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Milton (game)

Milton is an electronic talking game. According to the patent, Milton was the first electronic talking game that allowed two people to play against each other.[1] Previously released devices of this type, such as Speak & Spell by Texas Instruments, were known primarily as teaching devices rather than competitive games.

Milton
ManufacturersMilton Bradley Company
PublishersMilton Bradley Company
Players1 or more
Age range4 to adult

It was manufactured and distributed by Milton Bradley Company in 1980 and invented by Jeffrey D. Breslow and Erick E. Erickson.[1] The game is a single electronic unit with colored buttons, powered by an AC adapter.

Gameplay edit

Milton is essentially a game of memory skill. It has some similarities to Simon,[2] which is a popular electronic game that was introduced in 1978, also by Milton Bradley. The object of Milton is to correctly recall and match up spoken phrases, as opposed to Simon's patterns of light and sound. Although the release of Milton may have been an attempt to cash in on Simon's popularity, the game did not meet with the same level of success.[3]

There are 7 red and 7 yellow buttons on Milton. When the game begins, Milton recites 7 correctly completed three-word phrases. Player 1 then presses any one of the top red phrase buttons and listens to the beginning half of a phrase. The same player then presses one of the bottom yellow buttons and listens to the end of a phrase. If the match is correct, Player 1 scores a point and Player 2 takes a turn. If the match is incorrect, Milton will respond negatively with a sarcastic laugh, a razz sound, or by saying the attempt was "Garbage", "Ridiculous", "Absurd", or "No Way". A successful strategy is to remember the locations of incorrect matches, since on the next turn one may be able to use either the beginning or end of that phrase to complete another match successfully.[4]

Development edit

Milton's electronic voice was designed to sound more human by featuring an accent and casual dialect.[5]

At the time, electronics capable of speech were a novelty.[6] Due to limited memory, the speech synthesizer had to reuse various wave samples in multiple contexts,[7] producing what is called "ersatz speech."[6] Programming and editing words through such a process was lengthy and involved for the designers.[6][7]

While the game's chip only required 15 bytes of input, not all 15 bytes could be used to full precision since that would have required 700K of read-only memory and a bit rate of 12,000 to produce a frame rate of 100 Hz—which was impractical at the time.[7]

Reception edit

Milton was one of the seven games featured on the April 1980 cover of Playthings magazine for the Special Toy Fair issue.[8]

The September 1980 Popular Mechanics wrote, "We would have played more with Milton from Milton-Bradley, but the long line of people waiting to be insulted by this talking wonder discouraged us."[9]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Breslow, et al. United States Patent 4326710 April 27, 1982
  2. ^ "Vintage Milton Bradley talking electronic game simon." Worthopedia - Premier Price Guide
  3. ^ John Elder Robison. Look Me in the Eye: My Life with Asperger's. Random House, Inc., 2008. ISBN 0-307-39618-5, ISBN 978-0-307-39618-1. p.204
  4. ^ Milton instruction manual.
  5. ^ Milton cover box, interior side.
  6. ^ a b c "Far-out phonemes." Popular Mechanics (Tech Front Lines). Jun 1981
  7. ^ a b c "Squeezing Milton's voice into memory." Electronics, Volume 54. McGraw-Hill Pub. Co., 1981 (Note: see talk page for more on this source)
  8. ^ "Playthings Magazine" Playthings (Special Toy Fair issue). April 1980. From: handheldmuseum.com
  9. ^ "Toys do more than beep" Popular Mechanics. Sep 1980

External links edit

  • Vintage Milton Tabletop electronic game YouTube
  • MILTON ELECTRONIC TALKING GAME 1980 YouTube

milton, game, milton, electronic, talking, game, according, patent, milton, first, electronic, talking, game, that, allowed, people, play, against, each, other, previously, released, devices, this, type, such, speak, spell, texas, instruments, were, known, pri. Milton is an electronic talking game According to the patent Milton was the first electronic talking game that allowed two people to play against each other 1 Previously released devices of this type such as Speak amp Spell by Texas Instruments were known primarily as teaching devices rather than competitive games MiltonManufacturersMilton Bradley CompanyPublishersMilton Bradley CompanyPlayers1 or moreAge range4 to adultIt was manufactured and distributed by Milton Bradley Company in 1980 and invented by Jeffrey D Breslow and Erick E Erickson 1 The game is a single electronic unit with colored buttons powered by an AC adapter Contents 1 Gameplay 2 Development 3 Reception 4 References 5 External linksGameplay editMilton is essentially a game of memory skill It has some similarities to Simon 2 which is a popular electronic game that was introduced in 1978 also by Milton Bradley The object of Milton is to correctly recall and match up spoken phrases as opposed to Simon s patterns of light and sound Although the release of Milton may have been an attempt to cash in on Simon s popularity the game did not meet with the same level of success 3 There are 7 red and 7 yellow buttons on Milton When the game begins Milton recites 7 correctly completed three word phrases Player 1 then presses any one of the top red phrase buttons and listens to the beginning half of a phrase The same player then presses one of the bottom yellow buttons and listens to the end of a phrase If the match is correct Player 1 scores a point and Player 2 takes a turn If the match is incorrect Milton will respond negatively with a sarcastic laugh a razz sound or by saying the attempt was Garbage Ridiculous Absurd or No Way A successful strategy is to remember the locations of incorrect matches since on the next turn one may be able to use either the beginning or end of that phrase to complete another match successfully 4 Development editMilton s electronic voice was designed to sound more human by featuring an accent and casual dialect 5 At the time electronics capable of speech were a novelty 6 Due to limited memory the speech synthesizer had to reuse various wave samples in multiple contexts 7 producing what is called ersatz speech 6 Programming and editing words through such a process was lengthy and involved for the designers 6 7 While the game s chip only required 15 bytes of input not all 15 bytes could be used to full precision since that would have required 700K of read only memory and a bit rate of 12 000 to produce a frame rate of 100 Hz which was impractical at the time 7 Reception editMilton was one of the seven games featured on the April 1980 cover of Playthings magazine for the Special Toy Fair issue 8 The September 1980 Popular Mechanics wrote We would have played more with Milton from Milton Bradley but the long line of people waiting to be insulted by this talking wonder discouraged us 9 References edit a b Breslow et al United States Patent 4326710 April 27 1982 Vintage Milton Bradley talking electronic game simon Worthopedia Premier Price Guide John Elder Robison Look Me in the Eye My Life with Asperger s Random House Inc 2008 ISBN 0 307 39618 5 ISBN 978 0 307 39618 1 p 204 Milton instruction manual Milton cover box interior side a b c Far out phonemes Popular Mechanics Tech Front Lines Jun 1981 a b c Squeezing Milton s voice into memory Electronics Volume 54 McGraw Hill Pub Co 1981 Note see talk page for more on this source Playthings Magazine Playthings Special Toy Fair issue April 1980 From handheldmuseum com Toys do more than beep Popular Mechanics Sep 1980External links editVintage Milton Tabletop electronic game YouTube MILTON ELECTRONIC TALKING GAME 1980 YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Milton game amp oldid 1176685935, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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