The original
pilot for
Starcade was hosted by Olympic gold-medalist hockey player
Mike Eruzione, taped at the studios of
KRON-TV in San Francisco and featured an almost entirely different format. Twenty-four players competed at once, divided into three groups of eight that played different games (
Defender,
Centipede, and
Pac-Man). The players had 30 seconds to achieve as high a score as possible, and the top scorer on each game advanced to play
Berzerk against the other two. The winner of this contest received an
Asteroids Deluxe arcade game and an
Apple II computer, and then played a different game against a celebrity in an
exhibition match with no prizes at stake. The game used for this match was the then-new
Donkey Kong, and the celebrity was
Larry Wilcox, known for portraying police officer Jon Baker on the
NBC crime-drama
CHiPs. The original pilot aired as a special on a handful of syndicated stations, where it rated quite well. Three more pilots were then shot for NBC at Bridge Studios, formerly the facilities of
KPIX-TV (the station relocated to Battery Street in 1979, and the complex was demolished in 2006), featuring a retooled format (more similar to the series as aired) and host
Alex Trebek (who was suggested by NBC). The pilot was picked up by
Ted Turner in 1982, and the show began its life on WTBS in December, still taping at Bridge Studios with Mark Richards as host. Richards, however, appeared to be uncomfortable on-camera; more importantly to Turner, Richards did not appear to be interested in video games. Richards was replaced by veteran game-show host Geoff Edwards on the 24th WTBS episode. Though Edwards had had no previous experience with video games, he became a fan of them soon after taking the job, studying the games in the show's rotation and reading gaming magazines. He would frequently offer advice and hints to contestants, and he was once featured in a "Starcade Hotline" segment playing and beating the notoriously difficult game
Sinistar. Edwards remained a fan of video games until his death in 2014. The show's original theme was an eight-bit melody similar to those heard in various arcade games of the time. Halfway through Richards' run, the theme was changed to one composed by "Mindseed" (Ed and Joanne Anderson), who were also employed by
Data East at the time and who also composed the music for
Venture and
Mouse Trap for
Exidy. Occasionally, special episodes were produced such as team episodes, and others in which only one game was played repeatedly through the entire episode. Games that were featured in an episode of their own were
Cliff Hanger, ''
Dragon's Lair, Pole Position II, Track & Field and the 1983 Star Wars'' game. Certain segments of the show were set to the in-game theme music from the game
Xevious. The final first-run show aired on February 24, 1984, with reruns airing in syndication until September 1984. WTBS then reran episodes of
Starcade on Sunday mornings until January 1985. == Episode status ==