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Ep.32 – 1st Place Podium Finish:  Why Nürburgring 1 Was the Starting Line for a Genre
Episode 32

Ep.32 – 1st Place Podium Finish: Why Nürburgring 1 Was the Starting Line for a Genre

A Trip Down Memory Card Lane · David Kassin and Robert Kassin

April 8, 202157m 18sExplicit

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Show Notes

In 1976, Nürburgring 1 debuted in Germany as one of the earliest first-person racing games, created by Dr. Reiner Foerst to simulate the famous Nürburgring track. Using blocky white graphics, it gave players a cockpit view of winding roads and became a blueprint for what driving games could be. Our conversation explores how Foerst’s coin-op prototype paved the way for Atari’s Night Driver, which borrowed the concept a year later and brought it to arcades worldwide. We trace the challenges of building such technology in the 1970s, how the design captured speed and danger with minimal visuals, and why it stood out as both teaching tool and entertainment. From there, we look at how its influence rippled forward, inspiring Pole Position, OutRun, and the broader evolution of racing. Join us as we revisit the pioneering days of digital driving on today’s trip down Memory Card Lane.

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