Anyway, here’s a link to where you can play Sinistar on-line. (Although, you will have to watch a short ad first.) It’s an almost-exact duplicate of the arcade version right down to where you have to insert a “quarter” into a slot before playing. However, the small viewing screen is a bit of drawback.
Actually, since we’re talking about arcade boxes, it’s worth pointing out that the Pong arcade game was not a computer program. Nolan Bushnell (from whose interview on an Atari Classics CD-ROM I own I am getting this info) said the full computers at the time were not up to the task of providing the gameplay he wanted. The earliest Atari consoles, Pong included, were all hardwired state machines.
I ruled on that game. It was awesome, and I still remember all the joystick combos. (Up-left joystick, Down-right joystick is front flip. UpL, RightR is jumping side kick, etc…) I was only in the fourth grade, but I used to play on it for a half an hour or more on one quarter and gather a crowd around me when I would play. Ah…the good old video game days when actually getting to a high level on an arcade machine would give you some notoriety in the neightborhood.
My old time favorites are Joust, Gauntlet, and Ms. Pac Man. Slightly missing the 1985 cutoff is the 1986 Sega classic, Out Run. It is still perhaps my favorite racing game of all time. I just never get sick of it.
Another vote for Space Invaders. Picked up a buddy on our day off-he had instructions to get the wash done. We stopped at the bar for a cold beer-just one. Fast forward 6 hours: I drop him off, the roll of guarters is spent on Space Invaders, and their dirty laundry is still in my trunk. I could hear his wife screaming from the second floor. :eek:
I’ll go along with Zaxxon and Battlezone, but the very best in that time frame was Star Wars(1983). Anybody else remember ‘using the Force’ in the trench section, weaving up and down and around the barriers?
I actually had one of the first home game systems, a Sears Hockey/Pong. I recall it was hard wired as well. We never thought of it as anything but a computer game, and that’s how they were called back then. According to this site, people stood in line for hours to buy these sets. Interesting to think, after all these years, that they weren’t really computers at all. Maybe my “just a few K” comment doesn’t apply. (Also interesting to note that video games were originally conceived simply as a way to sell more television sets! :eek: )
Regardless, the OP specified “Video Games”, not computer games, so Pong still qualifies. I’m sticking with Pong.
Although many great ones are listed, I’ll put down two that I was best at:
Moon Patrol - not a great game, but I could make it to the end of the first world no problem, which seemed to impress the kids watching me at the roller rink :eek:
Time Pilot - was another one I enjoyed and could make it to the UFO levels. A shame the sequel was utter crap.
Zookeeper - a third favorite that I wasn’t great at, but was unique and the varied levels made it very fun.
Nope. The attract mode features the line “Beware of the ‘Unbeatable?’ pterodactyl.” The reason “unbeatable” has a question mark after it is because the pterodactyl can be killed if you strike your lance into his open mouth.
And in early versions of Joust, all you had to do was stand in the lower-middle platform and the pterodactyl would just ram himself into your lance. Starting about level six, you could have the troll grab the last red bird, holding it, while you stand on that platform as pterodactyl after pterodactyl would rise up, impaling themselves. I broke a million points doing this once and that pretty much was that for me and the game.
I do remember that now. And I hated it as much then as I did playing it now. Sinistar is too hard to kill, and his minions too easy. You wouldn’t happen to know of an online vector graphics Star Wars, would you? Because that was awesome.
As for the best, it’s either Star Wars, Galaxa, or Ms. Pac-Man, with the glitch fixed. It says something that you can still readily find all three of these in arcades today.
What was the Pac-Man version with the pinball machine in the cabinet? When you got a certain object or went out one of the tunnels (I don’t remember which), the ball dropped into the pinball chamber and you played down there until you lost it (and I think at that point your Pac-Man sprite emerged from the tunnel on the opposite side).
I never found Sinistar that hard to kill. Just make sure you’re loaded up with bombs before he comes to life. Also, let him get pretty close before dropping a bomb so that you’re sure it will hit him (that will slow him down for a sec, so you wait until he gets close again before you drop the next one). You just have to watch you don’t crash into an asteroid while he’s chasing you.
And his minions get tougher to kill on later levels.
I decided to go for the all time record once, at 3am after 7 hours of play I called it quits leaving somewhere in the hundreds of extra ships lined up across the top and into memory.
I actually made some money on the deal. When kids came in wanting to play, I would let them play about 6 ships for a quarter.
There was also Mr. & Mrs. Pac-Man pinball, where the “maze” was a 5 x 5 grid of dots on the center of the playfield. You’d use one flipper button to choose a direction, and another flipper button to move Pac-Man thataway. Definitely lacked some visual pizazz, if ya asks me.