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In grid capture games, also called line coloring games, the maze consists of lines, and the goal is to capture rectangular areas by traversing their perimeters. The gameplay is not fundamentally different from Pac-Man (players still have to navigate the entire maze to complete a level) but enough games have used the grid motif that it is a ...
Thief is a 1981 arcade video game that is extremely similar to Pac-Man. The player operates a car being pursued by several blue police cars, in a maze that is supposed to represent city streets. There are eight mazes in all, which change every level in a set order, then repeat starting with the ninth screen.
Berzerk is a video game designed by Alan McNeil and released for arcades in 1980 by Stern Electronics of Chicago. The game involves a Humanoid Intruder who has to escape maze-like rooms that are littered with robots that slowly move towards and shoot at the Humanoid. The player can shoot at the robots to try and escape the room.
Ms. Pac-Man [b] is a maze arcade video game developed by General Computer Corporation and published by Midway in 1982. [a] It is a sequel to Pac-Man (1980) and the first entry in the series to not be made by Namco.
Pac-Man, originally called Puck Man [a] in Japan, is a 1980 maze video game developed and released by Namco for arcades.In North America, the game was released by Midway Manufacturing as part of its licensing agreement with Namco America.
Tutankham (ツタンカーム, Tsutankāmu) is a 1982 arcade video game developed and released by Konami [4] [9] and released by Stern in North America. [3] Named after the Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun, [9] the game combines a maze shoot 'em up with light puzzle-solving elements.
According to the National Museum of Play, the history of arcade games in the United States traces its roots back to the 19th century, originating in dime museums and amusement parlors. Pinball ...
Rally-X was created by Namco and designed by Hirohito Ito, with hardware developed by Kouichi Tashiro. [11] It was produced as a successor to Head On (1979), an older arcade game from Sega that similarly involved collecting items in a maze while avoiding enemy cars that pursued the player. [12]
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