Panasonic Omnivision, a.k.a. Reggie-Vision, as Reggie Jackson was their spokesman at the time. My dad must have bought it in 81 or 82. It was a top loader, wired remote w/pause,ff,rew, play and stop. It had a 12 channel tuner with a push button and a little tuning wheel for each channel. The channel numbers were plastic tabs that could be inserted onto a strip that was slid into the side of the unit. The tuner was not cable ready, but it could pickup a few cable channels between 6 and 7, and a few channels above 13. When our cable was upgraded from 12 channels to 36 channels, we bought one of those Radio Shack converters that converted cable channels to UHF channels. Problem was that it was not very stable, so we were constantly having to retune the darn thing. It had a manual tracking knob, and also had a switch for SP, LP, and SLP speeds, so it was possible to playback videos at a different speed than what it was recorded at. I used it mainly to make 6 hour tapes of MTV, back when they played videos.That VCR continued to work until the late 90's, when the motor finally went out.
My dad was an early adopter in those days. He bought a Novus calculator in the early 70's. It had the red led's and did add, subtraction, multiplication, and division only. I think he paid well over $100 for it. He still has it and AFAIK, it still works. We also had a GE cordless phone that he bought around 1980. It was a 2-channel phone that operated just above the AM broadcast band, around 1700 kHz. To change channels, there was a switch in the base and a switch in the handset that had to be switched to either channel A or B. Not long after we got our phone, our next door neighbor got a similar phone, and we could pickup each other's conversations. When their phone rang, ours did too and vice versa. I think he paid about $200 for the phone.
He never bought a PONG, although I had an uncle who bought one when they first came out, and I remember everyone at my grandmother's house hundled around the TV watching the "matches"