Interesting stuff.
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If that visual effect in .151 happened with actual Pong and other pong clones hardware back then, that might have been enough to drive folks back to spending money on playing pinball and electro-mechanical games during mid 1970s which would have made Midway, Allied Leisure, and Chicago Coins very happy since they had that market well covered.
I wouldn't be surprised if the analog signal and all smoothed it over. Besides, it wasn't uncommon even in the 80s on your 19" color TV to experience blips on occasion. As long as it wasn't more than two, the Zen wasn't interrupted.
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As long as I could find and play a Chicago Coins Flying Tigers cab, that made my 1970s era arcade day experience a good one. :-)
I for some reason as a child was not impressed with arcade machines (pinball, and particularly video games) of the 70s.
Scifi frauds. SF illuminates.
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