Software:Moon Patrol

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Short description: 1982 video game
Moon Patrol
MoonPatrol arcadeflyer.png
North American arcade flyer
Developer(s)Irem
Publisher(s)Arcade Ports
Atari, Inc.
Atarisoft
Designer(s)Takashi Nishiyama[1]
Platform(s)Arcade, Apple II, Atari 8-bit, Atari 2600, Atari 5200, Atari ST, Commodore 64, IBM PC, MSX, TI-99/4A, VIC-20
Release
Genre(s)Scrolling shooter
Mode(s)1-2 players alternating
Arcade systemIrem M-52 hardware

Moon Patrol (ムーンパトロール, Mūn Patorōru) is a 1982 arcade video game developed and released by Irem. It was licensed to Williams for distribution in North America.[5] The player controls a Moon buggy which can jump over and shoot obstacles on a horizontally scrolling landscape as well as shoot aerial attackers. Designed by Takashi Nishiyama, Moon Patrol is often credited with the introduction of full parallax scrolling in side-scrolling games. Cabinet art for the Williams version was done by Larry Day. Most of the home ports were from Atari, Inc., sometimes under the Atarisoft label.

Gameplay

Two UFOs attack the moon buggy from above.

As a Luna City police officer assigned to Sector Nine, the home of the "toughest thugs in the galaxy", the player controls a Moon buggy that travels to the right over the horizontally scrolling surface of the Moon. Craters, mines, and other obstacles on the ground must be shot or jumped over. Three types of flying UFOs attack from above and must be shot down. One of the flying enemies has a weapon which creates a crater when it hits the ground.

Gameplay takes place on two courses, each divided into 26 checkpoints identified with letters of the English alphabet. Of these, the five major checkpoints—E, J, O, T and, Z—denote a new "stage" with a new background and theme; for example, the third stage starts at J and introduces mines. The top portion of the screen shows a timeline-style map of the course, with the major checkpoints marked. Above the map is an indicator of the current checkpoint, the time spent in the stage, and three indicator lights: the top light indicates upcoming enemy aerial attacks, the middle one indicates an upcoming minefield, and the bottom one indicates enemies approaching from behind.

At the end of a stage, that time spent is compared to the average, and bonus points are awarded accordingly, at 1,000 plus 100 per second bettered; completing an entire course gives an additional 5,000 points plus 100 per second bettered. There are two unique courses: the "Beginner Course" and the "Champion Course". The Champion Course "loops" forever, and each loop is numbered for convenience, up to three.

Extra lives are given at 10,000, 30,000, and 50,000 points; thereafter, no more lives are given. The game ends when the last patrol car is destroyed. The game can be continued, but points scored from one game do not carry over. 999,990 points is the maximum high score that can be achieved; players can exceed this score, but it "turns over" if they do.

Ports

Atari, Inc. released Moon Patrol for the Apple II, Atari 8-bit family, Atari 2600, Atari 5200, Atari ST, Commodore 64,[6] VIC-20, IBM PC (as a self-booting disk), and TI-99/4A. The versions for non-Atari systems were published under the Atarisoft label. The MSX conversion was published by Irem.[7]

Reception

Moon Patrol was among the five top-grossing arcade games on North America's monthly RePlay charts by January 1983.[8]

Moon Patrol received a Certificate of Merit in the category of "1984 Best Science Fiction/ Fantasy Video Game" at the 5th annual Arkie Awards.[9]:42 Arcade Express reviewed the arcade version in January 1983 and scored it 8 out of 10.[10]

Scott Mace of InfoWorld stated that Moon Patrol for the Commodore 64 was his favorite Atarisoft game, making good use of the computer's sound.[11] Computer Games magazine called the Commodore 64 conversion a "very good" shoot 'em up and the "thinking man's killing game" while noting it has a continue feature like Vanguard.[12] They later gave the home computer conversions a B− rating.[13] In March 1985, Computer & Video Games rated the Atari 800 version 33 out of 40 and listed it as the third best game of the month.[14] In 1995, Flux magazine ranked the arcade version 86th on their "Top 100 Video Games".[15]

Legacy

Moon Patrol was included in the retro compilations Arcade Hits: Moon Patrol & Spy Hunter for Game Boy Color and Midway Presents Arcade's Greatest Hits for Dreamcast, PlayStation, and Microsoft Windows. In 2006 Bandai released an enhanced version as Moon Patrol EX for cell phones.[16] Lunar Patrol J2ME was released in 2012 by GRP Software (Java ME and Symbian) with enhanced physics and playability. Moon Patrol was released for the Nintendo Switch by Hamster in March 2018 as part of the Arcade Archives series.[17] A version was announced in 2018 for the Intellivision Amico.[18]

Clones

A bootleg version called Moon Ranger was released in the arcades the same year as Moon Patrol.[19]

Home clones include Desert Patrol for the TRS-80 Color Computer (1983), Gas Hog for the Atari 2600 (1983),[20] Lunar Rover Patrol for the Dragon 32 (1983), Moon Buggy for the Commodore 64 (1983), Moon Alert for the ZX Spectrum (1984), Luna Rover for the ZX Spectrum (1985),[21] Moon Control for the Amstrad CPC (1985), Moonrider for MSX (1986), and Overlander for the Amiga (1993). Battle Through Time (1984) for the Commodore 64 re-themed the gameplay to be about major wars of the 20th century. A contemporaneous review for B.C.'s Quest for Tires (1983) remarked on the game's similarity to Moon Patrol.[22]

Open-source clones named moon-buggy[23] and ASCII Patrol[24] run in Unix-like terminals.

Impact

Moon Patrol introduced full parallax scrolling. The arcade video game Jump Bug (1981) had previously used a limited form of parallax scrolling, with the main scene scrolling while the starry night sky is fixed and clouds move slowly. Moon Patrol has three separate background layers scrolling at different speeds, simulating the distance between them.[25] Taito's Jungle King, also with parallax scrolling, was released a month after Moon Patrol.

The game's designer Takashi Nishiyama went on to create the beat 'em up game Kung-Fu Master (1984).

References

  1. "The Man Who Created Street Fighter from 1UP.com". 3 January 2012. http://www.1up.com/features/the-man-who-created-street-fighter. 
  2. Akagi, Masumi (13 October 2006) (in ja). アーケードTVゲームリスト国内•海外編(1971-2005). Japan: Amusement News Agency. p. 120. ISBN 978-4990251215. https://archive.org/details/ArcadeGameList1971-2005/page/n121. 
  3. "Moon Patrol (Registration Number PA0000142440)". https://cocatalog.loc.gov. 
  4. "Video Game Flyers: Moon Patrol, Karateco (France)". https://flyers.arcade-museum.com/?page=thumbs&db=videodb&id=5489. 
  5. "Moon Patrol - Videogame by Irem". Arcade-museum.com. http://www.arcade-museum.com/game_detail.php?game_id=8747. 
  6. "Moon Patrol - Commodore 64 Game / C64 Games, C64 reviews, downloads & SID tunes". Lemon64.com. http://www.lemon64.com/games/details.php?ID=1710. 
  7. "Moon Patrol". https://www.generation-msx.nl/software/irem/moon-patrol/348/. 
  8. "The Top Ten". Electronic Fun with Computers & Games 1 (3): 91. January 1983. https://archive.org/details/Electronic_Fun_with_Computer_Games_Vol_01_No_03_1983-01_Fun_Games_Publishing_US/page/n90. 
  9. Kunkel, Bill; Katz, Arnie (January 1984). "Arcade Alley: The Arcade Awards, Part 1". Video (Reese Communications) 7 (10): 40–42. ISSN 0147-8907. 
  10. "Reviews of New Products: Moon Patrol: Rating 8/10" (PDF). p. 6. http://www.digitpress.com/library/newsletters/arcadeexpress/arcade_express_v1n11.pdf#page=6. 
  11. Mace, Scott (1984-04-09). "Atarisoft vs. Commodore". InfoWorld: p. 50. https://books.google.com/books?id=jC4EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA50. 
  12. "Conversion Capsules: Hit Games in New Formats". Computer Games 3 (4): 62–3. December 1984. https://archive.org/details/Computer_Games_Vol_3_No_4_1984-12_Carnegie_Publications_US/page/n61/mode/2up. 
  13. "1985 Software Buyer's Guide". Computer Games (United States: Carnegie Publications) 3 (5): 11–8, 51–8. February 1985. https://archive.org/details/Computer_Games_Vol_3_No_5_1985-02_Carnegie_Publications_US/page/n13/mode/2up. 
  14. "Software Reviews: Ghostbusters". Computer & Video Games (42 (April 1985)): 29–35. 16 March 1985. https://worldofspectrum.org/archive/magazines/computer--video-games/42#29. 
  15. "Top 100 Video Games". Flux (Harris Publications) (4): 32. April 1995. https://archive.org/details/flux-issue-4/page/n31/mode/2up. 
  16. Buchanan, Levi (June 29, 2006). "Moon Patrol EX". http://www.ign.com/articles/2006/06/29/moon-patrol-ex. 
  17. "ArcadeArchives | Nintendo Switch". http://www.hamster.co.jp/american_hamster/arcadearchives/switch/moon_patrol.htm. 
  18. "INTELLIVISION® CELEBRATES ITS 40TH ANNIVERSARY". October 22, 2018. https://www.intellivisionamico.com/press-releases/press-release-december-3rd-2019. 
  19. "Moon Ranger - Videogame by Unknown". Klov.com. http://www.klov.com/game_detail.php?game_id=8750. 
  20. Trionfo, Adam; Federico, Chris. "Gas Hog". http://www.orphanedgames.com/articles/Gas_Hog/Gas_Hog.html. 
  21. "Luna Rover". http://www.worldofspectrum.org/infoseekid.cgi?id=0002954. 
  22. Bernstein, Harvey (March 1984). "8-Bit Product Reviews". Antic 2 (12). https://www.atarimagazines.com/v2n12/productreviews.html. 
  23. "moon-buggy". 14 April 2013. https://ttygames.wordpress.com/2013/04/14/moon-buggy/. 
  24. "Ascii Patrol". http://ascii-patrol.com/. 
  25. Uduslivii, Igor (26 December 2013). iPhone Game Blueprints. Packt Publishing Ltd. p. 339. ISBN 978-1-84969-027-0. https://books.google.com/books?id=C5R4AgAAQBAJ&pg=PT339. 

External links