The Intellivoice made voice in games possible for that console, but what was the first game that had voice samples in it that didn't use a peripheral?
The Intellivoice made voice in games possible for that console, but what was the first game that had voice samples in it that didn't use a peripheral?
I want to say Quadrun, but I'm not sure.
Intellivision, wasn't it? I seem to recall the old Baseball game for it had a voice sample without the intellivoice.
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"9 is a poor man's 11, and 11 is a Baker's Ten."
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I'm surprised nobody mentioned Berzerk and RealSports Baseball for the 5200.
"As you traitors roast in your own juices, I will be safely ensconced three miles below the earth's surface, listening to my wax-cylinder player and enjoying a delicious phosphate!"
No, he's right. In the original Intellivision Baseball, the "Yer Out!" is definitely done without an Intellivoice. That came out in 1979, 1980?
Major League Baseball for the Intellivision - 1980
http://www.intellivisiongames.com/ga....php?gameId=52
"Fun Fact: Major League Baseball is the only cartridge to use the Intellivision sound chip for speech synthesis (the umpire crying "Yer out!"). Marketing put a stop to any further such use, fearing it would hurt sales of the Intellivoice module. "
I always thought it was Vectrex Spike, though it came out in 1983:
http://www.mobygames.com/game/spike
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Major League Baseball uses the stock Intellivision sound chip to generate a crude computer "voice", but it's not actual voice synthesis like that featured on the Intellivoice games like World Championship Baseball, or Quadrun for 2600, both of which have actual human voice samples. Obviously this is a gray area...I'm not sure what the original poster was asking for.