Mechanized Attack

Mechanized Attack (メカナイズド・アタック, Mekanaizudo Atakku) is a shooter game developed and published by SNK. It was released in North America for the arcade in 1989,[1] and it was ported to the Nintendo Entertainment System in 1990.[2] It can be played with either the NES controller or the NES Zapper light gun.[3]

Mechanized Attack
Arcade flyer art
Developer(s)SNK
Publisher(s)SNK
Platform(s)Arcade, Nintendo Entertainment System
ReleaseArcade version
NES version
  • NA: June 1990
Genre(s)Rail shooter
Mode(s)Single-player

Easter egg

On the System Construction Screen in the NES version, the player can cause a female figure to undress herself by certain inputs. The player can continue to make certain inputs following the undressing of the female figure,[4] but it also will show a hexagram which will cause the game to freeze up.[5]

gollark: I guess if you just don't care about it and have it throw away money and build up increasingly large debts...
gollark: But won't that just result in one of the bots losing out?
gollark: Hmmmm...
gollark: So the optimal approach would probably either be something like long-term boring trading humans won't do which works on large amounts of the market, or relatively high-speed reaction to new memes.
gollark: I've been considering bots, and they have some advantages:- they can respond faster than humans, probably- they can process vast amounts of financial databut some disadvantages:- they can't practically actually react to the content of a meme, only some metadata- I think there's comment rate limiting so they can't post that often

References

  1. "Mechanized Attack (arcade) Release Date". GameFAQs. Retrieved 2008-08-11.
  2. "Mechanized Attack (NES) Release Date". GameFAQs. Retrieved 2008-08-11.
  3. "Mechanized Attack". Moby Games. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
  4. "Mechanized Attack: Debug Mode". Giant Bomb. GameSpot. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
  5. "Mechanized Attack (NES)". The Cutting Room Floor. Retrieved 9 November 2014.

(not shown): SNK, NES version Box Art by Marc Ericksen, 1989.

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