Pole Position

Pole Position
European arcade flyer
DeveloperNamco
Publishers
DesignersKazunori Sawano
Sho Osugi
Shinichiro Okamoto
ProgrammerKoichi Tashiro
ComposersNobuyuki Ohnogi
Yuriko Keino
SeriesPole Position
Platform
Arcade
Release
September 16, 1982
  • Arcade
    • JP: September 16, 1982
    • NA: November 30, 1982
    • EU: Late 1982
    2600
    • August 1983
    5200
    • September 1983
    Atari 8-bit
    • October 1983
    Vectrex
    • November 1983
    VIC-20
    • EU: 1983
    • NA: Early 1984
    ZX Spectrum
    • UK: April 1984
    C64
    • NA: May 1984
    • UK: March 1985
    BBC Micro
    • UK: November 1984
    Intellivision
    • March 1988
    MS-DOS
    • 1988
GenreRacing
ModeSingle-player

Pole Position is a 1982 racing video game developed and published by Namco for arcades. It was licensed to Atari, Inc. for US manufacture and distribution. Pole Position is considered one of the most important titles from the golden age of arcade video games. It was an evolution of Namco's earlier arcade racing electro-mechanical games, like F-1 (1976), whose designer Sho Osugi worked on Pole Position.

The game was a major commercial success in arcades. After becoming the highest-grossing arcade game of 1982 in Japan, it went on to become the most popular coin-operated arcade video game internationally in 1983. In North America, it was the highest-grossing arcade game for both 1983 and 1984 and still one of the top five in 1985.

Pole Position spawned ports, sequels, and a Saturday morning cartoon, although the cartoon has little in common with the game. The game established the conventions of the racing genre and its success inspired many imitators. Pole Position is regarded as one of the most influential video games of all time, and is considered to be the most influential racing game in particular. A sequel, Pole Position II, was released in 1983 with four tracks instead of one.