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Bally Professional Arcade - MAME machine

33487
astrocde
Bally Professional Arcade
astrocdl
Bally Home Library Computer
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1
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GAME SYSTEM CHD BIOS DEVICE PARENT CLONE MECHANICAL SCREENLESS

Main data
Romset and name:
astrocde Bally Professional Arcade
Short name:
Bally Professional Arcade
Manufacturer:
Bally Manufacturing
Year:
Genre:
Game Console
Category:
Game Console / Home Videogame
Serie:
-
Driver source:
midway/astrohome.cpp
Language:
-
Similar games:
Input / Controls
Players:
Up to 2 players
Input:
Keypad 8 ways, Joystick, Paddle
Buttons / keys:
Coins:
0
Cabinet:
-
Free-play:
Not supported
Rankings
Average user rating:
AntoPISA BestGame:
-
MASH All-Time:
-
Video
Display:
352x240@60.054442 Hz, CRT 15kHz
Orientation:
Horizontal
Scrolling:
Unknown
Colors:
-
CPU:
Zilog Z80
Audio
Sound:
Audio chips:
Astrocade Custom I/O, Speaker
Romset
First release:
Mess 0.2b4 released on aug-12 1998
Last release:
Mame 0.271 released on oct-31 2024
Clone of:
-
Clones:
Bios:
Not required
Use rom of:
-
Use sample of:
-
Previous romset:
None
New romset:
None
Files
Dump:
GOOD
Required files:
Status
OVERALL:
GOOD
Emulation:
Good
Graphic:
Good
Color:
Good
Sound:
Good
Cocktail:
Good
Protection:
Good
Save state:
Supported
Additional infos
  • History
  • Info
  • Score
  • PCB
  • Commands
  • Init
  • Driver
  • XML
  • Console published 46 years ago:

    Bally Professional Arcade © 1978 Bally Mfg. Co.

    An early video game console made by Bally. It featured 4 built-in programs, the first 2 being arcade game ports from Midway (which was Bally's arcade division). When starting up the console the user could select them by tapping the correct button on the numeric keypad:
    1 - Gunfight: arcade port of "Gun Fight [Model 597]"
    2 - Checkmate: arcade port of the 1977 'blockade' style game.
    3 - Calculator: as the name suggest a tool to do basic calculations
    4 - Scribling: This was a doodle/drawing program

    TECHNICAL
    Circuit board and cartridges:
    • CPU: Zilog Z80, 1.789 MHz
    • RAM: 4k (up to 64k with external modules in the expansion port)
    • ROM: 8k
    • Cart ROM: 8k
    • Expansion: 64K total
    • Ports: 4 controller, 1 expansion, 1 light pen
    • Sound: 3 voices + noise/vibrato effects (played through the TV)

    Video:
    • Resolution: True 160x102 / Basic 160x88 / Expanded RAM 320x204
    • Colors: True 8x / Basic 2
    -- The bitmap structure of the Bally actually only allows for 4 color settings. However, through the use of 2 color palettes and a left/right boundary control byte you could have the left section of screen (this could be the play field) use 1 set of colors while the right side (this could show information such as lives and score) used an entirely different set of colors, thus 8 total colors were possible.
    • Graphic type: Bitmap, 2 plane bitpacked

    TRIVIA
    Originally referred to as the Bally Home Library Computer, it was released in 1977 but available only through mail order. Delays in the production meant none of the units actually shipped until 1978, and by this time the machine had been renamed the Bally Professional Arcade. In this form it sold mostly at computer stores and had little retail exposure (unlike the Atari VCS). In 1979 Bally grew less interested in the arcade market and decided to sell off their Consumer Products Division, including development and production of the game console.

    At about the same time a 3rd party group had been unsuccessfully attempting to bring their own console design to market as the Astrovision. A corporate buyer from Montgomery Ward who was in charge of the Bally system put the two groups in contact, and a deal was eventually arranged. In 1981 they re-released the unit with the BASIC cartridge included for free, this time known as the Bally Computer System, and then changed the name again in 1982 to Astrocade. It sold under this name until the video game crash of 1983, and then disappeared around 1985.

    Midway had long been planning to release an expansion system for the unit, known as the ZGRASS-100. The system was being developed by a group of computer artists at the University of Illinois at Chicago known as the 'Circle Graphics Habitat', along with programmers at Nutting. Midway felt that such a system, in an external box, would make the Astrocade more interesting to the market. However it was still not ready for release when Bally sold off the division. A small handful may have been produced as the ZGRASS-32 after the machine was re-released by Astrovision.

    The system, combined into a single box, would eventually be released as the Datamax UV-1. Aimed at the home computer market while being designed, the machine was now re-targeted as a system for outputting high-quality graphics to video tape. These were offered for sale some time between 1980 and 1982, but it is unknown how many were built.

    CONTRIBUTE
    Edit this entry: https://www.arcade-history.com/?&page=detail&id=34774&o=2
    Informations provided by © Alexis Bousiges
    Informations provided by Contribute to the translation
  • Informations provided by
    Informations provided by / © Copyright of Fujix
  • Informations provided by
  • Informations provided by
  • Informations provided by Fabricio Coroquer, revisited from the work of
    NOTICE: The short version was discontinued in November 2019
  • Informations provided by Contribute
  • Informations provided by
  • Informations provided by
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Data updated on october 31 2024


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Romset:
astrocde
Title:
Bally Professional Arcade
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