Centuri

Centuri, based in Hialeah, Florida, was one of the top six suppliers of coin operated video game machinery in the United States in the 1980s. Many of the machines distributed in the US under the Centuri name were licensed from overseas manufacturers, particularly Konami.

Centuri in its modern inception was formed when former Taito of America president Ed Miller and his partner Bill Olliges took over a company called Allied Leisure, Inc. and renamed it "Centuri" in 1980. Centuri discontinued their video game operations in January 1985.

List of games

Allied Leisure and Centuri published the following arcade games in the United States:

Select games released as Allied Leisure (1969-1979):

  • Monkey Bizz (1969)
  • Unscramble (1969)
  • Wild Cycle (1970)
  • Sea Hunt (1972)
  • Spooksville (1972)
  • Crack Shot (1972)
  • Monte Carlo (1973)
  • Paddle Battle (1973)
  • Tennis Tourney (1973)
  • Chopper (1974)
  • Super Shifter (1974)
  • F-114 (1975)
  • Fire Power (1975)
  • Dyn O' Mite (1975; solid-state pinball machine)
  • Bomac (1976)
  • Chase (1976)
  • Daytona 500 (1976)
  • Battle Station (1977)
  • Take Five (1978; cocktail pinball)
  • Battlestar (1979; unreleased?)
  • Lunar Invasion (1979; unreleased?)
  • Space Bug (1979; unreleased?)
  • Clay Champ (1979; licensed from Namco)
  • Star Shooter (1979; cocktail pinball)
  • Clay Shoot (1979; video version of Clay Champ)

Games released as Centuri (1980-1984):

gollark: basically the box thing but the same !!!!
gollark: http://www.scp-wiki.net/scp-1968
gollark: Come to think of it, if you have a retrocausality torus, wouldn't it - over an arbitrarily large amount of iterations - eventually just create a universe where there is either *no* retrocausality torus or nobody uses it, and stop?
gollark: SCP-447-2 comes into contact with a dead body, SCP-3125 instantiates, SCP-579 [DATA EXPUNGED].
gollark: Or somehow keeps getting loaded onto helicopters/planes.

References

  1. Kent, Steven (November 1997). "Retroview: The Owen Rubin Memorial Gameroom". Next Generation. No. 35. Imagine Media. p. 34.
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