Round-Up (video game)

Round-Up is an arcade video game released in 1981 by Centuri. This game was also released by Taito as Fitter.

Round-Up
Developer(s)Amenip
Publisher(s)Centuri
Taito
Platform(s)Arcade
Release1981
Genre(s)Maze
Mode(s)Two players alternating turns
CabinetUpright, Cocktail
CPU1 × Z80 @ 3.072 MHz
Sound2 × AY-3-8910 @ 1.536 MHz
DisplayRaster, 224 x 256 pixels (Vertical), 40 colors

Gameplay

The object of the game is for the player to maneuver his white robot within a maze, capture a red character robot as they move about the maze, and race to the center to change the 9 white balls located there to red. The player may only change one white ball to red at a time after he has captured a red robot, and must evade 4 chaser monsters in the process. Bonus point may be earned when capturing the elusive 'red king' that appears on the screen. Capture him and you will momentarily immobilize the chasers. Play is over when the chasers have captured all of the player's robots.

If the player is successful in changing all of the balls in the center to red, the pattern clears and then a new challenge is presented: a 3×3 or 4×4 tri-colored pattern will appear at the bottom of the screen and a slightly different tri-colored cube of corresponding size will appear at the center of the screen. The player may earn bonus points by moving the directional arrow and rearranging the colors of the cube at the center of the screen to match the sample pattern presented at the bottom of the screen. The player is given 90 seconds to rearrange the cube as many times as he can. Action returns to the maze whether the player wins or loses the cube challenge.

gollark: No, it's Esowiki's fault.
gollark: Now, my crawler thing's HTTP client followed the request, but didn't note it, so it accidentally indexed a bunch of Wikipedia while thinking it was Esowiki.
gollark: I figured out the problem! Esowiki is being stupid and for some reason you can link to `Wikipedia:Whatever` and it links to Wikipedia.
gollark: Okay, mystery solved! Ish! Not really! It's crawling the links to nonexistent pages and fetching them anyway.
gollark: Well, the link input-into-database code seems sound.


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