Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. Pac-Man is a 1982 maze video game developed and published by Atari, Inc. under official license by Namco, and an adaptation of the 1980 arcade game Pac-Man. The player controls the title character, who attempts to consume all of the wafers in a maze while avoiding four ghosts that pursue him.

    • Gameplay
    • Development and Release
    • Trivia

    The core gameplay of the original remains the same, but there are many key differences: 1. The game uses a flicker effect to allow more sprites on the screen at a time. This can make the game hard to play if it is not on original 2600 hardware, as the flickering isn't handled well on more current devices. 2. The maze design is different, as are the...

    Despite numerous rumors surrounding the game's development, Pac-Man had a fairly normal development cycle compared to other Atari 2600 productions of the time. The Atari 2600 version of Pac-Man was programmed by Tod Frye, and was in development for about four months. Frye believes that the majority of the game's issues were the result of the two-pl...

    Starting in the late 1990s, several homebrew developers began producing new ports of Pac-Man on the Atari 2600. These were mainly created due to the infamously poor reception of the original, in or...
    The game was re-released on the Atari Retro Handheld: Pac-Man Edition by Blaze in December 2019, marking its first official release in 37 years. A port of the game was also featured on the Tiny Arc...
    Atari negotiated the Pac-Man home console rights directly with Namco of Japan in late 1980; roughly the same period as Bally Midwayacquired the greater arcade and merchandising rights for Pac-Man....
    The exact date that Pac-Man for the 2600 released is unclear. It is commonly credited as being April 3rd, 1982, due to that date marking Atarinational Pac-Man Day; however, multiple retailers had t...
    • 3 min
  2. Pac-Man is a maze action game developed and released by Namco for arcades in 1980. The objective of the game is to eat all of the dots placed in the maze while avoiding four colored ghosts — Blinky (red), Pinky (pink), Inky (cyan), and Clyde (orange) — that pursue him.

    • (86)
  3. Atari, Inc. licensed the home rights and developed versions of Pac-Man for their Atari 2600, Atari 8-bit family, and Atari 5200 systems. Ports to other systems were published under the Atarisoft label: Apple II, Commodore 64, VIC-20, Intellivision, IBM PC, Texas Instruments TI-99/4A, and ZX Spectrum.

  4. In 1982, Atari Inc. released a port of Namco's hit arcade game Pac-Man for its Atari 2600 video game console. Like the original arcade version, the player controls the titular character with a joystick. The object is to traverse a maze, consuming all the wafers within while avoiding four ghosts.

    • Tod Frye
    • Atari 2600
    • Cartridge
    • Atari
  5. The Atari 2600 was first released in North America in September 1977 and featured 9 launch titles: Air-Sea Battle, Basic Math, Blackjack, Combat, Indy 500, Star Ship, Street Racer, Surround and Video Olympics. The final licensed Atari 2600 game released in North America was Secret Quest in 1989, and the final licensed game released in Europe ...

  6. People also ask

  7. Pac-Man became the pack-in game for the Atari 2600 during some of its last years of production. Pac-Man was followed by the much better versions of Ms. Pac-Man and Jr. Pac-Man, although those games are for one player only. Due to hack-o-matic and the like programs, gamers with the Pac-Man ROM can disassemble it and make changes to it as they like.

  1. People also search for