Gladiator (video game)

Gladiator, known in Japan as Ougon no Shiro (黄金の城, lit. "Golden Castle"), is an arcade game developed by Allumer and published in 1986 by Taito.[1] It was followed by a sequel titled Blandia. Home ports of Gladiator were released for the ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC and Commodore 64 as Great Gurianos.

Gladiator
American arcade flyer
Developer(s)Allumer
Publisher(s)Taito
Platform(s)Arcade (original)
Amstrad CPC, C64, ZX Spectrum
Release1986
Genre(s)Beat'em up
Mode(s)Multiplayer
CabinetUpright, Cocktail
CPUZ80 (@ 6 MHz), Z80 (@ 3 MHz)
SoundM6809 (@ 750 kHz), YM2203 (@ 1.5 MHz), MSM5205 (@ 375 kHz)
DisplayRaster, 256 x 224 pixels (Horizontal), 1024 colors

Gameplay

Screenshot of the ZX Spectrum version, Great Gurianos

The player controls a gladiator/knight named Great Gurianos as he walks through a castle.[1] The joystick direction moves the character left and right and raises his shield up and down. The game's three buttons correspond to a high, medium, and low attack with Great Gurianos's sword.[1] Gladiator consists of four levels. The reward for completing the game is a fifth stage, the "Treasure Place".

Gameplay is split between two modes; in the "obstacle" mode, Great Gurianos walks forward, and the player must use the sword and shield to defend him from bats, fireballs, arrows, shuriken, and other flying hazards. The "obstacle" mode is broken up by a "fight" mode, in which Great Gurianos must fight against another, similarly-armored knight. In both modes, an un-defended hit to Great Gurianos knocks off part of his armor (his helmet for a high hit, his breastplate for a medium hit, and his leggings for a low hit), and a subsequent hit to the same area kills him.[1] The character can generate a temporary force field during the obstacle course phases (when weapons and bats fly at him) by rapidly moving the shield up and down.[2] During the combat phases, Great Gurianos can become invincible (flashing golden) for a short time.[1]

gollark: Thus readd andrew?
gollark: No reports have passed Evidential Standard 8912-ητY.
gollark: No brains have been CONFIRMED to have been melted by me.
gollark: No, I don't want to establish ☭.
gollark: Resolved via lyricly☭demote, yes.

References

  1. Gladiator at the Killer List of Videogames
  2. Dean, Michael. "Gladiator". Classic Gaming. Archived from the original on 2013-10-05. Retrieved 3 Oct 2013.
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