Bradley Trainer (a.k.a. “Military Battlezone”)

Atari Bradley TrainerThe Game: As the pilot of a Bradley infantry fighting vehicle, you wander the desolate battlefield, trying to wipe out enemy tanks and helictopers without accidentally firing on your own allies. (Atari, under special contract for the United States Army, 1981)

Memories: You’d be hard-pressed to find anyone in the arcade business who’d complain that a game was too good. But Ed Rotberg, designer of Atari’s original 3-D vector graphics tank hit Battlezone, would be the exception. His revolutionary first-person fighting game was impressive enough to attract the attention of the United States Army, and this landed him a very special job he did not want: retooling the game to the Army’s exacting specifications to turn it into a real training simulation. (Read more about this game…)

Bradley Trainer (a.k.a. “Military Battlezone”) review written by Earl Green / review, photographs and video presentations are © by Earl Green and by theLogbook.com and may not be reproduced without permission. Contact us for reprint permission or licensing information on theLogBook.com original material. Bradley Trainer (a.k.a. “Military Battlezone”) is filed under the categories: No Rating, B, Cockpit, other, ...under development, Atari, Specialized Controller, First-Person, Arcade, Tanks, Vector Graphics, 1981, Unreleased Prototypes

Pac-Man

Coleco Pac-ManThe Game: As a round yellow creature consisting of a mouth and nothing else, you maneuver around a relatively simple maze, gobbling small yellow dots and evading four monsters who can eat you on contact. In four corners of See the TV adthe screen, red power pellets enable you to turn the tables and eat the monsters for a brief period for an escalating score. The monsters, once eaten, return to their home base in ghost form and return to chase you anew. If cleared of dots, the maze refills and the game starts again, but just a little bit faster… (Coleco, 1981)

Memories: When Atari’s VCS translation of the immensely popular Pac-Man debuted to almost universal scorn, Coleco’s marketing division must have cheered. The market was primed for a good game of Pac-Man, and with the first in its line of licensed “mini-arcades,” Coleco had just the ticket every kid was looking for. (Read more about this game…)

Pac-Man review written by Earl Green / review, photographs and video presentations are © by Earl Green and by theLogbook.com and may not be reproduced without permission. Contact us for reprint permission or licensing information on theLogBook.com original material. Pac-Man is filed under the categories: Handheld / Portable Games, LED Mini-Arcades, ...in your pocket, P, Coleco, Joystick, 4 quarters (4 stars), 1981, Maze

20 queries. 3.470 seconds.
Powered by Wordpress
theme by evil.bert