Philips Videopac+ G7400
The Philips Videopac+ G7400 is a third-generation home video game console released in limited quantities in 1983, and only in Europe; an American release as the Odyssey³ Command Center was planned for the Odyssey series but never occurred. The G7400 was the successor to the Philips Videopac G7000, the European counterpart to the American Magnavox Odyssey². The system featured excellently tailored background 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.
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 it was not commercially feasible due to the video game crash of 1983.The Odyssey³ was to feature a real mechanical keyboard, unlike the membrane keyboard found in the G7000 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, 5.91 MHz
- RAM: 6 KB + 192 Byte
- ROM: 1 KB
- Display: 320×238×16
- Audio: 1 channel, 8 sounds
- Input / Output: RF modulator, Péritel/SCART connector, joystick port, ROM 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
- * Microsoft BASIC Home Computer Module – Similar to above, with the purpose of converting the G7400 into a "real" computer, not compatible with G7000. An additional Z80 CPU with 16 KB RAM and 16 KB ROM.