Roc'n Rope

Roc'n Rope (ロックンロープ)[2] is a platform video game developed by Konami. It was released in arcades in 1983, by both Konami and Kosuka/Interlogic in some markets. The player, a flashlight and harpoon-gun equipped archaeologist, must ascend a series of rocky platforms in a Lost World scenario to reach a Phoenix bird.

Roc'n Rope
European arcade flyer
Developer(s)Konami
Publisher(s)Konami
Kosuka
Coleco (ports)
Designer(s)Tokuro Fujiwara
Platform(s)Arcade, Atari 2600, ColecoVision
Release1983: Arcade
1984: Atari 2600[1]
Genre(s)Platform
Mode(s)Up to 2 players, alternating turns
CabinetUpright
DisplayVertical, raster, standard resolution

Coleco released versions of Roc'n Rope for the Atari 2600[1] and ColecoVision.

Gameplay

The player has to avoid ferocious man-sized dinosaurs and belligerent red-haired cavemen against which are there aren't direct means of offense. The only ways to defeat the opponents is either temporary (dazing them with the flashlight) or indirect (waiting for them to be suspended on a harpoon rope to make them fall down), an element which adds a certain amount of trickiness to the game. Bonus items to collect include fallen phoenix feathers and phoenix eggs, which grant the player invulnerability from the prehistoric denizens for a short period of time.

Legacy

Roc'n Rope was the first "wire action" game. It would later become the basis for the 1987 game Bionic Commando, which Tokuro Fujiwara intended to be an expanded version of Roc'n Rope.[3]

gollark: Well, it's easier than admitting you might have made a mistake!
gollark: You know, when I break my stuff through configuration changes, I generally manage to restore it within an hour or so.
gollark: I mean, yes, it's harder to memorize 128-bit addresses than 32-bit ones, but... we have computers to remember long things for us now.
gollark: What's wrong with IPv6? I can't really say much about the design changes versus v4 other than addresses, but it seems... necessary.
gollark: You need two ~s. It's a weird Markdown variant.

References

  1. "Roc 'n Rope". Atari Mania.
  2. Written as Roc 'N Rope on the American flyer and in Konami Arcade Classics.
  3. The Man Who Made Ghosts’n Goblins: Tokuro Fujiwara Interview, Continue, Vol. 12, 2003
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.