- ATARI
- Early video game maker with a logo resembling a peace sign
- Arcade name
- Early electronic game maker
- Nintendo forerunner
- First name in home-entertainment
- Maker of Space Invaders
- NINTENDO rival
- Nintendo precursor
- Pong name
- Pong producer
- Electronic game name
- Pong company
- Video game giant, once
- Video game pioneer
- Breakout company
- Maker of the Lynx and Jaguar systems
- 1977 video gaming debut
- Arcade giant
- Gauntlet maker
- Gaming console that named its devices after cats way before Apple
- Missile Command company
- Pong console
- 720° company
- Xbox's foil, in a CeeLo Green lyric
- Video game system referenced in a "Stranger Things" episode
- Console pioneer
- Doha denizen
- Breakout maker
- Defender maker
- Its first console was the 2600
- Missile Command maker
- Pong maker
- Console that once came with paddles
- Video-game name
- Gauntlet game company
- Paperboy company
- 2600 and 5200 maker
- Berzerk company
- Combat company
- Company that Pete Rose and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar did commercials for
- Console whose biggest selling game was the inexplicably awful Pac-Man
- E.T. maker
- Game system that came with "Combat"
- Gauntlet company
- Joust company
- Maker of the 2600
- Paperboy maker
- Video game company that took its name from the board game Go
- Maker of the Lynx
- Tech company that's still somehow a thing in "Blade Runner: 2049"
- Gauntlet-dropping company?
- Video game maker
- Company that buried unsold "E.T."s in a New Mexican desert
- Adventure company
- Old video game platform
- Early tech company whose logo is said to resemble Mount Fuji
- Maker of the VCS game system
- Pong creator
- Vintage computer
- Arcade game nameNintendo predecessor"]
- Asteroids game maker
- Centipede maker
- Arcade-game pioneer
- Hard Drivin' game platform
- Arcade pioneer
- Battlezone creator
- Early name in home computers
- Early name in video games
- Asteroids maker
- Pong manufacturer
- Old Coleco competitor
- Company named for a Go term
- Old Intellivision rival
- Intellivision rival, once
- Arcade giant that filed for bankruptcy in 2013
- Steve Jobs employer of the mid-1970s
- Missile Command game maker
- Tech company that filed for bankruptcy in 2013
- 2600, 5200, and 7800 maker
- 5200 maker
- It infamously buried hundreds of thousands of cartridges in the New Mexico desert in 1983
- Its three-line logo was called "Fuji"
- Non-Japanese tech brand whose name is Japanese for "correct guess"
- Company whose founder also founded Chuck E. Cheese's
- Releaser of the VCS game system in 2020
- American-founded tech company whose logo is called "Fuji"
- Company name that becomes a demonym when a Q is added to its beginning
- Company name that becomes a proper noun when a Q is added to its beginning
- Computer company
- Early video game company
- Space Invaders producer
- Centipede company
- Early video game maker
- Home-entertainment pioneer
- Super Breakout company
- Big name in video games, once
- Early computer manufacturer
- Pong people
- Company that created Centipede and Galaga
- Early name in arcades
- Company that made the 7800 game system
- Nintendo predecessor
- Maker of Pong
- Company that made the game Joust
- Maker of the 2600 video-game system
- Producer of Space Invaders
- Old arcade name
- Video arcade name
- Marketer of 27-Down
- Classic video game company
- Arcade games pioneer
- Company that introduced Pong
- Gaming trailblazer
- Big name in classic video games
- Gaming pioneer
- Space Invaders company
- Computer game name
- Pong producer, once
- Pong publicizer
- Video game trailblazer
- Game company founded in 1972
- Maker of the 400, 800, 2600, and 5200
- Missile Command game company
- Nolan Bushnell's video game company
- Producer of Pong
- Asteroids game company
- Maker of Missile Command
- Video game system pioneer
- Arcade game name
- Centipede producer
- Company that produced Pong
- Maker of many arcade classics
- Classic arcade game company
- Creator of Asteroids
- Missile Command system
- Missile Command developer
- Pitfall company
- Maker of the video games "Big Bird's Egg Catch" and "Cookie Monster Munch"
- Pong maker that filed for bankruptcy this year
- I'ma keep playing these cats out like ___ (Lil' Kim line)
- Computer games producer
- Games giant
- Pac-man creator
- Sega rival
- Sega rivals
- Video games name
- Early video game name
- Vido game pioneer
- 1976 Warner Communications acquisition
- Freddi Fish game maker
- Maker of the game Asteroids
- Maker of the game Dig Dug
- Asteroids game creator
- Retro __ Classics: game package
- Spider-Man video game maker
- High-tech entertainment pioneer
- Game company first called Syzygy
- Pioneering company originally named Syzygy
- __ 2600: early game console
- 2008 Infogrames acquisition
- Maker of the Lynx handheld game console
- Arcade games trailblazer
- Centipede video game creator
- Onetime Coleco competitor
- Arcade games leader
- Big name in video games
- Asteroids creator
- Big name in arcade games
- Collectible game system
- Video game giant
- Early gaming name
- Nintendo ancestor
- Pong developer
- Space Invaders platform
- __ 2600: old video game console
- Big arcade name
- Early game console
- Big name in arcades
- Game company formerly named Syzygy
- Jaguar creator
- RollerCoaster Tycoon World publisher
- Centipede creator
- Longtime video game name
- '70s breakout gaming company
- Big name in games
- Centipede developer
- Big name in gaming
- Centipede game company
- Missile Command producer
- __ 2600, Class of 2007 National Toy Hall of Fame inductee
- Big game name
- Breakout game developer
- Developer of 51-Across
- Gaming biggie
- Gaming giant
- Original Flashback games console designer
- Pong game maker
- Video game name for nearly 50 years
- Asteroids producer
- Gaming brand since 1972
- Millipede maker
- Vintage video game name
- Classic arcade name
- Pitfall! platform
- Adventure game console
- Breakout gaming company
- Game company featured in "Ready Player One"
- Game company since 1972
- Asteroids publisher
- Centipede platform
- Classic video game maker
- Game company co-founded by Nolan Bushnell
- Pong Quest developer
- Pong Quest maker
- Pong publisher
- Retro console
- Space Invaders console
- Subject of the 2014 documentary "Game Over"
- Video-game producer
- '70s gaming pioneer
- Onetime producer of plastic paddles
- Woz employer in '73
- Brand name derived from a Go term
- Company founded by Nolan Bushnell
- Computer-game maker
- Sega alternative
- Space Invaders maker
- Video-game company
- Dragon Ball Z producer
- Godzilla: Save the Earth maker
- Pioneer name in video games
- PlayStation supplier
- RollerCoaster Tycoon maker
- '80s home-computer maker
- Asteroids developer
- Computer game pioneer
- Game name once owned by Warner
- Interactive entertainment giant
- '70s video-game pioneer
- Early Steve Jobs employer
- Asteroids introducer
- Company that made Asteroids
- Early employer of 10 Across
- '70s video game giant
- Steve Jobs' first employer
- Video arcade pioneer
- Video gaming pioneer
- Early video-game console brand
- Early video console company
- Home-entertainment trailblazer
- Online arcade offerer
- Don't watch TV . . . Play it! advertiser (1978)
- Arcade game giant
- Early game console maker
- Early game console seller
- Former employer for both Apple founders
- Venerable video game name
- First with a video game Easter egg (1980)
- Whom Woz once worked for
- Enter the Matrix game company
- Company that takes its name from a term in the game of go
- Creator of Pong
- Go term that's equivalent to "check"
- Coleco contemporary
- Commodore competitor, once
- Maker of Asteroids
- Maker of Godzilla: Save the Earth
- Battlezone maker
- Commodore rival, once
- Dragon Ball Z company
- Leadfoot video game manufacturer
- Maker of the arcade game Breakout
- Maker of the video game Centipede
- Pioneering video game company
- Producer of Pong and Pole Position
- Company that created Pong
- Dragonshard maker
- Maker of the 2600 video game console
- Video game company whose founder also founded Chuck E. Cheese's
- Onetime rival of Coleco
- Sega competitor
- Test Drive Unlimited maker
- Breakout producer
- Chess : check :: go : ___
- Infogrames subsidiary
- Maker of Centipede
- Maker of the arcade classic Tempest
- Maker of the video game Pong
- Video game company founded by Nolan Bushnell
- Old name in game arcades
- ____ 2600 (old game-playing machine)
- Space Invaders game maker
- Computers for people company
- Company that produced the game Pong
- Big name at video arcades
- Maker of the game Pong
- Big name in video arcades
- Bygone computer name
- Nolan Bushnell's company
- Pole Position game company
- Space Invaders game company
- Electronic game pioneer
- Company built on the profits of Pong
- Company that introduced Donkey Kong
- Old Intellivision competitor
- Pole Position company
- Arcade game maker
- Company that made Pong
- Old name in coin-op games
- Game name
- Pac-Man maker
- Combat producer
- Company famous for Centipede and Battlezone
- Classic game company
- Company that once employed Steve Jobs
- Donkey Kong company
- Producer of the megaflop "E.T."
- Space Invaders maker, once
- Jaguar maker
- Maker of the Jaguar game console
- Maker of the game Combat
- ___ 2600 (classic video game console)
- ColecoVision rival
- Cyberball maker
- Defender company
- Dragon Ball Z game company
- Trailblazing video game maker
- ___ 2600 (hit product of the 1970s-'80s)
- Maker of Gauntlet and Area 51
- Company behind the game Battlezone
- Game maker since 1972
- Game maker starting in 1972
- ___ 2600
- Classic name in arcades
- Creator of the game Missile Command
- Tempest game maker
- Producer of the 2600 game console
- Breakout company of 1976
- Pong purveyor
- Early eight-bit computer maker
- Maker of Asteroids and Missile Command
- Big company in arcades
- Early manufacturer of home computers
- Game company with a Japanese name
- Game console pioneer
- Maker of Basketbrawl and Robo-Squash
- Company that buried 700,000+ unsold video games in 1983
- Early Nintendo competitor
- Its version of table tennis had a square ball
- Onetime arcade giant
- ___ 2600 (early game console)
- Old video game maker
- Big name in arcade gaming
- Company that once had tremendous "quarterly" profits?
- Creator of the game Centipede
- Game company that introduced Breakout
- Game company with an online-only museum
- Pioneering game company behind Tank and Tank II
- Pioneering name in video games
- Retro console giant
- Early employer of Steve Jobs
- Its version of 37-Across was popular in the 1970s-'80s
- Pioneering arcade game company
- Success story out of Sunnyvale, Calif.
- ___ 2600 (early video game device)
- Breakout console
- Company behind Battlezone and Asteroids
- Company that launched Pong
- Developer of 1982's E.T., a video game so bad that hundreds of thousands of unsold cartridges were secretly buried in a New Mexico landfill
- Maker of the game Centipede
- Pong game company
- Developer of the game Breakout
- Video Pinball maker
- ___: Game Over (2014 video game documentary)
- Breakout company of the 1970s
- Company whose corporate logo is known as "the Fuji"
- Company whose name comes from a term in the game of Go
- Crystal Castles console
- Immediate threat to capture, in a game of Go
- Maker of the 2600 game console
- Maker of the E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial video game
- Onetime rival of Activision
- PONG Quest gaming company
- Video game company behind Centipede
- Asteroids system
- Brand with a joystick
- Creator of the games Xybots and Klax
- ___ 2600 (bygone console)
- Asteroids made a big impact on it in the 1980s
- Creator of the 1980 video game Adventure
- Maker of the Flashback console
- Pac-Man platform
- Pioneer in arcade games
- Where Steve Jobs first worked after college
- 2600 maker
- Company that sold 70,000 Asteroids coin-op consoles
- Pong platform
- Video game company parodied in "Wreck-It Ralph"
- Old arcade company
- Old arcade giant
- Early video game system
- Old arcade biggie
- 1980s game console
- Old arcade game maker
- Producer of Centipede
- Early arcade giant
- Old game console
- Early arcade biggie
- Console featured in "Ready Player One"
- Defender marketers
- Missile Command makers
- Pong parent
- A Nintendo forerunner
- Former employer of Steve Jobs
- Asteroids company
- Creator of Centipede and Missile Command
- Maker of the Jaguar video-game console
- Tech company that once employed Steve Jobs
- Brand that launched an eight-bit-computer line in the seventies
- Maker of the 1976 arcade game Breakout
- Video-game company whose name comes from a Go term
- Company known for a groundbreaking version of table tennis
- Pioneer in home-gaming systems
- Big game name, formerly
- System before Nintendo
- Nintendo's predecessor
- Nintendo's precursor
- Classic video game name
- Video game system name
- Name in games people play
- ___ 2600 (early gaming system)
- Pong pioneer
- Breakout game company
- Breakout game maker
- Company building video game-themed hotels
- Video game brand since 1972
- Breakout game developer of 1976
- Pitfall! console maker
- So much more than video games! company
- Classic name in video games
- Company that buried thousands of unsold video game cartridges
- Breakout game console
- Its Jaguar game console was a flop
- Early video game giant
- Frogger console
- Precursor to Nintendo
- Company that made Breakout
- Video game brand name since 1972
- Nintendo's kin
- Early arcade game name
- Dig Dug maker
- Game innovator
- Early arcade game supplier
- Pole Position system
- Developer of Asteroids
- Developer of Space Invaders
- Developer of the arcade game Breakout
- Developer of the video game Centipede
- Video game company whose name is a Go term
- ___ 2600 (early video game console)
- Games specialist
- Name on some arcade equipment
- Name in video games since 1972
- Centipede game maker
- ___ 2600 (classic game console)
- Goon Squad game maker
- Pac-Man developer
- 1983 video-game crash victim
- Early home computer maker
- Video game name since 1972
- Developer of the video game Breakout
- Distributor of the arcade game Dig Dug
- Early maker of video games
- Rebecca Heineman won its Space Invaders Tournament in 1980
- Company with 52-Across games
- Developer of Pong
- Early arcade game maker
- Video game company behind Space Invaders
- Video game company that made Pong
- Developer of the game Pitfall!
- Company that made Frogger
- Company that made the CX40 joystick
- Developer of the game Food Fight
- Developer of the game Gauntlet
- Early video game console
- ___ 50 (game compilation with Pong and Asteroids)
- Computer games maker
- Game maker
- Video pioneer
- ___ ST (early Macintosh competitor)
- Krull console
- Warlords maker
- Company whose in-house newsletter was called The Gospel According to St. Pong
- Console that could be hooked up to a Gemstik controller
- Retro gamer's system
- Console with Trak-Ball controllers
- Game console that had faux wood paneling
- ___ Lynx (handheld console released in 1989)
- Berzerk console
- Developer of the 1987 game "Xybots"
- ___ Jaguar (1990s game console)
- Nolan Bushnell's 1972 company
- Company that introduced 6-Across
- Nolan Bushnell founded it
- Space Race producer
- Star Raiders producer
- Don't watch television tonight, play it! advertiser
- Asteroids source
- Lunar Lander producer
- Maker of Centipede and Asteroids
- Maker of 57-Across
- Classic arcade brand
- Tournament Cyberball 2072 maker
- Blasteroids producer
- Centipede source
- Maker of Asteroids and Space Invaders
- Maker of the Flashback game console
- Pit-Fighter producer
- Early arcade game giant
- Gaming nostalgist's console
- Stunt Cycle maker
- Canyon Bomber maker
- Maker of 26-Across
- Crystal Castles producer
- Lunar Lander maker
- Maker of the VCS gaming console
- Super Breakout maker
- Maker of Breakout and Centipede
- Company co-founded by the founder of Chuck E. Cheese
- Crash 'N Score maker
- Maze Craze producer