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Tudor-NFL. Once video games hit, electric football fell out of vogue with many young players. But fans who grew up in the game's heyday were able to keep it going through the '80s and '90s.
If football is a game of inches, electric football is one of millimeters. ... After the old Miggle regime lost the NFL license in 2007, a consequence of its owner's failing health, ...
I got an electric football game for Christmas when I was about 10 or 11 and at the time it was the coolest gift I’d ever received this side of a burnt-orange Schwinn Sting-Ray bicycle, and I ...
Tudor Electric Football games actually haven't gone away for a long time — versions have been on the market since 1949 — although they slipped under the playthings radar for a while. If you had a ...
It's the electric football game where the players are on little green bases, and after being lined up in formation on a metal field, ... "So I've got this game," Bartels said. "I'm 24 years old, ...
Tudor, inside its game instructions booklet, displayed full-color photos of all the NFL teams depicted as electric football players, painted in replica uniforms, in home and dark jerseys.
Well before 'Madden NFL' video games, there was Electric Football. A switch is flicked, the gridiron vibrates and the players move — often wildly in every direction.
There's a cult following for the game that most of America threw out when video games came along. It's more competitive than ever. And in the eyes of some, it's art.
The game of electric football has maintained a tight following among devotees who meet regularly to test their “skill” around those same old vibrating game boards.
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- Norman Sas, a mechanical engineer who created electric football, a tabletop game with a vibrating metal field and unpredictable plastic players that captivated and ...