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Tron arcade machine. Bally Midway had two different design teams submit pitches for the game. One team planned a first-person vector graphics game, while the second team suggested a collection of five minigames using existing Bally Midway technology; the second proposal was used because it had a better chance of being completed by the deadline. [4]
Tron (video game) Tron: Identity This page was last edited on 18 July 2024, at 02:52 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4. ...
Tron: Legacy, its comic book tie-in Tron: Betrayal, the animated television prequel Tron: Uprising and the video game tie-in Tron: Evolution serve as direct sequels to Tron. Several characters appear in all four parts, while others are specific to one part. All four parts establish a specific timeline of the Tron universe. [7]
TomyTutor Tron (1983): Developed by Tomy, for the Tomy Tutor home computer. However, the release only had the Tron moniker in Japan. The game was released stateside with the title, Hyperspace. [55] Discs of Tron (1983): Developed by Midway Games as a sequel to their initial release, the gameplay focuses on the disc-combat from the film. [56]
Armagetron Advanced is a multiplayer snake game in 3D based on the light cycle sequence from the film Tron. [1] It is available for Linux, macOS, Microsoft Windows, AmigaOS 4 [2] and OpenBSD as free and open-source software.
Tron: Deadly Discs is a video game for the Intellivision console published by Mattel in 1982. The initial game design was done by Don Daglow, with further design and programming by Steven Sents. It is the first of three Intellivision games based on the Disney motion picture Tron. Mattel released an Atari 2600 version under its M Network label.
Adventures of Tron is a platform video game produced by Mattel in 1982 for the Atari 2600. [1] It is based on the Disney film Tron . [ 2 ] The game was originally intended to be a port of the Intellivision video game Tron: Maze-A-Tron , but it became an original title as development progressed.
GLtron is a 3D snake game based on the light cycle portion of the film Tron. [1] The game is free and open-source software and has been ported to many mobile and non-mobile operating systems such as Windows , MacOS , Symbian [ 2 ] and Android [ 3 ] over the years.