Touch Me (arcade game)

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Touch Me was a Simon says-like game first released by Atari as an arcade game in 1974, and later as a handheld game in 1978.

The game involves touching a series of buttons that light up and produce sounds. The player must observe a sequence of blinking lights and repeat the sequence back in the same order that it occurred. Each time this is completed, the game will produce another sequence with an additional button added. This process is repeated and a digital score window displays the total number of sound sequences a player correctly repeats. The game continues until the maximum sequence of buttons is reached, or the user makes an error.

Touch Me was first released as an arcade game in 1974 by Atari. The arcade version was housed in a short arcade cabinet and had four large circular buttons of the same color. The player was allowed to make three mistakes before the game ended. The arcade game found itself competing for attention in arcades with the latest pinball machines and video games of the day and was not very successful.

In 1977, Ralph Baer saw potential in the "Simon says" concept behind the Touch Me game. He improved upon it significantly, adding colored buttons and musical sound effects, and created the Simon handheld game, which became a major success.

Seeing this, Atari sought to capitalize on the success of Simon and released their own handheld version of Touch Me in 1978. Unfortunately, like the arcade original, the Touch Me handheld game was not a major success. Many saw the Touch Me handheld as a clone of Simon, when in fact it was the other way around, and Touch Me soon vanished from sight. Simon, meanwhile, continues to be sold nearly 30 years later.

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