Software:Hellcat Ace

From HandWiki
Short description: 1982 combat flight simulator video game
Hellcat Ace
Hellcat Ace box cover.jpeg
Box cover for the original Atari release
Developer(s)MicroProse
Publisher(s)MicroProse
Designer(s)Sid Meier
Programmer(s)Atari
Sid Meier
C64
Ron Verovsky
Dale Gray
IBM PC
R. Donald Awalt
Platform(s)Atari 8-bit, Commodore 64, IBM PC
Release1982: Atari
1983: C64
1984: IBM PC
Genre(s)Combat flight simulator
Mode(s)Single-player

Hellcat Ace is a 1982 combat flight simulator video game written by Sid Meier for the Atari 8-bit family and published by MicroProse as their first program. The game was an immediate hit and led Meier to write several new releases for the Atari platform. Hellcat Ace was later ported to the Commodore 64 in 1983 and IBM PC in 1984.

Gameplay

The player flies the Grumman F6F Hellcat in a series of missions. The initial screen allows the user to select a mission from 1 to 10, each with increasing difficulty. An additional four missions are listed but cannot be selected directly in the original version. When a mission is successfully completed, the game moves onto the next mission.[1]

On entering a mission the player is inside the Hellcat flying over the Pacific Ocean. They normally start at 10,000 feet altitude, flying north at 200 mph. In the first mission, Flying Tiger, the task is to shoot down a Japanese bomber which is placed directly in front of the player at the same altitude and thus easily shot down with a single burst from the guns. In the second mission, Pearl Harbor, the bomber is replaced by a somewhat tougher float plane, and so forth.[1]

Development and release

Sid Meier purchased an Atari 800 computer in 1980 and began writing games in Atari BASIC. He showed his first work, Hostage Rescue, to his parents; his mother became so engrossed that she had to force herself to drop the joystick and walk away.[2]

In 1982, Meier was working for a cash register company in Baltimore.[lower-alpha 1] Mutual friends knew of Meier's interest in flight simulators and introduced him to Bill Stealey, a former military pilot who then worked in strategic planning at General Instrument. The two met in Las Vegas in the summer of 1982 while at meetings, and found Red Baron in the arcade at the MGM Grand. Meier repeatedly beat Stealey at the game, as Meier was able to consistently predict the game's next moves.[3]

Meier claimed he could write a better game than Red Baron on his home computer in one week; Stealey replied that he would sell it if Meier could write it. Despite Meier's initial one-week estimate, Hellcat Ace took two months to complete. Stealey sold fifty copies at his first sales meeting, and MicroProse was formed to sell the game.[3] In a 1996 interview, Stealey recalled posing as a customer and calling computer stores to ask if they carried Hellcat Ace; he would then later call the stores as himself, and sell the game to them.[4] He stated, "All these guys ended up being my regular customers. They all knew the scam I pulled on them and they all said, 'Bill, it was a great game.' And they sold a ton."[4]

Hellcat Ace was a success and led to several new games in quick succession; Spitfire Ace was a modified Hellcat Ace released the same year,[5] 1983's NATO Commander was a classic wargame, and 1984's F-15 Strike Eagle[2] returned to the flight simulation side and was a hit, eventually selling more than 1 million copies.[6]

Many years later, the original MGM Grand Red Baron machine was tracked down with the help of Bally Midway executives, and installed in the MicroProse offices.[3]

Reception

Antic reviewed the game in May 1983, summing it up by saying "While the graphics are not stunning, the game plays well and holds your interest with multiple skill levels and a variety of scenarios." The reviewer praised the overall simulation, noting that "Fancy aerobatics are easily done; loops, barrel rolls, split 'S' and Immelman turns are all possible". It concludes by saying the only obvious improvement would be better graphical effects, but that this did not detract from the playability, recommending it to anyone with an interest in flight simulators.[1]

Page 6 also reviewed the game in their May 1983 issue. Mirroring the Antic review, they note "The graphics are simple but the overall effect is quite stunning... This is a great simulation giving a real feel of action."[7] Softline reviewed both Hellcat Ace and Spitfire Ace in their January 1984 issue, saying "The games' graphics are extremely simple" but otherwise gives it a positive review, stating that "While Commodore 64 and Atari owners still don't have access to anything as sophisticated as the Flight Simulator, they now have Hellcat Ace and Spitfire Ace, programs that could produce some vertigo in people with a lot of imagination."[8]

Notes

  1. The company is not specified in any of the listed references. National Cash Register was headquartered in Baltimore.

References

Citations

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Plotkin 1983, p. 82.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Jahromi 2021.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 CGW 1988, p. 9.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Ranii, David (September 15, 1996). "Wild Bill is flying again". The News & Observer (Raleigh, North Carolina): p. 4F. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/116425764/the-news-and-observer/. 
  5. Meier, Sid (2020). Sid Meier's Memoir!: A Life in Computer Games. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-1324005872. "I had just churned out my fourth title, Spitfire Ace, which was the kind of game we'd probably call an expansion pack today. It used the same code base as Hellcat Ace, but moved the battle scenarios from the Pacific to the European theater." 
  6. "2006 Walk of Game Inductees, 2006 Lifetime Achievement, Sid Meier". Walk of Game. n.d.. Archived from the original on May 29, 2007. https://web.archive.org/web/20070529035808/http://westfield.com/walkofgame/inductees/inductees.html. Retrieved August 27, 2007. 
  7. "Hellcat Ace". Page 6: 23–24. May 1983. https://archive.org/details/Page6-03-May83/page/22/mode/2up. 
  8. "Spitfire Ace and Hellcat Ace". Softline: 51–52. January-February 1984. https://archive.org/details/Softline_Magazine_Issue_3.3/page/n51/mode/2up. 

Bibliography