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New Games - Page 12432

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  • Dawn Patrol

    1978

    Dawn Patrol

    1978

    Shooter Arcade
    Arcade
    In this dogfighting game the player controls a bi-plane in World War I who tries to shoot down as many enemy planes as possible.
  • Adventureland

    1978

    Adventureland

    1978

    Puzzle Adventure
    Commodore VIC-20 BBC Microcomputer System Atari 8-bit PC-9800 Series PC-8800 Series Dragon 32/64 Commodore C64/128/MAX ZX Spectrum TRS-80 Color Computer Commodore PET Acorn Electron Apple II TRS-80 FM-7 Texas Instruments TI-99
    star 6
    A text based Adventure Game for the TRS-80, later enhanced with visual scenes in various ports. Only allowed 2-Word input and was largely based on Colossal Cave Adventure.
  • Acheton

    1978

    Acheton

    1978

    Adventure
    Acorn Archimedes BBC Microcomputer System ZX Spectrum Call-A-Computer time-shared mainframe computer system DOS Amstrad CPC Amstrad PCW
    Achteon was originally released on a mainframe computer, similar to Zork. And just like Zork it is a fantasy treasure hunt with 400 rooms and 200 objects, and therefore is much bigger than its more famous companion.
  • Computer Intro!

    1978

    Computer Intro!

    1978

    Odyssey 2 / Videopac G7000
    This cartridge turns your Odyssey2 into an interactive electronic teacher of computer theory and technology! You learn how to talk with a computer in an assembler language! You use the Odyssey2 alpha-numeric keyboard to write a computer program - and enter it into a microprocessor capable of making 100,000 electronic decisions every second! Then you actually run the program and see the exciting results on your television screen! Shut off the power and it erases everything automatically so you can start a new program any time you want!
  • Space Fighter

    1978

    Space Fighter

    1978

    Arcade
  • Bowling! / Basketball!

    1978

    Bowling! / Basketball!

    1978

    Sport
    Odyssey 2 / Videopac G7000
    Two titles are available in this cart: Bowling!: one to four players take turns in this game. The alley is shown from a top down view and the ball moves back and forth at the foul line. The players have to press the action button to release the ball and can add an effect to it by pressing left or right on the right hand controller. Each player gets two balls per frame, except in the case of a strike. A strike scores 30 points, a spare 15 points and an open play scores one point for each pin hit. There are two game modes, League Night (selected by pressing "1"), with a slower swinging ball, and Tournament Play (selected by pressing "2"), with a faster swinging ball. Basketball! (selected by pressing "3") features two players in a five minutes game. Each drop scores two points for the player. The player can move with the ball left or right, but must shoot within 8 seconds, or else the ball will automatically transfer to the other player. If the ball is shot while the other player is touching the ball, he will steal
  • Dungeon Campaign

    1978

    Dungeon Campaign

    1978

    Role-playing (RPG)
    Atari 8-bit Apple II
    One of the earliest rogue-like RPGs for home computers.
  • Breaker

    1978

    Breaker

    1978

    Arcade
    Arcade
    Breaker is Konami's fourth video game. It is their last game to be a clone of Breakout, with the following games Space King and Rich Man being clones of Space Invaders and Bee Gee respectively.
  • Codebreaker

    1978

    Codebreaker

    1978

    Puzzle
    Atari 2600
    This one's not for stupid people. The goal of codebreaker is to guess a 3 or 4 digit number in 12 tries. The computer lets you know when your on the right track with some vague clues. In the second game, NIM, you and your opponent strategically remove blocks in an attempt to be the one to remove the last block.
  • Football

    1978

    Football

    1978

    Sport
    Bally Astrocade
    Two or four players can compete head-to-head in Football for the Bally Astrocade.
  • Speed Race CL-5

    1978

    Speed Race CL-5

    1978

    Racing
    Arcade
    A later release in Taito's Speed Race series.
  • Frogs

    1978

    Frogs

    1978

    Platform
    Arcade
    Frogs is a single-player action / platform arcade game released by Sega-Gremlin in 1978. It is the first video game with a jumping character (predating Donkey Kong by 3 years), which by some definitions could make it the first platform game. The player controls a frog on lily pads and attempts to catch (with the frog's tongue and while jumping) various insects (butterflies and dragonflies) worth different amounts of points in a set amount of time. Frogs is one of the first arcade games to include a static background as part of the arcade cabinet.[citation needed] The game’s graphics are "projected" by laying the monitor flat on its back and reflecting the computer-generated graphics of the frogs and flies toward the player via a mirror at a 45-degree angle. (The game’s graphics were actually generated and shown backward, so the mirror reflection would show letters and numbers properly.)
  • Atari Football

    1978

    Atari Football

    1978

    Sport Arcade
    Arcade
    Atari Football is a 2-player 1978 arcade game in which the sport of American football is accurately emulated, with players represented by Xs and Os. The game was one of the most popular arcade games in its day and is credited with popularizing the trackball. Twenty-five cents would allow 90 seconds of playtime, while adding more quarters would allow longer play. Considered physically exhausting to play, Atari Football involves spinning the trackball as fast as possible to win the game. Just 90 seconds of play could result in sore palms, and longer could cause blisters.
  • Gee Bee

    1978

    Gee Bee

    1978

    Pinball Arcade
    Arcade
    Namco's first independently designed video arcade game, Gee Bee combines gameplay elements of pinball and Breakout. There are two paddles, one at the bottom and one in the middle, that stay aligned when moving, so players must pay attention to both when bouncing the ball. There are blocks at the top, sides. and in two tiny compartments on the sides near the bottom. There is also a third, stationary, vertically-oriented paddle in the middle, as well as bumpers to give it a pinball feel. Scoring depends on what objects you hit. This was the first of three similar games designed and developed by Toru Iwatani, the creator of Pac-Man.
  • Beneath Apple Manor

    1978

    Beneath Apple Manor

    1978

    Role-playing (RPG)
    Atari 8-bit DOS Apple II
    star 6.4
    Very early dungeon-crawler, it is the first known roguelike pre-dating Rogue itself though no link between the two games exists.
  • Super Breakout

    1978

    Super Breakout

    1978

    Arcade
    Arcade
    star 6.5
    Super Breakout is an arcade game released by Atari in 1978. It utilizes a Motorola M6502 (running up at 375 KHz) and, as the name suggests, is the sequel to Breakout, which was released two years earlier. There are three different modes to choose from: Double Breakout, the playfield for which contains in fifty-two orange blocks (5-14 points), fifty-two green blocks (1-6 points), two paddles and two balls, Cavity Breakout, which contains in forty-four orange blocks (7-21 points), and fifty-two green blocks (1-9 points), one paddle, and three balls (the second and third of which have to be freed before they come into play) and Progressive Breakout which contains fifty-two blue blocks (7 points) and fifty-two green blocks (5 points), one paddle, and one ball - and the blocks shall be lowered down towards the paddle, at a rate determined by the number of times the ball lands on your paddle, but as the ball destroys them, additional rows of blocks shall appear at the top of the screen and be lowered down towards the pad
  • Secret Base

    1978

    Secret Base

    1978

    Arcade
  • Pro Racer

    1978

    Pro Racer

    1978

    Arcade
  • Trampoline

    1978

    Trampoline

    1978

    Arcade
    This is Exidy's sequel to Circus. It was originally developed under the name Trapeze, but only one board of this version is known to exist and it is not thought to have been released i North America. The game did however find success in Japan and was released by Taito in several variations under the Trampoline name in upright and tabletop arcade cabinets.
  • Extra Inning

    1978

    Extra Inning

    1978

    Sport
    Arcade
    The first graphical baseball sim, released by Midway for arcades in 1978
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