Difference between revisions of "Discrete logic arcade games"

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'''Discrete logic arcade games''' are the earliest form of what we would recognize as the modern video game. By using a cathode ray tube (CRT) TV display and a small number of logic gates rather than a full CPU, the ability of manufacturers such as Sega to produce arcade cabinets for a reasonable price in the mid to late 1970s was achieved. A discrete logic chip contains one logic gate or a small number of logic gates. Although thousands of gates are routinely placed on a single chip, discrete logic chips with only one or two gates are also manufactured. These chips are used today as "glue chips" between application-specific integrated circuits and other integrated circuits typically to reshape and transfer signals.
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'''Discrete logic arcade games''' are the earliest form of what we would recognize as the modern video game. By using a cathode ray tube (CRT) TV display and a small number of logic gates rather than a full CPU, the ability of manufacturers such as Sega to produce arcade cabinets for a reasonable price in the 1970s was achieved. A discrete logic chip contains one logic gate or a small number of logic gates. Although thousands of gates are routinely placed on a single chip, discrete logic chips with only one or two gates are also manufactured. These chips are used today as "glue chips" between application-specific integrated circuits and other integrated circuits typically to reshape and transfer signals.
  
 
Today, many discrete logic arcade games have been dumped and are available for play on emulators.
 
Today, many discrete logic arcade games have been dumped and are available for play on emulators.
  
 
[[Category:Pre-System 1 arcade systems]]
 
[[Category:Pre-System 1 arcade systems]]
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[[Category:Arcade systems]]

Latest revision as of 23:43, 26 November 2024

Discrete logic arcade games are the earliest form of what we would recognize as the modern video game. By using a cathode ray tube (CRT) TV display and a small number of logic gates rather than a full CPU, the ability of manufacturers such as Sega to produce arcade cabinets for a reasonable price in the 1970s was achieved. A discrete logic chip contains one logic gate or a small number of logic gates. Although thousands of gates are routinely placed on a single chip, discrete logic chips with only one or two gates are also manufactured. These chips are used today as "glue chips" between application-specific integrated circuits and other integrated circuits typically to reshape and transfer signals.

Today, many discrete logic arcade games have been dumped and are available for play on emulators.