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Yars' Revenge

As the last of a race of spacefaring insects, you must
defend yourself from a relentless wave of alien attackers bent on ridding the
universe of your race. An alien tracer, deadly to the touch, tracks your every
move, though it cannot harm you while you're in the neutral zone at the center
of the screen. You must eat away at the aliens' shield, which not only reduces
their defenses, but builds your energy reserve so you can fire your own powerful
weapon, which can wipe out the alien, the tracer - or yourself, if you're clumsy
enough to be caught in its path.
(Atari, 1981; programmed by Howard Scott Warshaw)

One of the coolest games ever conceived for the Atari 2600, Yars'
Revenge was a brilliant arcade-style game. In fact, I'm amazed that it
apparently never made it into coin-op form (like such games as Lode
Runner and Pitfall!). Addictive, fast
moving, and visually abstract and interesting in a way that took advantage of
the Atari 2600's limited graphical capabilities, Yars' Revenge was a very
cool game. Where the Atari 2600 version of Pac-Man
is often a reminder of the 2600's worst properties, Yars' Revenge can be
held up as an example of one of the best games that graced that machine.
Rating:
A whole dollar - trade it in for more quarters, you'll be playing this one
for a while.
Reviewed by Earl Green
theLogBook.com editor/webmaster

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