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These are games where the player moves through a maze while attempting to reach the exit, sometimes having to avoid or fight enemies. Despite a 3D perspective, the mazes in most of these games have 2D layouts when viewed from above. Some first-person maze games follow the design of Pac-Man, but from the point of view of being in the maze.
Pages in category "First-person maze games" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
Scary Maze Game; The Scrolls of Abadon; Serpentine (video game) Slaygon; Slot Racers; Snack Attack; Snail Maze; Sokoban; Space Invaders X Pac-Man; Spectar; Splat! (video game) Spore (1987 video game) Star Maze; Styx (Spectrum video game) Super Bomberman; Super Bomberman 2; Super Bomberman 3; Super Bomberman 4; Super Bomberman 5; Super Pac-Man ...
An updated version of the game, named Crazy Balloon 2005, was included alongside the original arcade release on Taito Legends Power-Up. There were no official contemporary home ports, but there were clones, including Crazy Balloon for the Commodore 64 ( Software Projects , 1983) [ 2 ] and Crazy Balloons for the ZX Spectrum (A&F Software, 1983 ...
Rally-X (Japanese: ラリーX, Hepburn: Rarī-Ekkusu) is a maze chase arcade video game developed in Japan and Germany by Namco and released in 1980. In North America, it was distributed by Midway Manufacturing and in Europe by Karateco. Players drive a blue Formula One race car through a multidirectional scrolling maze to collect yellow flags ...
Maze, also known as Maze War, [a] is a 3D multiplayer first-person shooter maze game originally developed in 1973 and expanded in 1974. The first version was developed by high school students Steve Colley, Greg Thompson, and Howard Palmer for the Imlac PDS-1 minicomputer during a school work/study program at the NASA Ames Research Center.
3D Monster Maze is a 1981 survival horror game designed by Malcolm Evans and published by J. K. Greye Software for the ZX81. [1] Rendered using low-resolution character block "graphics", it was one of the first 3D games for a home computer, [2] and one of the first games incorporating typical elements of the genre that would later be termed survival horror.
Maze Craze: A Game of Cops n’ Robbers is a game for the Atari Video Computer System (later renamed the Atari 2600) developed by Rick Maurer and published by Atari, Inc. in 1980. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In Maze Craze , two players compete to be the first to escape a randomly generated, top-down maze.