 Okay, this week in Retro Tech, this is kind of cool. First, let's show the commercial for it. We are the domeheads. We are the perfect family. And we play the perfect electronic game. Computer Perfection. Watch our daughter challenge her memory by lighting the lights in perfect sequence. Computer Perfection beats out clues and keeps score. With millions of games in its head, we can play alone. Or against each other. I run money. Oh well, nobody's perfect. Computer Perfection from Lakeside. In the world of electronic games, it's outstanding. Okay, 1979 Computer Perfection. This was released by Lakeside. It was a groundbreaking electronic game. How did the ultimate playmate? The game house in a transparent blue dome was activated by lifting the dome. And it revealed four games and three skill levels to choose from. Four games that it offered up or countdown. You'd try to get ten lights in the correct order with the fewest number of moves. Black Hole. Another one player game. Black Hole was the same objective countdown, but would add a twist. If you pressed another really lit button, the game would turn off all the lights ahead of it. The light itself. Brain Badden. That's the third game. A two player game. One player had to turn off all the lights starting with number one. Well, the other player to turn all the lights on starting with number six. Light Race. Two player game to turn on more than five lights. It wasn't supposed to be a game, more than a game. It was supposed to be something that was like half computer at the time, because this was like when computers were introduced. And it was supposed to be like a sophisticated game that was like very electronic, but also something kind of like a board game. One neat thing about it, a little bit of trivia. It hits a major media attention, not really, but back in the day, the show Buck Rogers in 21st century, in the episode Mark of the Sauron, viewers can notice computer perfections distinct blue dome besides Buck, Gilgerard's bed in the searcher sick bay. So that is this week's retro tech. This is the perfect family. Head or blue? Yeah, it was kind of it was kind of nice. JP is currently turning this into a synth. I think it's like the Atari 2600 switches. That's what was available, you could tell. And there's like a green LED and a red LED. Yeah, it's interesting because they're like, okay, computers are here, but we still make board games. So we have to like, you're in the computer as well. You're gonna like this. We're calling it computer perfection. It looks like, yeah, the enclosure is beautiful. Yeah, the blue dome, I'm surprised. It looks like good condition. Yeah.