Guzzler

Guzzler is a maze game developed and manufactured by Tehkan and licensed to Centuri for United States distribution in 1983. It was released as a conversion kit, including a new marquee and control panel. It was ported to the SG-1000 home system.

Arcade flyer
Developer(s)Tehkan
Publisher(s)
Designer(s)Michitaka Tsuruta
Platform(s)Arcade, SG-1000
ReleaseApril 1983 [1]
Genre(s)Maze
Mode(s)Single-player, 2 player alternating
CPU1 × Z80 @ 3.072 MHz[1]
Sound1 × Z80 @ 2 MHz
2 × AY-3-8910 @ 2 MHz

Gameplay

Each level is a maze of varying openness. Monsters spawn from colorful fires that must be extinguished to complete the level. The character can attack with three blasts of liquid before becoming empty. With each blast of liquid, the character moves faster and gets closer to being an empty outline with pink shoes. When empty the character is a shell of a sprite, but can move more quickly. Liquid is replenished by drinking (guzzling) from puddles. Occasionally, an alcoholic beverage will appear in the center of the screen. If the player picks up this beverage, liquid supply fills to maximum and the fires temporarily freeze.

Reception

William Michael Brown wrote in the Electronic Fun with Computers & Games 1983 coin-op preview: "Of all the brand new [conversion] kit titles that we saw, probably the best is Centuri's Guzzler."[2]

gollark: yes.
gollark: /a
gollark: It's very powerful, if sometimes accursed.
gollark: I like CSS.
gollark: And I dislike that.

References

  1. "Guzzler". Arcade History.
  2. Brown, William Michael (July 1983). "Hot Fun in the Summertime". Electronic Fun with Computers & Games. 1 (9): 26, 27.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.