The First Generation in the context of video game consoles refers to the period of time from 1972 to
1980. This period is defined by the release of first generation video game consoles, beginning with the
Magnavox Odyssey in 1972 and ending with the release of Nintendo's final Color TV-Game system in 1980.
First generation consoles were defined by their technical capabilities: most only had the ability to
draw
a few simple geometric shapes on a TV screen, which were typically not in color. Unlike future
generations, first generation consoles had their games physically built into the circuitry of the system
itself, and were therefore usually only capable of playing a single game per console. First generation
technology would eventually be surpassed in 1976 with the invention of microprocessor based consoles
capable of running games from ROM cartridges. This innovation marked the beginning of
the second generation of video game consoles, although consoles operating off of first generation
technology continued to be produced for a few years after.
The Magnavox Odyssey
Made by Magnavox
Released: 1972
Price: $99.95
Sold: 350,000
The Magnavox Odyssey was the first video game console ever created. It possessed the ability to draw
three dots and one line to a TV screen and came with swappable game cartridges.
For more information about the Odyssey, check out OdysseyNow.
Atari's Home Pong
Made by Atari
Released: 1975
Price: $98.95
Sold: >500,000
Home Pong only contained a single game, based on the popular arcade game Pong. Its success
would
usher in a wave of copycat consoles by prospective console developers across the world.
Coleco Telstar
Made by Coleco
Released: 1976
Price: $50
Sold: >1,000,000
Coleco's Telstar series of consoles originally began as a Pong clone before branching off into other
games. What it lacked in innovation, however, it made up for in affordability, leading to very high
sales.
Color TV-Game
Made by Nintendo
Released: 1977
Price: $36-62
Sold: 3,000,000
Nintendo's first ever console, the Color TV-Game series was only ever released in Japan, but despite
this
it was still the highest selling console of the first generation. The first units featured full
colored
versions of Pong with adjustable settings.
Odyssey Series
Made by Magnavox
Released: 1975
Price: $100 (roughly)
Sold: 1,200,000
While the original Magnavox Odyssey was relatively successful, it was expensive to produce and not
very
profitable. The Odyssey series was a line of derivative consoles which simplified the design of the
original Odyssey to make it cheaper to manufacture.
Other first-gen consoles:
- 1974 - Ping-O-Tronic
- 1974 - VideoSport MK2
- 1975 - TV Tennis Electrotennis
- 1976 - Philips Odyssey series
- 1976 - APF TV Fun series
- 1976 - Tele-Games Speedway IV
- 1977 - Telescore 750
- 1977 - TV Game System 10
- 1978 - Epoch TV Baseball
and more...