Difference between revisions of "Game Cards"

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(Created page with "{{otherPage|desc=the Japanese payment system|page=Game Card}} {{stub}}'''{{PAGENAME}}''' was a concept invented by Sega/Gremlin in the early 1980s to supplement their arca...")
 
 
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{{stub}}'''{{PAGENAME}}''' was a concept invented by [[Sega/Gremlin]] in the early 1980s to supplement their arcade games. Operators would install card holders, either on the side of an arcade cabinet or on a wall, and Sega/Gremlin would provide foldable cards or leaflets containing tips on how to play their games.
 
{{stub}}'''{{PAGENAME}}''' was a concept invented by [[Sega/Gremlin]] in the early 1980s to supplement their arcade games. Operators would install card holders, either on the side of an arcade cabinet or on a wall, and Sega/Gremlin would provide foldable cards or leaflets containing tips on how to play their games.
  
Currently the only games known to have adopted this feature are ''[[Eliminator]]'', ''[[Astro Blaster]]'' and ''[[Pengo]]''.
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Currently the only games known to have adopted this feature are ''[[Eliminator]]'', ''[[Astro Blaster]]'', ''[[Pengo]]'' and ''[[Zaxxon]]''.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 11:44, 28 July 2023

For the Japanese payment system, see Game Card.

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Game Cards was a concept invented by Sega/Gremlin in the early 1980s to supplement their arcade games. Operators would install card holders, either on the side of an arcade cabinet or on a wall, and Sega/Gremlin would provide foldable cards or leaflets containing tips on how to play their games.

Currently the only games known to have adopted this feature are Eliminator, Astro Blaster, Pengo and Zaxxon.

References