Electronic Games
By: Jordan Jackson-Hill
Introduction
The Technology Behind It
Electronic games are operated by a small computer called a microprocessor. The microprocessor runs a program, or set of instructions, that controls what appears on the screen and what sounds the game makes. Home video game consoles are hooked up to a television set for display. A computer displays games directly on its screen. Games are stored on special cartridges, compact discs (CDs), or digital video discs (DVDs). The games with the most advanced graphics and sound are on DVDs, which can hold the most data. The player usually operates the game with a lever called a joystick or with buttons on a control pad.
Educational and Therapeutic Applications
Though electronic games are primarily a form of entertainment, some also are valuable educational tools. Some schools use games to familiarize children with computers and to teach language, mathematics, reading, science, and other subjects. Video game simulators are used for driving and flight instruction and to train emergency personnel in responding to such crises as natural disasters and terrorist attacks. The U.S. military uses video games for combat training.
Electronic games also have therapeutic uses. Psychologists have used games to treat children and adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD. Playing games helps ADHD patients to keep their minds focused on a task. Some therapists use games to treat people with brain injuries or learning disabilities. One game allows cancer patients to destroy harmful cells and shield themselves from the effects of chemotherapy.
History
Arcade Games
The first arcade game was Computer Space, a coin-operated version of Spacewar! that was released in 1971. Although the game was a commercial failure, its creator, Nolan Bushnell, founded the Atari Corporation in 1972 to develop new arcade games. Atari’s first release was Pong, a simple game based on Ping-Pong. It was an immediate success. Atari began manufacturing arcade consoles in volume, creating a new industry while also attracting competitors.
The arcade industry exploded in 1978 with the introduction of Space Invaders. The game was so popular in Japan that it caused a shortage of the coins used to play it. Space Invaders also spurred the development of video arcades all over the United States and in other countries. It was followed by a series of other hugely popular games, including Asteroids, Defender, Missile Command, Centipede, Donkey Kong, and electronic versions of sports and card games. The most successful arcade game of all time was Pac-Man, which was released in 1980. It quickly became an international phenomenon, with more than 100,000 consoles sold in the United States alone.
Early Home Video Consoles
Computer Games
One factor in the decline of home video consoles was competition from computer games. Computers offered users the advantage of doing much more than playing games. They offered game developers enhanced memory, speed, and display capabilities, allowing the creation of more complex games.
The new games introduced “virtual spaces” that players explored by inputting simple text commands—such as room numbers or coordinates—with their keyboards. The prototype for text-based narrative games was Adventure, in which players wandered through a dungeon to collect items and defeat monsters. Written in the mid-1970s, Adventure was limited to large, university-based shared computers. But as personal computers (PCs) became widespread in the 1980s, similar games became available for the home. The popular Zork series was inspired directly by Adventure.
Return of Video Consoles
Two Japanese manufacturers of arcade games, Nintendo and Sega, revived the home video game industry in the second half of the 1980s. The Nintendo Entertainment System (1985) and the Sega Genesis (1989) had graphics that equaled or exceeded the capabilities of personal computers. More important, Nintendo introduced storage cartridges that enabled players to save games in progress. Games such as Nintendo’s Super Mario Brothers and The Legend of Zelda used this capability to provide deeper, more dynamic worlds. In 1989 Nintendo built on its success by releasing a handheld game system called Game Boy. More units of Game Boy, continued by the Game Boy Advance in 2001, have been sold than any other game device.
The next generation of video game consoles, including Sony Corporation’s PlayStation 2 (2000), Nintendo’s GameCube (2001), and the Microsoft Corporation’s Xbox (2001), was defined primarily by superior technology, especially graphics. Later consoles were distinguished by wireless controllers and their ability to communicate with the Internet. For example, the Nintendo Wii (2006) had wireless, motion-sensing controllers that resembled a television remote. The controllers could sense a player’s actions—for example, swinging at a baseball or aiming at an enemy—and send them to the console.