Computer Space: Difference between revisions
From Videogame Morgue File
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1972-11-04 Cash Box pg 55 08.png|(1972) | 1972-11-04 Cash Box pg 55 08.png|(1972) | ||
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== Game credits == | |||
{{Credits begin}} | |||
{{Credits line|Game Designer, Hardware Designer = Nolan Bushnell}} | |||
{{Credits line|Hardware Designer, Sound Engineer = Ted Dabney}} | |||
{{Credits line|Technician = Steve Bristow}} | |||
{{Credits end}} | |||
== Histories == | == Histories == |
Revision as of 21:31, 2 March 2023
Previews[edit]
Announcement[edit]
Advertisement[edit]
Ad Pages[edit]
Flyers[edit]
Production[edit]
Articles[edit]
Game credits[edit]
- Game Designer, Hardware Designer
- Nolan Bushnell
- Hardware Designer, Sound Engineer
- Ted Dabney
- Technician
- Steve Bristow
Histories[edit]
- Computer Space and the Dawn of the Arcade Video Game by Benj Edwards.
- Pixels in Print (Part 1): Advertising Computer Space by Kate Willaert covering the advertising context of the original game.
- Nolan Versus Ted: Part 1 by Alex Smith. A historiological discussion of the work done on Computer Space by the two partners.
- Worldly Wednesdays: A Timeline of Computer Space by Alex Smith. An attempt to use existing documentation to sort out when parts of the game were conceived and built.
Interviews[edit]
- https://amhistory.si.edu/archives/AC1498_Transcript_NolanBushnell.pdf — Nolan Bushnell oral history conducted by Christopher Weaver, working with the Smithsonian Institution's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation (November 17th, 2017).
- https://amhistory.si.edu/archives/AC1498_Transcript_TedDabney.pdf — Ted Dabney oral history conducted by Christopher Weaver, working with the Smithsonian Institution's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation (March 15th, 2018).
Books[edit]
- Video Invaders by Steve Bloom
- Atari Inc: Business is Fun by Curt Vendel and Marty Goldberg.
Other Information[edit]
- http://www.computerspacefan.com/SN9003large.htm — Information on the white variation of Computer Space, claimed to be one of the original four production units.