Lunar Lander
Lunar Lander is a series of Simulation Games about landing an Apollo 11-style lunar module on a rocky lunar surface. You have a limited amount of fuel with which to maneuver the lander on to level platforms.
The first versions were written in the late 1960s and early 1970s by Jim Storer, Eric Peters, and William Labaree II for DEC minicomputers, and published as BASIC type-in programs. The earliest version was created in 1969. The first version with graphics was released in 1973 as a Tech Demo Game for a DEC's new GT40 vector graphics terminal. Atari released an Arcade Game version in 1979. This version featured one of the first examples of Bribing Your Way to Victory[1]: You could insert coins during gameplay to buy more fuel.
It later became a Mini Game in other games, and was ported to every platform imaginable, even pocket calculators. There are now several free versions online.
- Attract Mode: The Atari version.
- Bribing Your Way to Victory: Assuming your definition of victory is the highest score, the Atari version lets you buy more fuel.
- Endless Game: You play until you run out of fuel.
- Fan Remake: Numerous versions, especially since the 1990s.
- Game Mod: The original version. Since it's a type-in BASIC program, you can modify it any way you like.
- Game Over
- Have a Nice Death: Notably the Atari version. "You just destroyed a 100 megabuck lander", etc.
- The Golden Age of Video Games: The Atari version.
- No Plot, No Problem
- Ragdoll Physics
- Scoring Points
- Side View
- Simulation Game
- Status Line: Starting with the 1973 version. Could be the Ur Example.
- Tech Demo Game: The 1973 version.
- Vector Game
- ↑ Or at least more gameplay, because it's an Endless Game