APF TV Fun series

APF TV Fun series
An APF TV Fun (model 402C)
DeveloperAPF Electronics Inc.
ManufacturerAPF Electronics Inc.
TypeSeries of dedicated home video game consoles
GenerationFirst generation
Release dateApril 1976; 48 years ago (1976-04)[1]
CPUAY-3-8500 chipset from General Instruments[2][3]
DisplayVertical orientation, black-and-white raster display, standard resolution
SoundAmplified mono (one channel)
SuccessorAPF-MP1000

The APF TV Fun brand (stylized as aPF tv fun on its logo) is a series of dedicated home video game consoles manufactured by APF Electronics Inc. and built in Japan starting in 1976. The systems were among the first built on the General Instrument "Pong-on-a-chip", the AY-3-8500, that allowed many manufacturers to compete against the Atari Home Pong. The APF TV Fun consoles were one of the earliest Pong clone consoles.

The TV Fun package is the first excursion of APF into the video game market; APF was formerly a calculator and other small electronics developer. It was sold at Sears under the name Hockey Jockari. TV Fun was followed up by the 8-bit APF-MP1000 in 1978 and then APF Imagination Machine in 1979. These were made to compete in the 2nd generation of early ROM cartridge consoles, namely the Atari VCS.

  1. ^ Video games. Put your backhand on TV, By Cindy Morgan, Popular Mechanics, Oct 1976, Page 80, Picture and listed in table: ...APF TV Fun / Price: $90 / Number of Players: 1-2 / .../ Color: no / ... / Remarks: Manual or auto-serve; ball angle selection...
  2. ^ "Museum: APF TV Fun (Model 401)". Old-Computers.com. Archived from the original on 2012-10-11. Retrieved 2012-03-29.
  3. ^ "Museum: APF TV Fun (Model 401) [Updated 2020 link]". Old-Computers.com. Retrieved 2020-07-22.