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1972 marked an important landmark in the history of the video game industry with the releases of Pong and the Odyssey home console. The profile of electronic games rose substantially and companies began exploring the distribution of video games on a larger scale. Important mainframe computer games were created in this period which became the basis for early microcomputer games.

EventsEdit

  • 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.<ref name="Agreed Statement of Facts v Chicago2">Template:Cite news</ref>
  • June 26 – Bally Manufacturing formalizes an agreement with Nolan Bushnell for the creation of one video game and one pinball table for Bally. Bushnell later describes the creation of a hockey game.<ref name="Agreed Statement of Facts v Chicago23">Template:Cite news</ref> The term “video amusement game” is used by Bushnell – one of the earliest instances of the phrase “video game” in print.<ref name="Agreed Statement of Facts v Chicago22">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • 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, Massachusetts for the third consecutive year.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
  • 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 as the only two video games on the show floor.
  • September 22 – Felipe Mor Pérez, head of research and development at Inter Electrónica, registered the trademark "Odyssey" in Spain, describing it as an "electronic toy." This led to the development of the Overkal, a Spanish clone of the Odyssey.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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Financial performanceEdit

United StatesEdit

ArcadeEdit

Title Arcade cabinet units (Lifetime) Manufacturer Developer Genre
Pong 8,000<<ref name=":03">Template:Cite book</ref>

8,000Template:SfnTemplate:Refn

Atari Inc. Atari Inc. Sports

Home consolesEdit

Title Game console units (1972) Manufacturer Developer
Odyssey 69,000*<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

80,000Template:SfnTemplate:Refn

Magnavox Co. Sanders Associates/Magnavox

(*) Indicates a sales number given by official company sources.

Notable releasesEdit

PublicationsEdit

GamesEdit

ArcadeEdit

  • March – The second unit of Galaxy Game is placed at the Tresidder Student Union at Stanford University. This version features two fiberglass cabinets with two players each, which can be linked to create a four-player game.Template:Sfn
  • October – Coin-operated games company For-Play Manufacturing in California releases Star Trek (1972) – a presumed clone of Nutting Associates’ Computer Space.Template:Sfn
  • 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.

ComputerEdit

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HardwareEdit

ConsolesEdit

  • 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.Template:Sfn

BusinessEdit

NotesEdit

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See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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Template:History of video games