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Missile Command

Tucked away safely in an underground bunker, you are
solely responsible for defending six cities from a relentless, ever-escalating
ICBM attack. Your three missile bases are armed with nuclear missiles capable
of intercepting the incoming enemy nukes, planes and smart bombs. One nuke hit
on any of your three launch bases will incapacitate that facility for the rest
of your current turn, but one nuke hit on any of your six cities will destroy it
completely. (The only chance you have of rebuilding a city comes when a bonus
city is awarded for every 10,000 points scored.) And when all six of your
cities have been destroyed, the cataclysmic end of the world proceeds. Game
over.
(Atari, 1980)

Possibly the first video game ever to register on the moral compass, Atari's
Missile Command contained a strong, anti-nuclear message, arriving at the
dawn of Ronald Reagan's presidency. For those of you who weren't alive at that
time, here's a little bit of historical context. Reagan's barely-diplomatic
saber rattling with a quick succession of Soviet Premiers made his reign in the
White House one of the biggest nuclear scares since the Cuban Missile Crisis.
What with Reagan declaring the U.S.S.R. to be the "evil empire,"
creating the Strategic Defense Initiative, and pissing off the Middle East from
Iran to Libya (and God knows, we haven't heard a peep out of the Middle
Eastern countries since then!), Missile Command was more than a game...it
was more of a harbinger. Of course, in 1980, these things hadn't happened yet...but
by the time they did, Atari's innocuous little game had given us an idea of what
the outcome could be - a no-win situation, as seen in the screen shots below.
Pretty scary stuff for a quarter.
Atari naturally kept the rights to Missile
Command for itself, promptly introducing an Atari
2600 edition, following up with Missile Command cartridges for the
Atari 400 and 800 computers and the Atari
5200. But in one of Atari's savviest marketing moments, it didn't make a
version of Missile Command for any other platforms.

This game is available in
theLogBook.com's Classic Video Game Store.
Rating:
Four quarters - a couple of minor irritants, but mostly a compelling and
addictive game.
Reviewed by Earl Green
theLogBook.com editor/webmaster

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