APB (1987 video game)

APB ("All Points Bulletin") is a video game released in arcades by Atari Games in 1987. The player assumes the role of "Officer Bob," a rookie police officer. As Bob, players drive around the city, ticketing motorists for minor infractions and pulling over more serious offenders. Eventually, players must apprehend criminals for which an all-points bulletin has been called.

APB
Promotional flyer picturing the arcade cabinet with attached seat
Developer(s)Atari Games (arcade)
Tengen
Publisher(s)Atari Games (arcade)
Domark
Atari Corporation (Lynx)
Designer(s)Mike Hally
Programmer(s)David Theurer
Alan Murphy
Russell Dawe
Artist(s)Mike West
Composer(s)Arcade
Brad Fuller
Hal Canon
Earl Vickers
Amiga
David Whittaker
Platform(s)Arcade, Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, Lynx, ZX Spectrum
Release1987: Arcade
1989: Amiga, ST, C64, Spectrum
1991: Lynx
Genre(s)Vehicular combat
Mode(s)Single-player
CabinetStandard and sit-down (convertible)
Arcade systemAtari System 2
DisplayVertical orientation, 19", Raster, medium resolution

The arcade cabinet looks like a police car, with a gas pedal, steering wheel and a siren button, complete with flashing lights atop the unit. The game's cartoonish visuals and sense of humor gained it positive reviews. The game was slightly criticized for its difficulty; the game's developers later admitted that a long development cycle had resulted in the gameplay growing more complicated than originally planned.

Ports of APB were released for the Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, and ZX Spectrum in 1989. The home versions were mostly developed by Tengen and published by Domark.[1][2] A version for the Atari Lynx handheld was published later, in 1991.

Gameplay

Players must pull over various offenders on each day, such as litterbugs.

The object of the game is to meet (or exceed) the daily quota of citing or arresting various types of law-breakers within a time limit for the day. The player is given an overhead view of Officer Bob's patrol car, number 54. The player controls the car with a gas pedal and a steering wheel.[3] Bonuses are awarded for a "perfect day" and each arrest over the quota. Picking up donuts extends the day's time limit. Driving through filling stations refuels the patrol car. Driving through the "Speed Shop" garage daily upgrades the patrol car with brakes, guns, armor, radar, etc.[4]

The first day of the game is where the player must drive on a closed course and use his siren on marked traffic cones. From the second day onwards, the player will ticket common misdemeanor infractions (such as littering) by pulling up behind them, pushing the siren button and having them pull over. Certain offenders require more siren taps to be pulled over. Specific offenses are tied directly to distinctive vehicles (e.g., only the pink convertibles toss litter, and that is the only offense they will commit.) The exception to this is speeding, eventually introduced into the game, which can be perpetrated by any vehicle. Soon new petty lawbreakers are introduced, to include road rage, drunk driving, dopers, et cetera.

The game also gives the player the task of arresting fugitive felons. Every other day, starting on the third day, the player can go after an A.P.B. ("All Points Bulletin").[5] The stage will start with a scene of multiple officers seen in silhouette where the Chief is showing a mugshot of a suspect wanted for a major crime, the vehicle to be on the lookout for, along with the words "Get this crook today". Examples of major crimes can be expected such as selling narcotics, prostitution, terrorism, or arson, or less commonplace, such as one day where a truck full of nuclear fuel was stolen and Officer Bob is ordered to recover it. When a fugitive is caught and returned to the station, the player must violently shake the suspect to get a confession before the Chief enters the room. This is done by filling the "Confess-O-Meter" by tapping alternatively on the "fire" and "siren" buttons.[6] The A.P.B. suspects are named, often in a manner according to their offense: "Bernie Gasman" (wanted for arson), "Cool Hand Duke" (wanted for pimping), "Buzz Geiger" (wanted for nuclear fuel theft). Should Officer Bob get an APB suspect to the station and force him or her to confess, a screen of "Bob's Top 10" will be shown where the convict is then put behind bars and a brief musical tone akin to "Dragnet" is played. After Day 16, no other petty violators are introduced. The daily quota will be a combination of those above. Other petty violators seen in the game but not formally introduced are hitchhikers and distressed motorists, seen by a man working on a car at a road shoulder and his wife saying "Help!" in which Officer Bob will give them a $75 ticket for his time and aid.

The game's life gauge of sorts is a demerit meter. The game ends when this meter is maxed out. When the demerit limit is reached, the message "TOO MANY DEMERITS. YOU ARE FIRED."[3] is displayed, along with Officer Bob being dragged from the car, handcuffed, and thrown either into the back of a paddy wagon or into a garbage can. Demerits are gotten for colliding with cones and other vehicles with the siren off, shooting non-offender vehicles, running into donut huts and pedestrians, running out of gas (if the quota is met), and failing to get a confession from an A.P.B. Also, demerits come from the player's car exploding through getting hit with dynamite, high-speed collisions with trains and other obstacles, and attempting to jump construction pits at too low a speed. Attaining a certain score, having a demerit-free day, or on rare occasions, finding a money bag with a prize inside, reading "DEMERIT ERASED", will forgive one demerit.

Failure to meet the quota when time expired will have one of four comical scenes, where Officer Bob is dressed down by the Chief for substandard performance, either getting scorched by "dragon breath", strangled by the Chief tugging on Bob's collar, having his nose honked, or having his patrolman's hat draped over his eyes. In addition, the player will be also be given one demerit multiplied by every unticketed infraction. Should this happen on an A.P.B. day but the player successfully apprehended the most wanted suspect, Officer Bob is excused from the quota. Should the player meet the quota, he will then get a radio message "Car 54, return to station", and the player must drive back to the starting point or another police station which has parked squad cars and a space marked "Reserved for Officer Bob". In this case, it will show a pleasant Chief remarking "Nice work" to Officer Bob.

The game cabinet is generally a standard upright. The main controls consist of a steering wheel, a siren button, a "fire" button for the gun and an accelerator pedal. The cabinet has two lights on top, red and blue, which flash when the player presses the siren button.[3] Units feature a detachable seat which can be used to convert the cabinet into a sit-down game.

Development

According to members of the team that worked on the game, APB had an extended development process. Throughout the lengthy development, new gameplay ideas such as the in-game shops were continually added. The developers admitted that as a result, the final game may have been overly complex.[7]

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
CVG88% (Lynx)[8]
IGN8.5/10 (Lynx)[9]
Raze83% (Lynx)[10]

The game enjoyed moderate success in the marketplace. Its high-resolution graphics and novel cabinet design, with the flashing lights atop, added to its initial appeal.[3] The game was noted for its increasing difficulty, with The Games Machine calling it at times "utterly frustrating."[5] However, the game's cartoonish graphics and sound along with its humor were well-received, with Your Sinclair calling it "one of the funniest games of the year" and Computer and Video Games calling it "hilarious."[4][6] The unique gameplay was also lauded; The Games Machine called it "like a breath of fresh air." and Crash said the game was "refreshingly different from the usual mass of bash-or-blast'em ups"[3][5]

In a retrospective review for Allgame, Paul Biondich wrote that the gameplay "stood the test of time" and that the arcade cabinet's unique design set the game apart in arcades. He also wrote that ten years after its release, the game was still graphically impressive. In addition, he complimented the game's depth, difficulty curve and replay value.[11]

Atari Lynx

The Atari Lynx version was reviewed by CVG Magazine in their August 1991 issue giving the game a score of 88 out of 100.[8] Robert A. Jung also reviewed the game on the Lynx calling it "decent adaptation of the original game" and that "The gameplay is fair, and is enhanced by some very appropriate and entertaining sound and graphics." Giving a rating of 8.5 out of 10.[9] Raze Magazine also reviewed the game in their September 1991 issue. Julian Boardman liked the colourful cartoony graphics, sounds and found the game funny, but after a while irritating. He also found the game quite tricky to master and gave a score of 83%.[10]

Legacy

The game came to the GameCube, PlayStation 2 and Xbox as part of Midway Arcade Treasures 2 and to Microsoft Windows as part of Midway Arcade Treasures Deluxe Edition.[12][13] It was released again as part of the compilation Midway Arcade Origins in 2012.[14]

gollark: BeeCoin™.
gollark: And paying for traffic through your devices incentivizes messing with those mechanisms to get more traffic, although that's mostly the same as the jamming issue.
gollark: Without those I think you get really bad speeds if you have multiple things trying to transmit and receive simultaneously.
gollark: Since unlike with wired networks, it has a fairly small "bus" which all devices ever have to use.
gollark: I think WiFi now has a bunch of AP-side coordination mechanisms for higher throughput, which might be hard to decentralize.

References

  1. APB. Zzap! October 1989. p.18.
  2. Knight, Kyle. "A.P.B. - Review". All Game. Rovi. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
  3. "APB" Crash. October 1987. p.137.
  4. "APB" Computer+Video Games. November 1987.
  5. "A.P.B." The Games Machine. February 1988. p. 70.
  6. Shaw, Peter. "All Points Bulletin". Your Sinclair. November 1987.
  7. Digital Eclipse, Backbone Entertainment (2004-10-11). Midway Arcade Treasures 2 (PlayStation 2, Xbox). Midway Games.
  8. Paul Glancey (August 1991). "Lynx Lowdown". archive.org. No. 117. Computer Videogame Magazine. p. 36. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  9. Robert A. Jung (30 June 1999). "A.P.B." IGN Entertainment. Retrieved 14 August 2018.
  10. Julian Boardman (September 1991). "APB". Raze Magazine. p. 32. Retrieved 18 August 2018 – via archive.org.
  11. Biondich, Paul. "A.P.B. - Overview". All Game. Rovi. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
  12. "Midway Arcade Treasures 2 Review". 1UP.com. 2004-10-13. Archived from the original on 2010-01-05. Retrieved 2008-11-16.
  13. Gerstmann, Jeff (February 28, 2006). "Midway Arcade Treasures Deluxe Edition Review". GameSpot. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
  14. Samuel Claiborn (November 13, 2012). "Midway Arcade Origins Review". IGN. Retrieved March 14, 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.