RCA Studio 2

RCA executives had been kicking themselves ever since they let Ralph Baer's system slip through their
fingers and into the hands of Magnavox. Because of this, RCA was busy trying to catch up with the video
game console explosion of the late seventies.

The RCA Studio II was styled very much after the Pong units of the time, with one glaring exception; it
had a cartridge port similar to the Fairchild Channel F. Another less important difference was that the
Studio II had numeric keypads for controllers instead of the paddles that were standard among the Pong
games of the era.

Both the RCA Studio II and Fairchild Channel F were doomed to failure because of the looming presence
of the Second Generation Atari VCS/2600 on the horizon.

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JT August  starsabre@att.net  on Sunday, March 5, 2000 at 20:37:47
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The RCA Studio II failure was more self induced than to blame on Atari.  The system had many limitations 
that made it ineffective as a competitor against Atari.  The numeric keypad controllers were key.  They were 
clumsy and awkard to use.  Also, RCA had its own baggage that hindered the system.  Atari was still 
struggling with Distribution, while the Studio II was simply added to the well established RCA distribution flow. 
Atari recognized that to gain market share, they had to advertise aggressively, and did so.  RCA did very little 
advertising, thinking that the unit's presence in RCA retailers would be pretty much sufficient.  Atari was 
aggresively developing games, and had over 20 carts by the first Christmas, whereas RCA ultimately developed 
only seven total, and none of the games were particularly impressive.
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