Frenzy (video game)

Frenzy (video game)

Infobox VG
title = Frenzy


developer = Stern Electronics
publisher = Stern Electronics
designer = Alan McNeil
release = 1982
genre = Multi-directional shooter
modes = Up to 2 players, alternating turns
cabinet = Upright and cocktail
arcade system =
display = Horizontal, Raster, standard resolution (Used: 256 x 224), 19 inch
input = Joystick; 1 button
platforms = Arcade, ColecoVision, Sinclair ZX Spectrum

Frenzy was an arcade game published by Stern Electronics in 1982. It was a sequel to the hit 1980 arcade game "Berzerk".

Description

"Frenzy" followed the basic paradigm set by "Berzerk": you are in a maze full of hostile robots who are shooting at you. The goal of the game is to survive as long as possible and score points by killing robots and travelling from room to room. The game has no end other than the player losing all of his or her lives.

You have a gun, so you can shoot back, and the robots are fortunately not that bright, and so can often be tricked into shooting each other. If you linger too long in a room, however, a bouncing smiley face, "Evil Otto", appears, and relentlessly chases you. Evil Otto will happily destroy any robots in his way, and can move through walls.

Differences from "Berzerk"

In "Berzerk", the walls are all electrified and can kill you if you touched one of them. In "Frenzy", some of the walls of the maze are composed of "dots" which can be shot. This opens up strategies such as blasting a hole in the side of a room to escape when in trouble. The solid walls, on the other hand, now reflect shots. You can trick robots into killing themselves by standing on the opposite side of a reflective wall and letting them shoot themselves. The only wall that simply absorbs shots harmlessly as in the original is the closed door that appears behind you when you enter a new room.

Neither type of wall is electrified, and so you can touch them without dying. On the other hand, you also usually can't kill robots by tricking them into walking into the now-harmless walls. In addition, you can no longer die by touching the robots or their explosions. Only their shots can kill you (though the blast radius from an exploding robot can kill you). There are two types of robots: skeletons and tanks. The two types have identical AI, but the skeletons are more difficult to shoot from above or below (because they're so thin).

In "Berzerk", Evil Otto was unkillable and unstoppable. In "Frenzy", shooting him once changes him from a smiley face to a "neutral" face, and another shot converts him to a "frowny" face. Another shot kills him. However, each time you kill Evil Otto makes him a little bit faster the next time he appears, which is usually immediately.

Every four mazes, there are seemingly decorative elements in "Frenzy" that don't exist in the earlier game. In one room is a huge statue of Evil Otto, for example. Each one has a specific effect on gameplay for that one room. The order is: Big Otto, Power Plant, Central Computer, and Robot Factory. The Power Plant and the Central Computer are surrounded by walls made entirely of "dots", while Big Otto and the Robot Factory are surrounded by reflective walls with only one breakable "dot" in the corner, making them more difficult to hit.

In the Power Plant room (see screenshot), shooting the power plant once will disable it, and all robots in the room will stop moving. In the Central Computer room, shooting the computer will cause all the robots to start moving and firing erratically. While they're in such a state, the walls can kill them. The Robot Factory will continue to spit out additional robots while you're in the stage, taunting you as it does so. Shooting the factory has no effect.

In the Big Otto room, if you kill Evil Otto, not only does he immediately respawn as usual, but the Big Otto sends four more Ottos at you, all moving at top speed. Like the Robot Factory, shooting Big Otto has no effect. Big Otto starts out with closed eyes and a neutral expression, but his expression changes to one of rage, with glowing red eyes and a frowning mouth, when you kill Evil Otto. He also smiles when you die, though his eyes remain the same as before, either closed or open.

Finally, the robots are nowhere near as chatty. They only speak in a few specific situations. They say "Robot attack!" when Evil Otto appears, "Charge attack shoot kill destroy" when you kill Otto and he respawns, "The humanoid must not destroy the robot" when entering the Big Otto room, "The humanoid..." when shooting the Central Computer, and randomly alternates between "A robot must get the humanoid" and "A robot, not a chicken" when the Robot Factory dispenses a new robot. The constant background chatter of the original game is gone.

Legacy

"Frenzy" was a less popular game than "Berzerk", possibly because it was even more difficult. "Frenzy" was ported to the ColecoVision home video game console and the Sinclair ZX Spectrum home computer in 1983.

ong

In 1982, R. Cade and the Video Victims recorded a song titled "Frenzy" using sound effects from the game, and released it on the album Get Victimized, a lesser-known video game song album.

Trivia

*"Frenzy" has 64,000 levels. If you manage to make it past all of them, the game crashes. It's unlikely that anyone has ever accomplished this without cheating.

*"Berzerk" machines could be converted into "Frenzy" machines by just dropping in a Stern-provided upgrade board.

External links

*


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Feeding Frenzy (video game) — Infobox VG title= Feeding Frenzy caption= Screenshot from Feeding Frenzy developer= PopCap Games (formerly by Sprout Games) publisher= PopCap Games (previously by GameHouse) distributor= Various designer= James Gwertzman, Del Chafe and Ed Allard… …   Wikipedia

  • Digger (video game) — Digger Developer(s) Windmill Software Inc. Publisher(s) Windmill Software Inc …   Wikipedia

  • Taz (video game) — Infobox VG title = Taz caption = aspect ratio = resolution = developer = Atari publisher = Atari distributor = designer = license = series = engine = version = released = 1983 genre = Action modes = ratings = platforms = Atari 2600 media =… …   Wikipedia

  • Frenzy (disambiguation) — Frenzy can refer to a number of things:* Frenzy , a 1972 film directed by Alfred Hitchcock * Frenzy (album), a 1979 album recorded by Split Enz * Frenzy (video game), an arcade game manufactured by Stern in 1982 *Frenzy (Transformers), a… …   Wikipedia

  • Zoo Entertainment (video game company) — Zoo Games Type Public (NASDAQ: ZOOG) Industry Computer and video game industry Founded 200 …   Wikipedia

  • List of video game musicians — The following is a list of computer and video game musicians, those who have worked in the video game industry to produce video game soundtracks or otherwise contribute musically. A broader list of major figures in the video game industry is also …   Wikipedia

  • Ticket to Ride (video game) — Infobox VG width= title= Ticket to Ride caption= developer= Next Level Games [ [http://www.xblah.net/2008/05/oflc watch ticket to ride crazy mouse.html XBLAH!: OFLC Watch Ticket To Ride, Crazy Mouse, and Darwinia+ rated] ] publisher= Playful… …   Wikipedia

  • South Park (video game) — Infobox VG title = South Park caption= North American PlayStation version box art developer = Iguana Entertainment (Nintendo 64, PC) Appaloosa Interactive (PlayStation) publisher = Acclaim, Gradiente designer = series = engine = Turok 2 released …   Wikipedia

  • Ascendancy (video game) — Infobox VG title = Ascendancy developer = The Logic Factory publisher = Virgin Interactive Entertainment designer = engine = released = 1995 genre = Turn based strategy (4X) modes = Single player ratings = ESRB: Everyone platforms = DOS, Windows… …   Wikipedia

  • Frenzy (Transformers) — Frenzy is the name of several fictional characters in the various Transformers universes.Transformers: Generation 1Transformers character name =Frenzy caption =Frenzy box art affiliation =Decepticon subgroup =Communications, Go Bots function… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”