Quadrun (Prototype 1983xxxx)
Quadrun was published in 1983 by Atari for the Atari 2600. However, it is available to play at a relatively cheaper price on either the 2005 Xbox/PlayStation 2 collection Atari Anthology, or the Atari Flashback 2, where Quadrun is one of the forty included games.
Long ago, the peaceful land of Quad was invaded by cruel Captors who rounded up all the helpless inhabitants and imprisoned them in cages. The Captors called their prisoners "Runts". And the name has stuck. Now you've come to Quad to rescue the Runts and destroy their Captors with your special weapon: phaser balls.
Long ago, the peaceful land of Quad was invaded by cruel Captors who rounded up all the helpless inhabitants and imprisoned them in cages. The Captors called their prisoners "Runts". And the name has stuck. Now you've come to Quad to rescue the Runts and destroy their Captors with your special weapon: phaser balls.
- Your weapon: phaser balls. Shoot the Captors with a phaser ball, then run to the opposite sector and catch the phaser ball so that you can reuse it. Be quick and accurate: you have only three phaser balls with which to destroy the Captors. The game ends when you lose all three phaser balls.
- Running around the quad: The Quad consists of four sectors, with a Runt cage in the center. You can run to any sector on the screen. But to switch from a vertical sector to a horizontal sector, or vice versa, you must touch one of the side walls.
- The bad guys: the captors. There are five Captors per wave. Each wave begins with the QUADRUN voice, and each wave features a different type of Captor. Captors patrol the quad vertically. You can shoot at Captors only while you're in the vertical sectors. If a Captor crashes into you, you lose a phaser ball.
- The good guys: the Runts. Runts escape from the center cage and race madly left or right toward their doom: an electrified toaster grid. Catch each Runt before it runs into the grid or it will fry. You can cath Runts only while you're in the horizontal sectors.
- Don't let the critter counter disappear! The white line located at the top of the screen is the Critter Counter. Every time you fail to destroy a Captor or fail to catch a Runt, the Critter Counter decreases in length. When it disappears, the game ends.
- Crazy Crazed Wave: After you complete five waves, you begin the CRAZED WAVE. At the start of the CRAZED WAVE, the Critter Counter returns to its full length and you receive bonus points for all remaining phaser balls. During the CRAZED WAVE, you face constant attacks from a random assortment of the five types of Captors.
HINTS
- When a Brat Captor attacks, run to the opposite side of the screen and "lead it on" in order to destroy it.
- When a Yo-Yo rushes out, go to the spot where it first appeared and wait for it to return - like a yo-yo, it always comes back to where it started. Then hit it with your phaser ball.
- If you're not in a horizontal sector when a Runt escapes from its cage, hit the closest wall in order to move quickly into the horizontal channel and catch the Runt.
- If you have only one phaser ball left and a Captor is about to crash into you, fire the phaser ball (then go catch it!) so that you won't automatically lose it.
SCORING
- Goons 10
- Snags 50
- Yo-Yos 200
- Nods 500
- Brats 1000
- Each completed wave 1000
- Each saved Runt 100
- 1 Phaser ball at beginning 2500
- 2 Phaser balls at the beginning 5000
- 3 Phaser balls at the beginning 10000
- Destroy every 5th Captor 1000
Télécharger Quadrun (Prototype 1983xxxx)
Contents of the ROM :
Technical
CPU
- maincpu M6502 (@ 1 Mhz)
Chipset
- TIA (@ 0 Mhz)
- Cassette
Display
- Orientation Yoko
- Resolution 176 x 223
- Frequency 59.922743 Hz
Controlers
- Number of players 1
- Number of buttons 1
- Kind of controler joy (8 ways)
© Copyright author(s) of Wikipedia. This article is under CC-BY-SA
Ports
Quadrun was made available on Microsoft's Game Room service for its Xbox 360 console and for Windows-based PCs in July 2010.
History
Quadrun was published in 1983 by Atari. One of the four Atari Club games available exclusively via mail order, this title may have been available later in stores in very limited quantities. This is one of the rarest games from Atari, as only approximately 10,000 were initially made. According to programmer Steve Woita, the game was play-tested by a group of young girls. Not surprisingly, they did not like the game and found it too difficult, so Atari decided not to heavily distribute the game. It was also the first Atari game to feature voice synthesis ("Quadrun! Quadrun! Quadrun!"), and is one of only two games ever made for the Atari 2600 that actually talk (the other is Open Sesame, made by Bit Corp). Today, Quadrun is highly sought after by collectors, often selling for hundreds of dollars on auction sites.
Quadrun was made available on Microsoft's Game Room service for its Xbox 360 console and for Windows-based PCs in July 2010.
Quadrun was made available on Microsoft's Game Room service for its Xbox 360 console and for Windows-based PCs in July 2010.
Importance
Quadrun and Open Sesame are the only two Atari 2600 games to feature speech synthesis.