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The AY-3-8900, also known as the Standard Television Interface Chip or STIC, is a video display controller (VDC) produced by General Instrument for use with their CP1600 CPU in games consoles. [1] It is best known as the basis for the Mattel Intellivision. [2] [1] [3] [4]
The STIC is typical of VDCs of the era, using a grid of character-like cells to draw a background graphic and then using up to eight sprites they called "movable objects" (MOBs), to produce animation. The overall resolution is 167 × 105 pixels in NTSC (in the 8900-1 model) and 168 × 104 pixels in PAL (8900 model), [1] but only visible in an area of 159 × 96 pixels. The extra pixels around the visible area allow sprites to be placed in those locations and then smoothly move on-screen. The background consists of a 20 × 12 grid of 8×8 patterns known as "cards", which can be used as characters or other shapes. The STIC also computes collision information between the objects and screen borders.
A 16 color palette is available, divided into two sets. [3] [6] [7]
| Black | Blue | Red | Tan | Dark Green | Green | Yellow | White |
| Gray | Cyan | Orange | Brown | Pink | Light Blue | Yellow Green | Purple |
Note: The displayed colors are approximate. Actual tones varied according to the analog television standard and quality of the CRT display.