Released in August 1976. Another in a long line of original Atari black and white driving games. Le Mans continues the winning racing and profit tradition of Team Atari, like its famous forebears: "Gran Trak 10", "Indy 800", "Indy 4". Le Mans challenges player speed and skill with 10 different tracks. Players race against the clock on each track as it appears in sequence. After the car passes the finish line of one track, a new one appears automatically, more difficult than the one before. The first track is a snap. The second, a little more difficult. etc... The more skilled the driver, the more tracks will be completed within the gam's time limit. And oil slicks don't make it any easier. 10 points are scored for each completed track. If a player finishes the first 6 tracks, two of four possible mystery courses will appear randomly to add further excitement and challenge.
Rock'n Bark, sometimes erroneously labeled as "Rock'n Park", is a 1976 discrete logic game by Sega with twin Tommy Guns. It is similar to Sega's earlier 1975 game Bullet Mark - complete with the "Bullet Mark" branding on the cabinet, suggesting it may have earlier been a cabinet variant or sequel.
An early motorbike racing game developed and published by Sega in 1976, based on the character Fonz from the TV show Happy Days. Versions of the game are also known as Man TT and Moto-Cross. It uses a pseudo-3D, third-person perspective.
An arcade driving game released by Taito in 1976. The game features destruction derby-style gameplay where the players score by crashing into as many computer-controlled cars as possible.
A blackjack game. The goal is to get closest to 21 without going over. If your score is higher than the dealer or he busts, then you win. To hit a blackjack, you must score 21 in 2 cards.
Flyball is a baseball arcade game which was released by Atari in 1976.
Both players must use an analogue joystick, 1P bats first and 2P pitches first, to control their players with one button to make them bat and pitch for the members of the batting team will run round the bases automatically - and unlike in real baseball matches, the game shall only last for one (or two) innings.
Cops and robbers fire at each other in a high speed chase on city streets. Choose to be the cops and try to stop the robbers or choose to be the robbers and try to overcome the cops and escape from them.
The objective of the game is to destroy a multilayered wall of bricks at the top the screen. Upon hitting the bricks with a ball which bounces off of a paddle at the bottom of the screen the bricks are destroyed. If the player misses the ball with his horizontally moveable paddle the ball is lost. After loosing five balls the game is over.
The game requires four players. Play consists of a black and a white BiPlane that is steered like a tank. The object is to shoot the other players without crashing into either the ground or the anti-aircraft fire at the top of the screen.
A four-player racing game by Sega. The four cars race along the screen in a side view, with collisions between them causing them to slow down. The winner is the car which has travelled the furthest during the allotted time.
Eliminator IV is a drag racing game released by Electra games in April 1976 as an arcade cabinet. Up to 4 players can play, using realistic, H-pattern gear sticks.
Death Race is a vehicular combat game that puts your car in an open space with gremlins. Your goal is the crash into the gremlins so you can brutally and cruelly kill them. Upon dying, they scream. In the spot where the gremlin once was, a cross-shaped gravestone will be left. This clutters the playing field, making it harder to move around. There are dotted lines on the sides, representing two narrow "safe" zones on the left and right sides of the screen for the gremlins, as your car will crash on contact with the dotted lines.