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Nürburgring 1

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1976 video game 1976 video game
Nürburgring 1
Developer(s)Dr. Reiner Foerst
Publisher(s)Dr. Reiner Foerst
Platform(s)Arcade
Release
  • DE: Spring 1976
Genre(s)Racing
Mode(s)Single-player

Nürburgring 1 is an arcade video game developed by Dr. Reiner Foerst and released 1976. It was first demonstrated at the German IMA show in Spring 1976. It is recognized as the world's earliest first-person racing video game and inspired the development of Atari, Inc.'s Night Driver.

Gameplay

The game's arcade cabinet contains a steering wheel, shifter, pedals, and other controls in the form of buttons. The player drives along a twisting roadway bordered by white guardrails. The lower portion of the screen shows the speedometer, mileage, and other indicators. The game counts crashes and punishes them with a time penalty. It ends after 90 seconds or after driving across the finish line.

Development

The game was created by Dr. Foerst not out of a desire to develop a video game, but in order to make a working driving simulation. Unable to find a way to cheaply scale down the earliest driving simulators by Volkswagen and BP, he decided to build one based on the technology he found inside a Pong video game machine. The resulting arcade game has no CPU and contains 28 separate circuit boards.

Legacy

Dave Shepperd, a programmer at Atari, Inc., saw a picture of the arcade cabinet in a flyer that had a small portion of the screen visible, which inspired him to create Night Driver. Atari was able to miniaturize the game to a single board and ultimately capitalized on Nürburgring 1 while that game remained largely unknown.

Several other versions of Nürburgring 1 were created. The second installment in the series has motorcycle handlebars, while the third is in full color with selectable backgrounds. Other versions of the third game in the series have cabinets that swivel back and forth on a turntable, as well as bank back and forth.

References

  1. ^ "Sexton Star of MOA Seminar: Video". Play Meter. Vol. 2, no. 14. December 1976. pp. 20-26 (23-6).
  2. ^ Torchinsky, Jason. "Meet The Doctor-Engineer Who Basically Invented The Modern Racing Game". Jalopnik. Retrieved 2017-07-29.
  3. Stuart, Keith (2017-05-26). "The 10 most influential driving games – in pictures". the Guardian. Retrieved 2017-07-29.
  4. ^ (c)2000..2007, CYBERYOGI Christian Oliver(=CO=) Windler. "Reiner Foerst's Nürburgring - The world first 3D arcade car race game, made in Germany!". weltenschule.de. Retrieved 2017-07-29.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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