Help ID bronze age PCB

From the chip date codes, something from 1973 or later. No markings on the board makes this tough.

No vector section and double traces on several legs, so not Atari as far as I know. Maybe Pong?
 
It could be another version of Flim-Flam but there is the corner switch that is missing on this pcb here. Here is Flim Flam:

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It could be another version of Flim-Flam but there is the corner switch that is missing on this pcb here. Here is Flim Flam:

Meadows was my first thought as well, but all the Meadows boards I've seen have vertical power routing on the top layer, and this has all the power on the back.

The IC #s in top copper on this board is pretty distinctive.
 
Looks like a Pong clone.

The dates on the chips place it in the mid-1974 range, and the distinct lack of any manufacturer's markings suggests it's a bootleg.

Also, the way those bare jumpers jump multiple bare traces... Ouch. That's a short waiting to happen.
 
Looks like a Pong clone.

The dates on the chips place it in the mid-1974 range, and the distinct lack of any manufacturer's markings suggests it's a bootleg.

Also, the way those bare jumpers jump multiple bare traces... Ouch. That's a short waiting to happen.

Agreed it feels like a bootleg pong. Could be a 4-player clone. Lots of 555's on there.

If you're talking about these, that's not bare wire. It's insulated. At least that's what it looks like to me.

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Here's another one.

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Upon further staring.....it could go either way. But I'm leaning toward clear PVC insulation like you see on cheap lamp cord and speaker wire. I've seen that stuff on hookup wire at the 24ga (telephone cross point wire) size.

It would be easy to tell with the PCB in hand of course.
 
Yeah, you're right. It must be insulated. Maybe it's just clear or silver insulation.

I was just going by a couple of the others I saw quickly. But the ones you posted, yeah, those look insulated.
 
It's definitely late 1973, maybe even early 1974. I wouldn't be surprised if this was something other than Pong, but the lack of PROMs definitely raises the ball n' paddle flag.

The trace routing is uncanny. I swear I've seen Midway boards routed like that too. Maybe Ramtek as well, but they leave maker's marks on their boards.
One thing of note is the lack of switches and the abundance of pots. I'd love to hook this board up to see what it outputs on a screen. It's definitely interesting to me.
 
It's definitely late 1973, maybe even early 1974. I wouldn't be surprised if this was something other than Pong, but the lack of PROMs definitely raises the ball n' paddle flag.

The trace routing is uncanny. I swear I've seen Midway boards routed like that too. Maybe Ramtek as well, but they leave maker's marks on their boards.
One thing of note is the lack of switches and the abundance of pots. I'd love to hook this board up to see what it outputs on a screen. It's definitely interesting to me.
Go for it. It's bugging me too, but I have too many projects.
 
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