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Mac
The Macintosh (Mac) line of personal computers is designed and developed by Apple, Inc. - formerly Apple Computer, Inc. It runs macOS, a Unix operating system. Its current version, macOS 13.4 "Ventura" was released on May 18, 2023.
Launched on January 31, 1984
Hosts 6362 games
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Casio PV-1000
The Casio PV-1000 was released in Japan in 1983. Only 15 games were produced.
Launched on October 31, 1983
Hosts 15 games
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Coleco Adam
The Coleco Adam is a standalone home computer as well as an expansion module released for the ColecoVision in October 1983. Several games were released that required an Adam-compatible devices.
Launched on October 01, 1983
Hosts 0 games
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Gakken Compact Vision TV Boy
The Compact Vision TV Boy is a game console developed by Gakken in 1983. Only six games were released.
Launched on October 01, 1983
Hosts 0 games
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Famicom Disk System
The Famicom Disk System was an add-on accessory for the Nintendo Entertainment System's Japanese counterpart. With its games coming on a floppy disk-like medium, many of its releases saw conversions to cartridges both overseas and within Japan.
Launched on July 31, 1983
Hosts 194 games
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Nintendo Entertainment System
The NES, also known as Famicom, launched in 1983 in Japan and 1985 in North America, where the video game industry was headed downhill due to a deluge of poor games and over-saturation. Nintendo's second home console became an enormous success, establishing consoles as a mainstream market in Japan and pulling the North American industry back to its feet.
Launched on July 15, 1983
Hosts 1416 games
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Sega SG-1000
Sega's first foray into home game consoles. Released in 1983 alongside its rival, the Famicom, the SG-1000 is an early third-generation home console and did not receive a worldwide release. It was later succeeded by the Sega Mark III, better known as the Sega Master System.
Launched on July 15, 1983
Hosts 67 games
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Bandai RX-78
The Bandai RX-78 is a home computer that was released in July 1983 in Japan for ¥59,800.
Launched on July 01, 1983
Hosts 0 games
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MSX
MSX is a standardized home computer architecture. It was popular in Japan, South Korea, Brazil, Netherlands, France, Spain, Finland, Arabian Gulf countries and former Soviet Union during the 1980s. Like the PC of today, the MSX computers were manufactured by many different companies.
Launched on June 16, 1983
Hosts 935 games
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Aquarius
Aquarius is a home computer made by Mattel. Released in June 1983, it was discontinued only a few months later in October 1983.
Launched on June 01, 1983
Hosts 16 games
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Casio PV-2000
The Casio PV-2000 was a gaming computer released by Casio in Japan in 1983. Only eleven games were released in its lifetime, and it is not compatible with Casio PV-1000 games.
Launched on May 01, 1983
Hosts 0 games
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Memotech MTX
The Memotech MTX is a series of British-developed home computers released in 1983 and 1984.
Launched on January 01, 1983
Hosts 0 games
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Mitsubishi Multi 8
The Mitsubishi Multi 8 is a home computer released in Japan in 1983. Several cartridge-based games were released for it.
Launched on January 01, 1983
Hosts 0 games
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Tomy Tutor
Tomy released the Tutor computer in 1982. It was primarily known in Japan, where it was launched as the Tomy Pyuuta.
Launched on December 31, 1982
Hosts 26 games
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Sony SMC-777
Many of Sony's SMC series of machines came with built-in genlocks for video production use, but games were also released on some of the different variants. It is also the first computer to utilize 3.5" diskettes.
Launched on December 31, 1982
Hosts 6 games
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VTech CreatiVision
A hybrid personal computer and video game console released in 1982.
Launched on December 01, 1982
Hosts 0 games
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Vectrex
The Vectrex was a short lived home video game system that used Vector graphics. It is often considered as one of the first home video gaming systems.
Launched on November 30, 1982
Hosts 24 games
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Adventure Vision
The Adventure Vision is a handheld video game console developed by Entex Industries in 1982.
Launched on November 01, 1982
Hosts 4 games
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Atari 5200
The Atari 5200 Supersystem was released in 1982, as a followup to the successful VCS/Atari 2600.
Launched on November 01, 1982
Hosts 96 games
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FM-7
The second in Fujitsu's FM line of computers, the FM-7 was intended more for the mass market, and received fair popularity in Japan.
Launched on November 01, 1982
Hosts 201 games
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NEC PC-9801
A 16/32-bit Japanese personal computer system launched by NEC in 1982. It was the most successful computer platform in Japan and one of the best-selling computer systems of the 20th century. It has a very large video game library with thousands of titles, the majority of which were never released outside Japan.
Launched on October 31, 1982
Hosts 449 games
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Oric
Oric was a series of computers produced by Tangerine Computer Systems between 1981 and 1986.
Launched on September 01, 1982
Hosts 0 games
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Commodore 64
The Commodore 64 personal computer dominated the market from 1983-1985, and stands as one of the best-selling personal computers of all time.
Launched on August 31, 1982
Hosts 2618 games
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ColecoVision
The ColecoVision came out in 1982 and had a successful run as the Atari 5200's competitor until 1984.
Launched on August 31, 1982
Hosts 129 games
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Dragon 32/64
The Dragon 32 and Dragon 64 is to date the only computer to be made in Wales, UK. The companies short history spanned only August 1982 - June 1984.
Launched on August 15, 1982
Hosts 137 games
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Sord M5
The Sord M5 is a home computer produced by the Sord Corporation in 1982.
Launched on May 01, 1982
Hosts 0 games
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ZX Spectrum
The ZX Spectrum is one of the most popular European computers of all time. Its software library is enormous and its fame in Europe rivals the Commodore 64 in the US.
Launched on April 20, 1982
Hosts 1953 games
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Arcadia 2001
Arcadia 2001 is an 8-bit console made by Emerson.
Launched on March 31, 1982
Hosts 21 games
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MicroBee
The MicroBee line of computers started with the release of a mail-order kit computer in 1982.
Launched on February 01, 1982
Hosts 1 games
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Sharp X1
The first in Sharp's X line of computers. It was the successor to the Sharp MZ, and was in turn succeeded by the Sharp X68000.
Launched on January 31, 1982
Hosts 158 games
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NEC PC-6001
The first in NEC's PC-6000 line of computers.
Launched on November 01, 1981
Hosts 99 games
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BBC Micro
Designed and built by Acorn Computers in 1981 as part of the BBC's Computer Literacy Project, the BBC Microcomputer System was notable for its rugged build quality, expandability and feature set. Several notable British developers started out making games for this system.
Launched on September 30, 1981
Hosts 193 games
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PC
The PC (Personal Computer) is a highly configurable and upgradable gaming platform that, among home systems, sports the widest variety of control methods, largest library of games, and cutting edge graphics and sound capabilities.
Launched on August 12, 1981
Hosts 27655 games
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Epoch Cassette Vision
A cartridge-based system released in Japan in 1981.
Launched on July 31, 1981
Hosts 11 games
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TI-99/4A
A home computer created by Texas Instruments and released in 1981. It was the first home console to feature a 16-bit processor and included a prototype plug-and-play serial bus similar to what would become known as USB.
Launched on June 30, 1981
Hosts 80 games
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Entex Select-A-Game
Entex's Select-A-Game is a handheld console that was released in 1981. Only six games were officially released before it was discontinued.
Launched on May 01, 1981
Hosts 0 games
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NEC PC-8801
This NEC computer was released in 1981 and is more commonly referred to as the PC-88.
Launched on January 31, 1981
Hosts 337 games
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TRS-80 CoCo
The Tandy TRS-80 Color Computer, affectionatly nicknamed CoCo, was a home computer launched in 1980. It had limited video and sound capabilites compared to its rivals, but was easy to program for and was produced in various incarnations until 1991.
Launched on December 31, 1980
Hosts 149 games
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TRS-80
The TRS-80 was a very popular early microcomputer with standout features such as a full keyboard, included monitor, impressive floating point BASIC programming language, and a $600 pricepoint.
Launched on October 01, 1980
Hosts 213 games
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VIC-20
An 8-bit computer produced by Commodore Electronics Ltd. Also known as the VIC-1001, it was the first microcomputer to sell one million units.
Launched on May 31, 1980
Hosts 155 games
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Intellivision
The Intellivision by Mattel Electronics was a system known for its unique controllers and cutting-edge graphics in the early 1980s, but it was ultimately overshadowed by the technically less powerful, Atari 2600.
Launched on December 01, 1979
Hosts 124 games
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Atari 8-bit
A line of 8-bit computers produced by Atari, Inc. from 1979 to 1992.
Launched on November 30, 1979
Hosts 740 games
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Microvision
The first gaming handheld, Surpisingly big but extremely rare.
Launched on November 05, 1979
Hosts 13 games
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Odyssey 2
The Odyssey 2 was Magnavox's second console, which competed with the Atari 2600 and Fairchild Channel F.
Launched on December 02, 1978
Hosts 65 games
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