Exidy

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Exidy was one of the largest creators of arcade video games during the early period of video games, from 1974 until at least 1986 (when Chiller was released. The company was founded by H.R."Pete" Kauffman. The name "Exidy" was a portmanteau of the words "Excellence in Dynamics."

Some of the notable games released by Exidy included Circus, Death Race, Star Fire, Venture, Pepper II, Mouse Trap, Targ, and Spectar. Star Fire was prominently featured in the 1980 film Midnight Madness, while Mouse Trap was the subject of a song on the 1982 Pac-Man Fever album.

Beginning in 1983, Exidy released a series of light gun games, the first and most well-known of which was Crossbow. These presented an unusual twist to the genre: the goal is to protect characters walking through the screen by shooting down bullets and other things which are trying to kill the characters. These games were also the first to feature fully digitized sound for all sound effects and music (more advanced than other games up until the 16-bit generation). Other "C" series games include Cheyenne, Combat, Crackshot, Clay Pigeon, and Chiller. Chief designer for these games was Larry Hutcherson.

Under the leadership of visionary Paul Terrell of Byte Shop fame, Exidy made a brief foray into the personal computer market, with the Exidy Sorcerer in 1978. The Sorcerer was a modified S-100 bus based machine, but lacked the internal expansion system common to other S-100 systems. It made do with an S-100 expansion card-edge that could connect to an S-100 expansion cage. The Sorcerer also featured an advanced (for the era) text display that was capable of 64 characters per line, when most systems supported only 40 characters. Oddly, the Sorcerer did not support sound, color, or in some respects, graphics, which seems at odds with the company's video game background; however the characters it displayed were programmable by the user. The system was never very popular in North America, but found a following in Australia and Europe, notably Belgium.
 
Source - Wikipedia

Timeline for Exidy :

Date Event
Aug 1980 News Article : Exidy withdraws from microcomputer market
Oct 1980 News Article : No exit for Exidy
Jan 1982 News Article : Sorcerer's magic way with words


Hardware Products

Exidy Sorcerer II

Exidy Sorcerer II
1978
The Sorcerer was one of the early home computer systems, released in 1978 by the videogame company, Exidy.

Manufacturer : Exidy
Type : Computer

Exidy S-100 Expansion Unit

Exidy S-100 Expansion Unit
1978
This expansion unit connected to the Exidy Sorcerer and provided six S-100 card slots.

Manufacturer : Exidy
Type : Peripheral

Exidy Sorcerer II

Exidy Sorcerer II
1978
THIS MODEL: Serial No. 06019-016R. With two disk drives. Kindly Donated by: Geoffrey John Rose...

Manufacturer : Exidy
Type : Computer

Exidy Display Disk Subsystem

Exidy Display Disk Subsystem
May 1980
Exidy Display Disk Unit Exidy Display/ Dual floppy disk had 616K bytes of formatted data storage on 5 V diskettes.

Manufacturer : Exidy
Type : Peripheral


Software Products

Gorf

Gorf
1981
...

Manufacturer : Colecovision
Type : Software - Game

Mouse Trap

Mouse Trap
1981
...

Manufacturer : Colecovision
Type : Software - Game

Venture

Venture
1981
...

Manufacturer : CBS
Type : Software - Game

Pepper II

Pepper II
1983
...

Manufacturer : CBS
Type : Software - Game


Magazine Articles About Exidy

 

Exidy

 

 

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