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First and second generations of video game consoles

98 bytes added, 00:55, 25 May 2022
Second Generation (Cartridge Consoles): updated Pong links
==Second Generation (Cartridge Consoles)==
Best-selling game consoles: Atari 2600, Intellivision, Magnavox Odyssey², ColecoVision.
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:centerleft;"
! scope="col"|Name
! scope="col"|[[MAME]] support
|No
|
|Released in 1977, Coleco's first attempt at making a video game console was an odd one, a triangle console with triangle cartridges and each side of system had a different controller type. the The console itself dose not have a CPU built-in, instead, each cartridge had contained a custom chip based on the [[Dedicated Pong Consoles(Pong In A Chip)| MPS-7600-00x POCseries.]] inside   It's unknown how many units were sold or when itwas discontinued. Only four games were released for Telstar Arcade before being pulled off shelvesthe system.
|-
|[[wikipedia:Commodore MAX Machine|Commodore MAX Machine]]
|No
|
|Designed by Soundic and Released by many different companies, the PC-50x is a series of consoles is similar to Telstar Arcade, these systems has no built-in CPU and use cartridges that have a [[Dedicated Pong Consoles(Pong In A Chip)| POC]] inside. These system were first released in 1977 with only around 8 games were released in its lifetime.
|-
|[[Vectrex emulators|Vectrex]]<ref group=N name="vectrex">Clone: Spectrum I+ (1984. Roy Abel & Associates.).</ref>
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