- Entex Adventure Vision
infobox CVG system
manufacturer =Entex
type =Video game console
generation = Second generation
lifespan =1982
discontinue =1983 [cite book |last=Forster |first=Winnie |authorlink=Winnie Forster |title=The encyclopedia of consoles, handhelds & home computers 1972 - 2005 |year=2005 |publisher=GAMEPLAN |isbn=3-00-015359-4|pages=pp. 53]
CPU =Intel 8048 @ 733kHz
media =ROM cartridge
unitssold = 50,000 [cite book |last=Forster |first=Winnie |authorlink=Winnie Forster |title=The encyclopedia of consoles, handhelds & home computers 1972 - 2005 |year=2005 |publisher=GAMEPLAN |isbn=3-00-015359-4|pages=pp. 53] .The Adventure Vision is a self-contained (no external monitor is required) cartridge-basedvideo game console released byEntex Industries in1982 . The Adventure Vision was Entex's second generation system. Their first console was theEntex select-a-game , released a year earlier in 1981.Control is through a single multi-position
joystick and two sets of four buttons, one on each side of the joystick, for ease of play by both left- and right-handed players.An interesting feature of the Adventure Vision is its "monitor." Rather than using an LCD screen or an external
television set like other systems of the time, the Adventure Vision uses a single vertical line of 40 redLED s combined with a spinning mirror inside the casing. This allows for a screen resolution of 150 x 40pixels . Another product using this technique was produced byNintendo in the mid1990 s – the "Virtual Boy" – another product which, while technically ahead of its time like the Adventure Vision, was doomed to failure in the open market.The game cartridges can be stored in spaces on top of the case.
Drawbacks to the Adventure Vision are its
monochrome (red) screen as well as the mirror motor, which draws a great deal of power from the batteries. The latter problem can be solved easily by the use of the built-in AC adapter port.Many casual fans dismiss the Adventure Vision as a failed
handheld console . In fact, it was a tabletop console that was much too large and fragile to be used effectively for handheld purposes.Entex released four games for the Adventure Vision:
*"Defender", based on the
Williams Electronics arcade game of the same name
*"Super Cobra ", based on theKonami arcade game of the same name
*"Turtles", based on the Konami arcade game of the same name (similar to "Pac-Man ")
*"Space Force", a clone ofAtari 's "Asteroids" arcade gameTechnical specifications
* CPU:
Intel 8048 @ 733kHz
* Sound:National Semiconductor COP411L @ 52.6 kHz
* RAM: 64 bytes (internal to 8048), 1K (on main PCB)
* ROM: 1K (internal to 8048), 512 bytes (internal to COP411L), 4K (cartridge)
* Input: 4 direction joystick, 4 buttons duplicated on each side of the joystick
* Graphics: 150x40 monochrome pixelsExternal links
* [http://www.adventurevision.com/ AdventureVision.com]
References
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