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Survivor (1982 video game)

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Survivor
Publisher(s)Synapse Software
Designer(s)Richard Carr[1]
Platform(s)Atari 8-bit, Commodore 64
Release1982: Atari
1983: C64
Genre(s)Scrolling shooter
Mode(s)Single-player
2-4 player cooperative

Survivor is a multidirectional scrolling shooter written by Richard Carr for the Atari 8-bit family and published in 1982 by Synapse Software.[1] A Commodore 64 port by Peter Adams was released in 1983.[1]

The player controls a spaceship attacking a number of fortresses, attempting to destroy the fort's guns without being hit. There is optional cooperative play, which allows one user to control the motion of the spaceship while another controls its gun.

Gameplay

Survivor takes place on a scrolling map consisting of several areas walled off to form separate but closely spaced fortresses. The fortresses are randomly shaped and bristle with guns that fire continually. The fortresses are also surrounded by a protective wall made of blocks, which take several shots to destroy.

In-game screenshot (Atari 8-bit

The player begins in space outside the forts. They begin the action by moving towards one of them and shooting enough of the blocks to provide access to the fort within. They then enter the inner area and shoot out the guns. Some of these may be located on interior sections or in locations close to the wall where they may be difficult to attack. When all of the guns on a fort are destroyed, it explodes and awards the player with two "smart bombs". The player then moves onto another fort, and continues until all of the forts on the map are destroyed and the mission ends.

The player can be destroyed by the fortress guns, or any of the numerous moving enemies. These enemies can be destroyed with the ship's gun, or by using up one of the smart bombs, which destroy all of the enemies on the screen. Some enemies are also blocked by the protective wall, making them easy to avoid by shooting open only small passages in the walls. Others can move through the walls and present more of a challenge. Since some of the fort guns can only be attacked from angles that demand additional holes be punched in the walls, the play can become hectic.

The game begins with three lives and four smart bombs. Another life is awarded with every 10,000 points. At the end of a round, any lives over three award an additional 3000 points.

In single player mode the player uses the joystick to move in the eight cardinal directions. When the fire button is held down, the ship continues moving in the last direction while slowing down, and the joystick instead fires the gun in those same eight directions. In two player mode, the first player controls motion while the second controls firing, allowing motion and firing at the same time. The Atari version allowed up to four players in a single mission, giving each additional user control over a different guns or weapons.

Reception

Allen Doum reviewed the game for Computer Gaming World, and stated that "While there have been games that show the action from the player's point of view (Star Raiders, of course), they have always been limited either in what they showed, or in the animation of the scene. Until now."[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c Hague, James. "The Giant List of Classic Game Programmers".
  2. ^ Doum, Allen (May–Jun 1983). "The Atari Arena". Computer Gaming World. 1 (10): 28–29.