Kee Games Explained

Industry:Video game industry
Predecessors:-->
Successors:-->
Founded:1973
Founders:-->
Defunct:1978
Hq Location Country:US
Areas Served:-->
Products:Arcade games
Owner:Joe Keenan
Parent:Atari, Inc.

Kee Games was an American arcade game manufacturer that released arcade and video games from 1973 to 1978.

History

Kee was formed by Joe Keenan, a friend and neighbor of Atari co-founder Nolan Bushnell, in September 1973. In reality, Bushnell had worked with Keenan to create Kee Games in response to the pinball and arcade distributors of the time who demanded exclusivity deals; Bushnell believed that Kee Games could offer similar but renamed arcade games, or "clones", to distributors, which would greatly expand Atari's distribution beyond the limits of these deals.[1] Bushnell assigned several of Atari's staff to work at Kee Games, including Steve Bristow, Bill White, and Gil Williams, and discreetly supplied them the parts for which they could make their games.[2] To the public, Kee Games advertized itself as a competitor to Atari and that it was hiring defectors from Atari.[3]

Through 1973 and 1974, Kee's games were slight modifications of Atari games already released or games that had been left in development at Atari. These included Elimination which was based on Bristow's Quadrapong that he had left unfinished at Atari, while Spike was based on Atari's Rebound but with an added move. Kee wanted to avoid the stigma of simply being a follower of Atari and started developing its own games, its first own game being Tank that was released in November 1974.[2] Ahead of Tanks release, Atari itself was having financial and management problems. Among other measures, Atari opted to formally merge Kee Games into Atari in September 1974, with Keenan named to president of Atari and the Kee Games kept as a separate operating division.[2] Tank became a popular arcade game, and helped Atari recover from the financial downturn. Kee continued to produce arcade games through 1978, when the division was closed down by Warner Communications, which had acquired Atari in 1976.[2] After Bushnell left Atari in December 1978, Keenan departed the company a few months later, joining Bushnell to help manage his Pizza Time Theatre restaurant/arcade franchise.[2]

Games

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Perry . Tekla S. . Tales of Atari: New Stories of a Legendary Company Come to Light (online extended version) . IEEE Spectrum . 53 . 11 . 24 . Institute of Electric and Electronics Engineers . New York, New York . November 2016 . 10.1109/MSPEC.2016.7607020 . 37352766 .
  2. Book: Atari Inc: Business is Fun . Marty . Goldberg . Curt . Vendel . 2012 . 978-0985597405 . Sygyzy Press . Intermission: Growing Pains .
  3. Video Game Timeline . . 102. Ziff Davis. January 1998 . 116.