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· Download Worm Car and enjoy it on your iPhone, iPad and iPod touch ... Draw & Ride! Games. Ride Master: Car Building Game. Games


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Video games today can be a number of things: dizzying franchises full of complex world-building, inspiration for popular movies or TV shows, or even examples of borderline abstract art from passionate indie developers. Whether you’re a gamer or not, you can likely picture something for each of those: your Marios, your Final Fantasies, your surprisingly dramatic clips of The Last of Us cutscenes.
That’s because video games have long been established as a popular (and profitable) pastime for people the world over. Since the early 1970s, gaming has seen big changes with each new console generation. Track the biggest innovations and cultural moments with this timeline on the evolution of gaming.

Humble origins: Early days of gaming

Pong: It doesn’t get much simpler than a game about bouncing a small white dot between two paddles against an all-black screen. Released in 1972, this table-tennis arcade game was manufactured and released by Atari – which would go on to dominate the video game and arcade scene until the early 80s.

This is the first big upward trajectory of gaming, but the origins of gaming go back a bit further: the first game machine, the Nimatron (based on the ancient math game Nim), was showcased at the New York World’s Fair in 1940 (!).

Sometime after that – but before the days of Atari – Ralph Baer earned the nickname “Father of Gaming” by developing the Brown Box gaming system. This was later released as the Magnavox Odyssey in 1972 (followed closely by Atari a few months later).

Console wars and the rise of gaming systems

The 70s and 80s saw the slow but steady spread of home gaming systems – as well as the rapid spread of arcade machines in places like bars and bowling alleys. The Atari 2600 and Nintendo NES (released in the late 70s and early 80s, respectively) were the big names at the time, but competitive sales and marketing campaigns were just past the horizon – and these concepts would speed things up in the world of gaming.

Atari had Space Invaders, which came out in 1978 and ignited the spark of competitive gaming and high scores in arcades all over. Nintendo had Donkey Kong, which debuted in 1981 and fueled the company’s rise to fame with an almost ridiculous number of sequels, spin-offs, merchandising opportunities, and the character Jumpman (who grew into a certain mustached, mushroom-eating, franchise-starring plumber we all know today).

As the gaming market grew, the biggest competition in gaming boiled down to Sega vs. Nintendo in the early 90s. Sega edged out an early win thanks to the success of the Sonic the Hedgehog franchise, but anyone who bet on that company would regret it. The brand saw its success die with the tragically short-lived Sega Genesis – and then collapse with the failure of the Sega Dreamcast.

The next big console war saw Microsoft jump into the arena with the Xbox in 1996. It joined the Nintendo GameCube and Sony’s PlayStation 2 in the mid-90s.







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