Bally Home Library Computer Bally Professional Arcade Bally Computer System Astrocade |
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Announced: October 1977
Available: Some time in 1978
Prices: US299ドル.95
CPU: Zilog Z-80 @ 3.579 MHz
Memory: 8K RAM, 4K ROM in carts
Display: TV channel 3 or 4
160x102 graphics, 4 colors out of 256
Storage: audio cassette with BASIC cart
Ports: 4 joystick ports, 1 system bus
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The
Bally Home Library Computer was announced by
Bally in 1977. It was only home video game or computer system that they ever released.
Bally has long history in the entertainment industry, from pinball machines and gambling in the 1930s, to the 1970s when they acquired
Midway Manufacturing, an amusement game company which focused on arcade video games. Midway obtained the licenses for three of the most popular
video games of all time:
Space Invaders,
Pac-Man, and
Ms. Pac-Man, and
Bally placed 60,000 coin-operated
Space Invaders
machines around the country.
At around the same time,
Bally made an entry into the growing market for home computer games. In late 1977 they announced their
Bally Home Library Computer
- a home computer and game system created by their Midway Games division.
Bally decided that the only outlet for their system was to be "JS&A"
(link) -
a Chicago-based mail-order company that introduced and market high-technology, high ticket items. The new
Bally Library Computer provided more
entertainment and services than man has ever dreamed possible from a single consumer product (their words, not mine).
The system proved to be in-demand - JS&A received over 8,000 orders for the
Bally Home Library Computer,
but due to production delays,
Bally couldn't deliver - no systems shipped during 1977.
Eventually the production issues were straightened out, and in early 1978 the system was available in computer stores, while JS&A was phased-out.
The system is now named the
Bally Professional Arcade.
The Bally is definitely a home video game system, it even has three games built-in - Gunfight, Checkmate, Scribbling, as well as Calculator -
but is it a computer? Yes - the BASIC programming cartridge was released in August, 1978. This ROM cartridge contains a version of
Dr. Wang's Palo Alto
Tiny Basic, and a full-size keyboard add-on module was promised.
In 1980, deciding to focus on casino and stand-alone video arcade machines,
Bally sold their Consumer Products Division to
AstroVision, Inc.,
a Columbus-based company that controls E. F. Johnson, the CB two-way radio manufacturer. Johnson had been constructing the Bally motherboard for some
time under subcontract. The system is relaunched as the
Bally Computer System
At the outset of 1982,
AstroVision's right to use the Bally trademark expired, so they changed the company name to
Astrocade. The computer system was also
renamed as the
Astrocade, but Astrocade, the company, eventually ran into financial difficulties, and filed for "chapter 11" in 1984,
and the long history of the Bally system came to a close.
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