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Encyclopedia > Philips Videopac G7400
The title given to this article is incorrect due to technical limitations. The correct title is Philips Videopac + G7400.
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Philips Videopac G7400 console

The Philips Videopac + G7400 was a video game console released in limited quantities in 1983, and only in Europe; an American release as the Odyssey³ Command Center was planned but never occurred. The G7400 was the successor to the Philips Videopac G7000, the European counterpart to the American Magnavox Odyssey². The system had 16 KB of both RAM and ROM and featured excellently tailored backround and foreground graphics.


The G7400 could play three types of games: all normal G7000 games, special G7000 games with additional high-res background graphics that would appear only when played on the G7400, and G7400-only games with high-res sprites and backgrounds.

Contents

Odyssey³

There were plans to release the G7400 in the United States as the Odyssey³ and later as the Odyssey³ Command Center; the system was demonstrated at the 1983 Consumer Electronics Show and some prototypes have been found. The Odyssey³ was never released, mostly because company executives concluded that it was not technologically advanced enough to compete in the marketplace. Also, the video game crash of 1983 ended all lingering hopes for a release.


The Odyssey³ was to feature a real mechanical keyboard, unlike the membrane keyboard found in the G7400 and Odyssey², as well as a built-in joystick holder for dual-joystick games. Prototypes for a 300 baud modem and a speech synthesizer are known to have been made, and a laserdisc interface was planned to allow even more advanced games.


Specifications

  • CPU: Intel 8048, 1.79 MHz
  • RAM: 16 KB
  • ROM: 16 KB
  • Display: 256x192x16
  • Audio: 1 channel, 8 sounds
  • Input / Output: RF modulator, joystick port(s), cartridge port
  • Expansion
    • The Voice - Speech synthesis unit, compatible with G7000
    • Chess Module - Increased the G7400's computing power such that it could play chess, also compatible with G7000
    • Home Computer Module - Similar to above, with the purpose of converting the G7400 into a "real" computer, not compatible with G7000

Emulation

The emulator O2EM allows G7400 games to be played on modern computers.


See also

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Philips Videopac + G7400 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (347 words)
The Philips Videopac + G7400 was a video game console released in limited quantities in 1983, and only in Europe; an American release as the Odyssey³ Command Center was planned but never occurred.
The G7400 was the successor to the Philips Videopac G7000, the European counterpart to the American Magnavox Odyssey².
There were plans to release the G7400 in the United States as the Odyssey³ and later as the Odyssey³ Command Center; the system was demonstrated at the 1983 Consumer Electronics Show and some prototypes have been found.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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