Rescue Raiders

Rescue Raiders is an Apple II scrolling shooter published by Sir-Tech in 1984.[1] It was designed by Arthur Britto and Greg Hale.[2]

Rescue Raiders
Publisher(s)Sir-Tech
Designer(s)Arthur Britto
Greg Hale
Platform(s)Apple II
Release1984
Genre(s)Scrolling shooter, Real-time tactics
Mode(s)Single player

Gameplay

The game is played on a two-dimensional side-scrolling playfield, where two players start at main bases on opposing sides of the field. The player operates a Choplifter-esque helicopter defending a string of advancing units, which the player purchases throughout the game. The objective is to create and defend a force that can escort a van filled with explosives to the enemy base at the other end of the playing field.

Along the way a series of smaller bunkers act as obstacles by flying balloons which, when operating for the opposing team, will destroy the player helicopter (the cable will severely damage the helicopter). The bunkers may be taken over by delivering enough infantry units, which may reach the bunker either by walking all the way from a main base without being killed, or by being carried there more quickly in the player helicopter.

The helicopter begins with three weapons: heat-seeking missiles, machine guns, and bombs. As the game progresses, additional weaponry is introduced.

Reception

In 1996, Next Generation listed it as number 36 on their "Top 100 Games of All Time", citing the strategy required to succeed in the game.[3]

Reviews

  • The V.I.P. of Gaming Magazine #5 (Sept./Oct., 1986)

Legacy

In 1991 Three-Sixty Pacific released Armor Alley, a recreation of Rescue Raiders for Mac OS and MS-DOS which added four-player network support.

These games subsequently inspired Super Army War for the Game Boy Advance and its Nintendo DS sequel, Glory Days 2.[4]

gollark: oh no. autobotrobot is fail.
gollark: ++help
gollark: > using non-threadsafe apis in different threads is causing problemshow surprising.
gollark: Iceland seems like a cool country, based on my limited knowledge of it.
gollark: I am mostly okay with the United Kingdom.

References

  1. Reagan, Jim (10 October 1985). "New York Computer Software Company Takes Off In Japan". The Telegraph. p. 32. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  2. Hague, James. "The Giant List of Classic Game Programmers".
  3. "Top 100 Games of All Time". Next Generation. No. 21. Imagine Media. September 1996. pp. 56, 59.
  4. Parfitt, Ben (3 September 2007). "Glory Days 2". MCV. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.


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