Odyssey²: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 21:56, 11 December 2016
The Odyssey2 was Magnavox's successor to the Odyssey. Unlike the Odyssey, and like later consoles such as the Atari 2600, it had a CPU, and was fully programmable. It was released in 1978, after the 2600, and was technically inferior to it. The Odyssey2 had a couple of unique features, though: a keyboard, making it somewhere between a console and a computer, and a speech synthesis unit.
Known outside the United States as the Philips Videopac G7000 or the Philips Odyssey.
Specifications
Processors
- CPU: Intel 8048, 5.37 MHz
- Graphics and sound: Intel 8244
Memory
- 64 bytes system RAM
- 128 bytes audio/video RAM
Display
- 160×200 resolution
- 16 colors
- Four sprites
Sound
- Noise generator
- Speech synthesis unit available
Games
- Atlantis
- Demon Attack
- Frogger
- K. C. Munchkin!—a game just enough like the original Pac-Man that Atari sued to get it off the market
- K.C.'s Krazy Chase!
- The Master Strategy series, board/video game hybrids
- Conquest Of The World
- Quest For The Rings!
- The Great Wall Street Fortune Hunt
- Popeye
- Q*bert
- Super Cobra