Thank you for visiting Pong Museum
To anyone directly or indirectly involved in the development of Pong in the 70's, please feel welcome to share your experiences. We're grateful for any kind of help as well as donations. Or maybe you'd like more information about Pong Museum, just fill in the contact form below. The curator or other representative of the museum will get back to you shortly. We especially appreciate text and photo contributions about pong systems, companies or other projects you have worked on or have knowledge about. If you give us permission, we will include this in various parts of our site.
There are a number of ways to contribute
- Donate your old Pong console to the museums collection
- Send additional informations about Pong consoles and video gaming history before 1984
- Send us videos related to 1970s video gaming (please contact us first)
- Send us scanned Pong console manuals for the Manual Download Section
- Donate a small sum of money and help expanding the collection
Donate in Euro
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Please donate your old Pong
If you are offering to donate a Pong artefact please check our wish list bellow and let us know where your artefact is physically located so we can estimate shipping costs. We acknowledge all donations, unless otherwise requested by the donor, on our website and with the display information for those items on display. We thank all donors for their enthusiasm, and look forward to working with new friends as we collect video game artefacts for the future.
This museums collection is meant to be an educational tool, therefore we are looking for information sources (especially primary source information) whether it be from letters, magazines, pamphlets or other documents. We also will be making audio recordings from those individuals who were involved in video gaming industry before 1984.
Contact us / Make a donation to the museum
Wish list
We are always looking for prototypes and handmade kits, also low serial numbers are of great interest.
But also the basic pong families have stored away are very welcome in our collection. Here are just some of the systems we would love to have as part of our collection:
- Allied Leisure Industries - Name Of The Game II (model A-300) (USA)
- APF Imagination Machine (USA)
- Ameprod - TVG-10 (Poland)
- ATARI Pong consoles (USA)
- Bally Astrocade (a.k.a. Bally Computer System) (USA)
- Bandai TV Jack consoles and Supervision 8000 (Japan)
- Coleco Telstar consoles (USA)
- Fairchild Channel F (USA)
- Interfab Pong Kits (USA)
- Heathkit, First Dimension and other Pong kits and handmade consoles
- Magnavox Odyssey and the Spanish Overkal clone
- Mestron - TVG-2600 - analog Pong, 1975
- Orelec PP-2000 (France)
- Playtech - telesports (Australia)
- RCA Studio II (USA) or Sheen M1200 (UK) or VISICOM Video System COM-100 (Japan)
- Ricochet - 70ties wood design console (USA)
- Société Occitane (France) Pong consoles
- teleclick (?) - Magiclick console (Argentina)
- Universal Research Labs - Video Action Systems (USA)
- VideoMaster consoles (UK) great interest: Home Game console
- Videosport - MK II - analog Pong, 1975 - including "Hole In The Wall" game :-)
- Videotronic 2 / II (UK)
- Zanussi - Pong-O Tronic aka Play-O Tronic (Italy)
Details and where to send ?
- Please include everything you have from the system like original box, manual or bill
- Please use styrofoam and other filling materials to save the surfaces
- Please use a second box for shipping if you send us the original box
- We acknowledge all donations and donators, unless otherwise requested
- Please send your donation to the museums curator:

Museum's Donators
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pokerlistings.com - Card games online
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