Pong
This article is about the video game. For the drinking game, see Dartmouth pong. |
Pong helped bring computerized video games into everyday life. |
Pong is a
video game based on
ping-pong, released by
Atari on
November 29 1972. It is the first video game to win widespread popularity, in both its
arcade and
home console versions.
Its creators were the first to recognize that technology had evolved sufficiently to make such a game possible. Displaying graphics on a video or television screen and reacting in real time to user input required more computer power than 1960s consumer products could afford. Even in 1970, the computing power of a modern
cell phone would have required a
mainframe computer the size of a small apartment.
However, by drawing only two lines for paddles, a line for the net and a square for the ball,
Pong was playable as a graphical game on the technology of the early 1970s and could soon be sold as units to consumers.
PONG is a basic simulation of the
racket sport of
table tennis. A small square representing a
ping pong ball travels across the screen in a
linear trajectory. If the square strikes the perimeter of the
playing field, or one of the simulated paddles, the square
ricochets based on the
angle of the
impact.
Game play consists of players moving their respective paddles vertically to defend their
scoring zones. Players score one point by maneuvering the square past their opponent's paddle.
PONG can be played either by a single player pitted against a computerized
opponent, or by two players each controlling a paddle. In Atari's original
PONG arcade cabinets, players controlled their paddles using one of two small
paddle controllers (a
knob-like
input device). By contrast, several of the derivative table tennis simulations employed longitudinally-sliding
joysticks.
While not the first electronic game, the earliest form of an electronic ping-pong game dates back as a game played on an
oscilloscope, by
William A. Higinbotham at the
Brookhaven National Laboratory in 1958. His game was titled
Tennis for Two.
In 1966,
Ralph Baer, then working for
Sanders Associates, made a design for running simple computer games over a television set. His ideas were
patented, and he created a game resembling
PONG proper, except with slightly more complex controls. In 1970, Baer demonstrated his video game system to corporate heads at
Magnavox, who became convinced that such a device would help sell more Magnavox television sets. Magnavox and Sanders Associates joined forces, with Baer and his patents at the center, to develop a stand-alone unit called the Odyssey 1TL200 to be sold to consumers for use in the home.
In the spring of 1972, the
Magnavox Odyssey system was on display at a demonstration in
Burlingame, California where
Nolan Bushnell played the Odyssey's ping-pong game for the first time. Soon afterwards Nolan and a friend formed a new company,
Atari. Nolan envisioned creating a driving game for arcades. He hired an electronic engineer,
Al Alcorn, fresh out of college. Concerned that the game he envisioned would be too complex for his new employee, Nolan first directed him to build a
ping-pong game. The game Alcorn created was so fun that Nolan decided to go ahead and market it. Since the name
Ping-Pong was already
trademarked, they settled on simply calling it
PONG.
Atari had not been envisioned as a manufacturer but only a developer of
arcade games. So Nolan set about demonstrating his new game to several amusement manufacturers. Initially, there was little interest in the product, primarily because the unit had not undergone a field test. Soon before departing on a trip to Chicago (Nolan had appointments scheduled with
pinball makers
Williams and
Bally/Midway), he and Alcorn rigged a coin switch to the unit for a location test.
The system was initially tested in a small bar in
Grass Valley, California and Andy Capp's Tavern, a bar in
Sunnyvale, California. Within a day, the game's popularity had grown to the point where people lined up outside the bar waiting for the place to open.
Before long, the unit broke down, and the bar's owner called Alcorn at home to have him remove the game. When he opened the unit to start a game, he quickly discovered the problem - the milk carton placed inside to catch the coins was overflowing with
quarters to the point that the coin switch was jammed. Alcorn immediately called Bushnell in Chicago to tell him about the game's outstanding success, and Nolan decided they should manufacture
PONG themselves.
Two weeks later, Magnavox learned of
PONG, and notified Atari that they already had a patent on the concept. The two companies went to court. Magnavox was able to produce witnesses who had seen Nolan playing the
Odyssey's ping-pong game, and they had a guestbook from the event which Nolan had signed. Magnavox and Atari eventually settled when Atari paid the television manufacturer $700,000 to license the patents.
|
Atari Super PONG, a refinement with more options |
The home version of
PONG was conceived in 1973 and designed by Al Alcorn, Bob Brown, and Harold Lee in 1975. Atari demonstrated the unit at the 1975 Summer
Consumer Electronics Show (CES). Because of the failure of the Odyssey (the unit was discontinued in 1974), retail outlets weren't interested by Atari's home console. These systems had on-screen digital scoring, something absent from other versions of
PONG.
However, soon after the show, Atari was contacted by Tom Quinn, sporting goods buyer for
Sears. Quinn met with Nolan Bushnell, and asked how many units Atari could produce in time for the holiday shopping season. Bushnell said they could probably produce 75,000. Quinn told them Sears wanted double that many units, and they would pay to boost production to that level. In return, Sears would be the exclusive seller of Atari
PONG.
Christmas 1975 was the most popular season for
PONG, with customers lined up outside Sears, waiting for shipments to arrive. That season's popularity caught the attention of
Al Franken and
Tom Davis during
Saturday Night Live's first year; the comedy duo wrote and voiced several segments for
SNL in which no actors were visible; all viewers saw was an active Pong game display, looking just like it would if they were playing the game themselves. As the game proceeded, Franken and Davis would talk to each other as friends, commenting only occasionally about the game itself (though the conversation of the players clearly had an occasional detrimental impact on their game skills).
By 1977 the coin-op arcade version of Pong had become so popular that it was copied by other manufacturers until the market was overrun with cloned machines. The flooded market could not absorb more Pong systems and the resulting "crash" in demand contributed to Fairchild's decision to exit the market.
By the end of March 1983, Atari had sold between 8,000 to 10,000 coin-operated
PONG systems.
Many versions of
PONG were released, including
Pong Doubles (a four-player
PONG),
Quadrapong (also four-player) and
Doctor Pong. Aside from Atari's arcade units, there was a slew of
PONG clones as well. In their rush to market, Atari did not wait to file for copyrights or patents on their unit. Despite Atari's success, only one in five
PONG style games in arcades were actually made by them. To reduce this problem, Atari purposely mismarked the chips in genuine Pong units to confuse anyone who tried to clone one.
The
PONG systems remained popular in the
US until the late 1970s and in
Europe until the early 1980s.
Ports
Beyond the home versions,
PONG has also been remade several times, including a version for
PlayStation. It has been included in the recent "
TV Games" collections, which are
console-on-a-chip systems that feature "classic" games from the
Atari 2600 era.
PONG also served as a source of inspiration for
Atari's game
Breakout (1976) which was itself updated successfully ten years later by
Taito under the name
Arkanoid.
Pong is available on Arcade Classics for the
Sega Genesis/Mega Drive.
The Original version (with Cabinet Art) and an updated version of Pong is available in the
Atari Anthology Video Game for the
Playstation 2 and the
Xbox.
The original Pong is challenging to faithfully
emulate because it uses
7400 chips and
discrete logic rather than a CPU for game logic.
Pong Kombat and its sequels are parodies of Pong based on the
Mortal Kombat series of video and arcade games.
Versions within other games and applications
Playable versions of Pong have also been included within other games:
*In the
Nintendo Famicom game based on
Kyoryuu Sentai ZyuRanger, one of the mini-games is a pong game with Daizyujin on the 1-Player side, and Dragon Caesar on the 2-Player/CPU side. Instead of scoring points, when the ball hits the scoring zone, the opponent loses energy.
Mortal Kombat II includes a hidden version which can be unlocked by playing a total of 250 battles (against human and computer opponents, combined).
Test Drive on the
PlayStation 2 and
Xbox features a Pong game during load times.
SingStar 80s on the PlayStation 2 includes a Pong variant using USB microphones as input devices. Players sing 'high' notes into the microphone to move their bat up, and 'low' notes to move their bat down.
Commander Keen (episodes 4, 5 and 6) includes a version of Pong called
Paddle War! selectable from the main menu.
Leisure Suit Larry: Magna Cum Laude on the PC includes a version in which the player controls both "paddles" which are in the shape of hands. The short middle "net" is in the shape of a penis. Every time the ball hits one of the paddles, the "net" grows; the object is to grow the net to the top of the screen, where it rings a bell and ends the game.
realMyst features a simple version of Pong as an
easter egg, hidden in the planetarium display on
Myst Island.
Emacs has a Pong
easter egg available by typing
Meta-x then
pong (or
tetris)
*The musical keyboards from
Kurzweil Music Systems (like the
K2600 or the
K2500) have a hidden Pong game that can be accessed if you type "Pong" while in search mode.
Super Spy Hunter has a pong clone that can be accessed by pointing the guns on the continue screen straight down and pressing start.
*
PONG-Story, the most comprehensive site about
PONG and its origins.
*
PONG article at The Dot Eaters, a history of
PONG and its development
*
The KLOV entry on PONG*
List of home Pong systems (in 1976
General Instruments released the
AY-3-8500 chip capable of running
PONG which led to an explosion of consumer consoles, a large number of which are listed on the site).
*
Open Directory Project:
Pong*
Human Pong on YouTubePlayable clones
*
Curveball 3D Pong that lets you "curve" the ball.
*
PONG! Free online version of
PONG.
*
Three superb Pong 3D games - windows & flash*
3D Pong Play online. The ball goes faster every time you hit it.
Open Directory Project:
Various playable clones of PONG*
Pong2Go - free online version of PONG*
Crazy Pong - free online version of PONG*
Deck Pong - free online version of PONG, with a difference*
WebSE Pong, a classic
Pong within a Macintosh System 7 Simulation.
*
fourPong - PONG with two balls and four paddles*
PongANI - an attempt to reconstruct classics
*
Pong Solo - Extreme Pong for the Pong Enthusiast!*
Guimp Pong - world's smallest pong game*
Pongmechanik, a mechanical
pong.
*
Pong Deluxe, a
Pong clone for
Symbian cell phones.
*
Pong Ultra, an open source
Pong clone.
*
Ultimate Ping*
DeskPong, a
Pong clone for
GDesklet*
PongBits, a simple flash-clone
*
KNCPong - Java based playable clone of pong.
*
Illuminate WinPong, and
NetPong*
Massively Multiplayer Pong, an
MMO Pong game where players' cursor positions collectively determine the position of the paddle
*
Plasma Pong A 2D Pong with the ability to inject plasma, create vaccums and shockwaves to influence the trajectory of the ball.
*
TONG - An open source game which combines the arcade classics Tetris and Pong. *DHTML Pong A simple browser-based Pong game in JavaScript and XHTML.The opening song to Frank Black's album Teenager of the Year is titled "What Ever Happened to Pong?" The lyrics tell a story of two brothers who scam older men by placing wagers on Pong competitions at bars.* History of computer and video games
In Britain the word "pong" is a slang term for Odour.
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