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Pong Clock - # 283, signed by Sander Mulder

February 16, 2010

What's the score? The time. Our signed Pong Clock # 283.

 

As Pong randomly plays, the score shown is the time of day on this unusual timepiece by Sander Mulder / Buro Vormkrijgers. In the old school Pong you could put the paddles in such a position, that the ball kept bouncing forever.

 

Quite hypnotic, and it became the inspiration for this time-killer/clock. The release of the limited edition of 400 Pong Clocks created such a hype that it sold out in 1 day. We are happy to have Pong Clock #283 from the original owner Julian Brannigan, UK in the museum's collection. The Designer Sander Mulder  signed our Pong Clock in December 2009. See the photos here.


Zanussi - Ping-O-Tronic Advertisement

August 27, 2009

New in collection: original Zanussi Ping-O-Tronic and Gun-O-Tronic print advertisement from Italy.

 

Zanussi, a well known Italian furniture company, released two game systems: Ping-O-Tronic, an analog game first released in late 1974 but really successful during 1975, and Play-O-Tronic, an AY-3-8500 game released in 1977 (this particular model was also released by Universum in Germany). Zanussi obtained the Sanders Associates License Agreement on April 21st, 1975. Zanussi reported 21,514 Play-O-Tronic units sold between October 1st and December 31st, 1977 (3 months) for a total amount of 620,408,000 lire, on which a 5.5% royalty was paid to Sanders (34,122,440 lire). Considering this amount, each game would have cost around 28,800 lire during this period, which seems quite low. Unfortunately there is no similar information for Ping-O-Tronic.

 

Click on the pictures to get a bigger view.

 

More Info about the Zanussi Pong at pong-story.com

 


Kee Games, Tank, and Combat - by A. Kator & J. Legaz

August 21, 2009

Immediately after Pong’s release,

 

Atari was having problems with Pong clones selling better than Atari’s machines. Part of their problem was the coin-operated amusement industry distribution system, in which regional vendors had exclusive contracts.

 

If one provider carried Atari, others in the area could not. Everyone wanted a piece of the lucrative Pong action, and clones were the solution for non-Atari vendors. Read the complete Article.


Our Odyssey 200 is signed :-)

August 1, 2009

Mr. Ralph H. Baer, Inventor of Home Video Games and the Odyssey, signed our museum´s collectable in Berlin on July 29, 2009.

 

Mr. Baer visited Berlin to celebrate the online launch of the "History of Video Games Timeline" by Computerspiele Museum Berlin. See the photos here.

 

See the first 8 minutes of the keynote by Mr. Baer, a short introduction to the very first years of Video Games. Sorry for the sound - the PA was near to be defect.


New in the collection: Pong Clock # 283

June 29, 2009

Pong Clock # 283

What's the score? The time. As Pong randomly plays, the score shown is the time of day on this unusual timepiece by Buro Vormkrijgers.

 

The release of the limited edition of 400 Pong Clocks created such a hype in 2006 that it sold out in 1 day. We are happy to have Pong Clock #283 from the original owner Julian Brannigan, UK in the museum's collection.

 

Read more about the Pong Clock here.


Museum's Golden Book

June 19, 2009

Please read our Golden Book


HGS - TELESPORT - Model 4

May 29, 2009

HGS - TELESPORT
module based console,

 

compatible to Hanimex TVG 070 C. The control panel on the console is composed of 10 buttons to select the different games offered by each cartridge (10 being the maximum). Difficulty switches, power switch and a start button can also be found. 


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