![]() It was same as the Odyssey 100 but with two additional chips from Texas Instruments, which added a third game called SMASH and some on-screen scoring. Magnavox released an improved version of the Odyssey 100: the Odyssey 200. The Odyssey 100 was very basic and didn't have the common features of the million-seller PONG systems of the next years. A switch selected the games, and the system was either powered by six batteries, or by an AC adaptor. It did not use cartridges and played two games: Tennis and Hockey. Released in 1975 in partnership with Sears stores, Sears would sell PONG under it's own specially created Tele-Games label. Since the PONG coin-op that Alan Alcorn designed was nothing more than the game board connected to an actual television set, he thought it would be possible to scale it down a bit and modify it for use at home. ![]() In 1973, after the success of the original PONG coin-op, an Atari engineer by the name of Harold Lee came up with the idea of a home PONG unit. The Odyssey and its variants also lack sound capability. Also, unlike any conventional console today, this system was powered by batteries. Unlike most video game consoles, the Odyssey is analog rather than digital. ![]() ![]() The Magnavox Odyssey is the first home video game console, released in May 1972, predating the Atari PONG home consoles by three years. 1.25 Super Nintendo Entertainment System (1991).1.22 Nintendo Entertainment System (1985). ![]()
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