A brief history of video games (Part I) - Safwat Saleem
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Not SyncedHi, I'm Medium Invader
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Not Syncedfrom the classic video game Space Invaders,
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Not Syncedand I want to tell you a little bit
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Not Syncedabout where video games came from.
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Not SyncedA video game is an electronic game
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Not Syncedthat has an interface designed for human interaction
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Not Syncedon a video device.
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Not SyncedSimple.
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Not SyncedVideo games are used by scientists,
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Not Syncedthe military,
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Not Syncedand people like you,
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Not Syncedand their evolution has spread across arcades,
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Not Syncedconsoles,
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Not Syncedcomputers,
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Not Syncedsmart phones,
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Not Syncedand all kinds of other electronics.
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Not SyncedThese days video games are everywhere,
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Not Syncedbut they were actually made in science labs.
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Not SyncedIn fact, the earliest U.S. video game patent on record
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Not Syncedwas in 1948,
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Not Syncedand at the time it was referred to
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Not Syncedas a cathode-ray tube amusement device.
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Not SyncedThat's a mouthful!
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Not SyncedSome of the earliest video games include
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Not Syncedthe Nimrod computer,
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Not SyncedOXO,
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Not SyncedTennis for Two,
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Not Syncedand my personal favorite, Spacewar!
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Not SyncedBut none of these early video games
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Not Syncedwere ever sold to the public
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Not Syncedbecause there were either too huge
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Not Syncedor too expensive
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Not Syncedto get out of the lab.
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Not SyncedThis all changed when a man named Ralph Baer
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Not Syncedlooked at his television screen and wondered
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Not Syncedhow else it might be used.
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Not SyncedIn 1972, Baer's idea to get video games
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Not Syncedout of the science lab and into the living room
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Not Syncedled to the release of a game console
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Not Syncedcalled Odyssey.
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Not SyncedOdyssey allowed you to play a game on your TV.
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Not SyncedAt about the same time,
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Not Syncedtwo other people, Nolan Bushnell and Ted Dabney,
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Not Syncedwere working on something similar
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Not Syncedin a little company called Atari.
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Not SyncedYou might have heard of it,
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Not Syncedand even if you haven't,
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Not SyncedI'm sure that your Dad has.
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Not SyncedAtari's first major game release was in 1972,
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Not Syncedan arcade game called Pong.
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Not SyncedIt was an immediate hit,
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Not Syncedand it is credited
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Not Syncedas the first commercially successful video game.
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Not SyncedAtari then released a home version of Pong in 1974.
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Not SyncedBy 1978, competition between Atari
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Not Syncedand another game company called Midway
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Not Syncedwas heating up.
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Not SyncedMidway had licensed an arcade game
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Not Syncedfor the Japanese company, Taito,
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Not Syncedthat put them on the map.
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Not SyncedThe game: Space Invaders.
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Not SyncedIt featured iconic actors like me,
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Not Syncedand it went on to become
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Not Syncedthe second highest selling arcade game of all time.
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Not SyncedSpace Invaders also helped kick-off
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Not Syncedwhat is known as the Golden Age of Arcade Games.
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Not SyncedIn response, Atari followed
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Not Syncedwith the release of the arcade game Asteroids,
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Not Syncedwhich ranked sixth on the list
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Not Syncedof highest selling arcade games.
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Not SyncedIt was a good game,
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Not Syncedbut it's no Space Invaders.
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Not SyncedBy 1980, color came to arcade games,
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Not Syncedand this was also the year
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Not Syncedthat another video gaming milestone was born.
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Not SyncedPac-Man, created by the Japanese company Namco,
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Not Syncedwas brought to the U.S. by Midway.
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Not SyncedImportant to the spread
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Not Syncedof video games into popular culture,
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Not SyncedPac-Man was a character that could be licensed.
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Not SyncedIt wasn't long before it had a song on the charts,
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Not Synceda Saturday morning television show,
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Not Syncedand all sorts of other products.
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Not SyncedIn just a year, Pac-Man arcade games
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Not Syncedmade over one billion dollars in quarters.
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Not SyncedThen, in 1981, a company called Nintendo
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Not Syncedstarted making waves in the U.S. video game market
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Not Syncedwith their release of Donkey Kong.
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Not SyncedIt was the earliest video game
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Not Syncedto have a story line.
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Not SyncedThe story went a bit like this:
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Not SyncedDonkey Kong is the pet
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Not Syncedof a carpenter called Jumpman.
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Not SyncedJumpman mistreats his pet ape,
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Not Syncedso the ape steals his girlfriend,
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Not Syncedleaving the game player to assume the role
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Not Syncedof Jumpman and rescue the girl.
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Not SyncedJumpman was eventually renamed to Mario.
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Not SyncedOther iconic arcade games from the early 80s include
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Not SyncedFrogger,
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Not SyncedDragon's Lair,
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Not Syncedand Mario Brothers.
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Not SyncedPerhaps the last iconic game considered
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Not Syncedto be part of the Golden Age of Arcade Games
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Not Syncedis Double Dragon.
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Not SyncedIt was the first really successful example
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Not Syncedof the beat-them-up genre.
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Not SyncedIn was released in 1987,
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Not Syncedand, like Donkey Kong,
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Not Syncedit featured a damsel in distress storyline,
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Not Synceda storyline common in many video games.
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Not SyncedBy the mid-90s, the Golden Age of Arcade Games
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Not Syncedwas coming to an end,
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Not Syncedand the home game console
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Not Syncedwas gaining in popularity.
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Not SyncedWhile arcade games continued
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Not Syncedto decline in sales over the years,
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Not Syncedthe popularity of video games was merely beginning,
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Not Syncedand we'll talk about that
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Not Synceda lot more in part two
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Not Syncedof a brief history of video games.
- Title:
- A brief history of video games (Part I) - Safwat Saleem
- Description:
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View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/a-brief-history-of-video-games-part-i-safwat-saleem
Video games are everywhere these days, but where did they actually come from? The history of video games is a complicated story that involves giant computers in science labs, the founder of Chuck E. Cheese and billions of dollars in quarters. Safwat Saleem examines the evolution of the beloved world of gaming.
Lesson and animation by Safwat Saleem.
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
closed TED
- Project:
- TED-Ed
- Duration:
- 04:46
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Jessica Ruby approved English subtitles for A brief history of video games (Part I) - Safwat Saleem | |
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Jessica Ruby accepted English subtitles for A brief history of video games (Part I) - Safwat Saleem | |
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Jessica Ruby edited English subtitles for A brief history of video games (Part I) - Safwat Saleem | |
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Jessica Ruby edited English subtitles for A brief history of video games (Part I) - Safwat Saleem | |
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Andrea McDonough edited English subtitles for A brief history of video games (Part I) - Safwat Saleem | |
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Andrea McDonough edited English subtitles for A brief history of video games (Part I) - Safwat Saleem |