Although Nimrod was very important and I am one of those who woulf strongly argue its place in the history of arcade cabinets, you cannot ignore the significance of Galaxy Game, the famed first ever coin-operated video game, something that is commonplace and expected in the modern arcade. It came out just two short months before Computer Space did and both were based off of an exsiting computer game called Spacewar which is one of the earliest computer games. You could play the Galaxy Game for 10 cents or 25 cents for three games. A small price considering the arcade cabinet would have cost the Tresidder Union at Stanford University around $20,000 which today would roughly be $113,377 (roughly the equivilent of 162 Brand New Xbox One's!) for the hardware. But then again it is said that right up until the end of Galaxy Games' 8 year life it had queues with wait times for over an hour. Due to the fact that it had such a huge part in the conception of what we know today as arcade games, conrtibuting things like analog sticks and the well known arcade cabinet look, it is currently being displayed exactly where it belongs at the Computer History Museum.