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  2. Japan Amusement Machine and Marketing Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japan_Amusement_Machine...

    This resulted in most arcade games in Japan (outside racing and gun shooting games that required deluxe cabinets) to be sold as conversion kits consisting of nothing more than a PCB, play instructions and an operator's manual. The JAMMA standard uses a 56-pin edge connector on the board with inputs and outputs common to most video games. These ...

  3. Arcade cabinet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arcade_cabinet

    An arcade cabinet, also known as an arcade machine or a coin-op cabinet or coin-op machine, is the housing within which an arcade game's electronic hardware resides. Most cabinets designed since the mid-1980s conform to the Japanese Amusement Machine Manufacturers Association (JAMMA) wiring standard. [ 1 ]

  4. Kick harness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kick_harness

    The kick harness, also known as the extra harness or plus harness, is a set of additional connectors that allow arcade PCBs to have extra inputs beyond what the JAMMA wiring standard allows. A typical JAMMA PCB supports only 1 joystick and 3 buttons each for 2 players. JAMMA boards that require this extra harness are referred to as JAMMA+ or ...

  5. exA-Arcadia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ExA-Arcadia

    The exA-Arcadia originally launched as a JVS conversion kit for existing coin-operated arcade cabinets. With its games stored on self-contained solid state media cartridges, a game cabinet can easily be changed to a different game title by swapping the game's cartridge and cabinet artwork.

  6. Cyberball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyberball

    Kit to upgrade Nintendo Dual System cabinet to Tournament Cyberball 2072; Kit to upgrade 2-player JAMMA cabinets to Cyberball 2072; Note, the conversion kit for the original Cyberball cabinet required a technician to modify the original game PCB by adding several jumper wires as well as a ROM daughter board. Other conversion kits included a ...

  7. 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). Construction is usually of metal and plastic, with wood also being used in earlier cabinets.

  8. List of Sega arcade system boards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Sega_arcade_system...

    Head On 2 (1979) [10] G80 [11] [12] Introduced arcade conversion kits where games could be changed in 15 minutes via a card cage housed in game cabinet with six PC boards; kits were sold as Convert-a-Game paks or ConvertaPaks [13] Color display [13] Capable of raster and vector graphics [14] Possessed the world's first color X-Y video system [14]

  9. Video game conversion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_game_conversion

    (1982) by Universal was the first hit arcade game sold as a conversion kit. [5] [6] After the golden age of arcade video games came to an end circa 1983, the arcade video game industry began recovering circa 1985 with the arrival of software conversion kit systems, such as Sega's Convert-a-Game system, the Atari System 1, and the Nintendo VS.