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  2. Arcade cabinet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arcade_cabinet

    Upright cabinets. Upright cabinets are the most common in North America, with their design heavily influenced by Computer Space and Pong.While the futuristic look of Computer Space 's outer fiberglass cabinet did not carry forward, both games did establish separating parts of the arcade machine for the cathode-ray tube (CRT) display, the game controllers, and the computer logic areas.

  3. Steel Talons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steel_Talons

    In Japan, Game Machine listed Steel Talons in its March 15, 1992 issue as the third most-successful upright arcade unit of the month. [ 17 ] Upon its AMOA 1991 debut, The One magazine compared the arcade game favorably with Taito 's 3D helicopter simulation Air Inferno (1990), stating that "Atari has gone even further, making it a lot easier to ...

  4. WEC Le Mans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WEC_Le_Mans

    WEC Le Mans deluxe arcade unit. Konami released three different video game arcade cabinet versions of the video arcade game, an upright machine, a 'mini' spin where the driver sat in a sit-down cockpit, and the 'big' spin version, the deluxe arcade version that would actually spin the gamer around a 360° spinning base, turning left or right depending on the corner.

  5. List of Japanese arcade cabinets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_arcade...

    This is a list of all known Japanese arcade cabinets, also known as "candy cabinets".. The majority are sitdown cabinets, with the occasional upright (Sega Swing, SNK MV25UP-0) and cocktail (Sega Aero Table).

  6. After Burner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/After_Burner

    After Burner [a] is a rail shooter arcade video game developed and released by Sega in 1987. [9] [10] The player controls an American F-14 Tomcat fighter jet and must clear each of the game's eighteen unique stages by destroying incoming enemies. The plane is equipped with a machine gun and a limited supply of heat-seeking missiles.

  7. Greyhound Electronics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greyhound_Electronics

    Greyhound's 1985 Video Trivia arcade game in various cabinets (clockwise from top left: upright, tabletop, countertop, and cocktail table) Among the company's first video arcade games in 1984 was a video poker machine available in floor-cabinet, swivel-mounted table and countertop table chassis. [10]

  8. TX-1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TX-1

    In Japan, it topped the Game Machine upright/cockpit arcade charts for about ten months, from September 1984, [16] through October, [17] [18] November [19] [20] and December, [21] up until July 1985. [22] Both TX-1 games topped the Game Machine upright/cockpit charts for a combined sixteen months between December 1983 and July 1985.

  9. GP Rider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GP_Rider

    GP Rider [a] is a motorcycle racing game developed and manufactured by Sega, released in as an arcade video game in Japan, North America and Europe. It came in a two-player motion simulator cabinet and a standard upright cabinet. [6] It was ported to the Master System in 1993 and then Game Gear in 1994.

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