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Prepare to qualify! Fly to the finish line in a fierce field of Formula One
competitors in a qualifying lap. Leaving the track is trouble - and hitting
one of the billboards dotted around the edges of the Mt. Fuji track is a sure
way to miss out on the subsequent race. (I've always wondered anyway: why
are there billboards around a racetrack? Are race car drivers a desirable
demographic to advertisers? Can they actually read those signs at 200+ MPH?)
(Atari [under license from Namco], 1982)

First off, a note to our loyal readers: I hope you're happy! Pole
Position is, by a vast margin, the single most-requested, most-asked-about
game ever at Phosphor Dot Fossils. You should see
some of the mail I've gotten regarding this game's absence in the past few years
- accusations of everything from bad taste to just plain incompetence. Well
fear not, faithful Phosphor Dot Fossils followers, for I actually love
this game.
Pole Position is a rare, serendipitous thing of beauty - and has
anyone ever noticed how many such gems spring from Namco? - where the graphics,
the handling of the controls, and the sound and music are perfect. I still find
myself humming the high score music lately. (Not that I'm so good at the game
that I've memorized it - my older brother was always much better at
Pole Position than I was.) It could be argued that Sega's competing
racing game Turbo, which hit arcades at
roughly the same time as Pole Position, had better graphics, a point I'm
willing to concede...but Turbo was much harder for me to control, so if
it came down to a choice between the two racing games, Pole Position
would get my quarter every time.
What an excellent game. As I've pointed out, Pole Position is still
a jewel in Namco's crown, and you can still play it on nearly every modern
console in existence. Atari held onto the license for the game for its 2600 and 5200 consoles, as
well as marketing Intellivision and home computer versions through its Atarisoft division.
The Atari 2600 port of Pole Position
was surprisingly good, all things considered. In the arcades, Atari bought
the U.S. rights to Namco's sequel, the even more polished Pole
Position II, of which Atari created
a decent home
version for its doomed Atari 7800 console.

This game is available through
theLogBook.com's Classic Video Game Store.
Rating:
One dollar - top of the line. Go trade it in for more quarters, you'll
want to play this game several times.
Reviewed by Earl Green
theLogBook.com editor/webmaster



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