Events
Maze War, one of the earliest first-person shooters, was ported to a number of computer systems. The above image was created from a version of the game written for the Xerox Star 8010 in 1985.
Notable releases
- Play Meter, the first magazine devoted to coin-operated amusements (including arcade games), publishes its first issue.1
- Magnavox reissues the Odyssey and releases it in Australia, Belgium, the United Kingdom, France, West Germany, Greece, Israel, Italy, Switzerland, the Soviet Union, and Venezuela.3
- Prior to their acquisition by Atari, Kee Games releases Tank to video arcades.1
- Atari releases Gran Trak 10, the first racing game, to video arcades.4
- The earliest first-person shooter video games are released:
- Rusty Rutherford develops pedit5, the first dungeon crawl game, for the PLATO system.7
- Gary Whisenhunt and Ray Wood develop dnd, the first game with a Boss, and arguably the first computer role-playing game, for the PLATO system.8. Development continued into 1975; it is unclear at what point the game became playable.
References
- ^ a b c d e f g Thomas, Donald A. Jr. (2005). "–1974–". ICWhen.com. Retrieved on 16 February, 2006.
- ^ Kaiser, Robert D. (1999). "The Ultimate Odyssey2 and Odyssey3 FAQ" (text). Retrieved on 16 February, 2006.
- ^ Gegan, Shaun and David Winter (2003). "Magnavox Odyssey FAQ version 2.9.1" (text). Retrieved on 16 February, 2006.
- ^ Cassidy, William (2003). "Hall of Fame / Gran Trak 10 and Sprint 2". GameSpy. Retrieved on 16 February, 2006.
- ^ "The Maze War 30 Year Retrospective". DigiBarn Games (2004). Retrieved on 16 February, 2006.
- ^ Bowery, Jim (2001). "Spasim (1974) The First First-Person-Shooter 3D Multiplayer Networked Game". Retrieved on 16 February, 2006.
- ^ "Hack and slash". Retrieved on 16 February, 2006.
- ^ Koster, Raph (February 17). "Online World Timeline". Raph Koster's Website. Retrieved on 2006.
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