.

  • Members
  • PipPip
  • 83 posts
  • Facebook: Link
  • LocationMontreal

Posted 09 August 2012 - 06:10 AM

View PostAdridos, on 09 August 2012 - 05:05 AM, said:

Why didn't you start with the first video game ever and then move on to the first hit, the Pong? :huh:


True, but I wanted to highlight the first hit vs the first failure :)

#5 ElcomeSoft

    Member

  • Members
  • PipPip
  • 472 posts
  • LocationNewcastle upon Tyne, England

Posted 09 August 2012 - 06:14 AM

Where's my Atlas with full articulated hands holding a Commando as a pong bat playing with a Gauss Slug?

#6 Granimal

    Member

  • Legendary Founder
  • 163 posts
  • Google+: Link
  • LocationWashington

Posted 09 August 2012 - 11:19 PM

Pong was my first video game!!!!!!!! kind of dating myself there but oh well. Who would have thought hitting a ball back and forth could be so much fun?

#7 rRadix

    Member

  • Veteran Founder
  • 30 posts

Posted 15 August 2012 - 07:56 AM

View PostXoanon, on 09 August 2012 - 06:10 AM, said:


True, but I wanted to highlight the first hit vs the first failure :)

That most horrible failure; ushering in a revolutionary new medium.
How could you ever show your face again.

#8 Sean von Steinike

    Member

  • Elite Founder
  • 2264 posts
  • LocationUSA

Posted 15 August 2012 - 01:26 PM

Played Pong quite a bit.

#9 Insidious Johnson

    Member

  • Legendary Founder
  • 2356 posts
  • Location"This is Johnson, I'm cored"

Posted 21 August 2012 - 03:19 AM

If you plan on having a soundtrack which isn't classical music, there better be one hell of an homage to Les Paul done here.

#10 Gargantula

    Newbie

  • Members
  • Pip
  • 4 posts

Posted 24 September 2012 - 12:15 AM

PONG is not that good

#11 King Curt

    Member

  • Legendary Founder
  • 187 posts

Posted 30 October 2012 - 01:46 AM

The paddle is OP! :lol:

An aside though, the first coin-operated video game was Computer Space ( http://en.wikipedia..../Computer_Space ), which was co-created by Nolan Bushnell. Predates both, barely.

#12 Lunchmeat

    Member

  • Legendary Founder
  • 126 posts
  • LocationWinnipeg, Manitoba, Canada

Posted 29 November 2012 - 04:30 AM

@ 1:51 he says "You want to score Bill?". Possibly the first recorded video game smacktalk!

Edited by Lunchmeat, 29 November 2012 - 04:30 AM.


#13 Tex Arcana

    Member

  • Members
  • PipPip
  • 150 posts
  • LocationStark Industries: Sector 16.

Posted 11 December 2012 - 08:40 AM

I like the TT version better.





1 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users