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The Pit is a 1982 arcade action game released by Zilec in the United Kingdom, and licensed to Centuri in North America and Taito in Japan. [1] The game was designed by Andy Walker and Tony Gibson, [2] and developed by AW Electronics. The objective of The Pit is to descend into an underground labyrinth, retrieve a gem, and escape.
This is a list of arcade video games organized alphabetically by name. ... Pit & Run: F1 Race ... pop'n music 3 — 1999 Konami: Music ...
Pop'n Stage is a dancing game based around the Pop'n Music design and songs, with ten "switches" (four diagonals and a center on each side, just like Pump It Up ' s panel placement). It is a combination of Pop'n Music and Dance Dance Revolution , using Pop'n -style graphics with DDR -style gameplay.
Sente Technologies (also known as Bally Sente, Inc.) was an arcade game company.Founded as Videa in 1982 by ex-Atari employees Roger Hector, Wendi Allen (then known as Howard Delman), and Ed Rotberg, the company was bought by Nolan Bushnell and made a division of his Pizza Time Theatre company in 1983.
When I was a kid (back in the stone age, aka the early 80s), I dreamed of someday owning my own coin-op arcade games. Or maybe just living in an arcade; that would've been fine, too.
Tinkle Pit [a] is a maze arcade game released by Namco in 1993 only in Japan. It features many of the characters from the company's earlier games (including: the Galaxian flagship, Pac-Man, the Rally-X Special Flag, the Solvalou from Xevious, Mappy from his self-titled game and several others besides, many of whom only initially appeared in the game they were created for).
3-Demon (1983) is a wireframe-3D Pac-Man clone. Arcade Action (1983) Byter (1983) Chomps (1983) for IBM-PC by Howard Eugene Arrington of Ensign Software, published by Softsmith of The Software Guild was entirely in text mode using the IBM-PC's code page 437. The player character, the enemy ghosts, the pellets and bonus items were represented by ...
The YM2203, a.k.a. OPN (FM Operator Type-N), is a six-channel (3 FM and 3 SSG) sound chip developed by Yamaha. It was the progenitor of Yamaha's OPN family of FM synthesis chips used in many video game and computer systems throughout the 1980s and early 1990s. It was used in a variety of NEC computers, along with various arcade game machines.