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Though video games are found today in homes worldwide, they actually got their start in the research labs of scientists. In 1952, for instance, British professor A.S. Douglas created OXO, also known as crosses or a tic-tac-toe, as part of his doctoral dissertation at the University of Cambridge.
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Though video games are found today in homes worldwide, they actually got their start in the research labs of scientists. In 1952, for instance, British professor A.S. Douglas created OXO, also known as crosses or a tic-tac-toe, as part of his doctoral dissertation at the University of Cambridge.