RDI Video Systems (Rick Dyer Industries) was a video game company founded by Rick Dyer originally as Advanced Microcomputer Systems, and was well known for its Laserdisc video games, beginning with the immensely popular Dragon's Lair. The company went bankrupt shortly after completing, but before releasing, the Halcyon gaming console.
History
Rick Dyer initially experimented with interactive novel games "in the early 1980s" and decided to use a "LaserDisc player in an arcade machine" after witnessing a 1982 Amusement & Music Operators Association trade show "demo of Sega's LaserDisc game Astron Belt". He also saw Don Bluth's The Secret of NIMH (1982) which led Dyer "to draft in Bluth's company to do the animation for what would become Dragon's Lair" (1983) for his "newly formed" company Advanced Microcomputer Systems. Following this, Dyer and Bluth developed their next arcade game Space Ace (1984). Simone de Rochefort, for Polygon in 2018, noted that this console "came on the heels of Dyer's success with the one-two punch of Dragon's Lair and Space Ace. These laserdisc arcade games stunned people because they looked like movies and played like – well, a series of stressful quick-time events that made players suffer". Greer also commented that regardless of the attention the Halcyon received, "the ups-and-downs of the $33 billion consumer electronics industry mean that there's no guarantee it will be a bigger hit than any of the dozens of other new products introduced at the show".
- Dragon's Lair (1983) and later released in arcades)
- NFL Football (1985) (Originally for the Halcyon,
