Achieved at : 2020-11-15
Rank : 3
(64% worse)
Lups : 155
Approved :
Yes
Voting completed : 2021-03-14
| General Rules: |
Difficulty switches can be in any position at any time. Must be played on a real 2600-compatible console or expansion module. Play with default settings unless otherwise specified. No code modifications that give the player an advantage over other players. No continues. No use of trainers, cheats, auto-fire (when not default present in-game) , game saves, or cheat codes. Can be overruled by the Specific Rules. It is discouraged and may lead to voters not accepting your score to: - excessively point farm - use glitches or other game exploits |
| Specific Rules: |
βοΈ Game 7 β Bonus Life: No β Evil Otto: No β Shooting Robots: Yes βͺ Left difficulty switch setting has no effect in this title, and can therefore be in any position at any time. β© Right difficulty switch setting has no effect in this title, and can therefore be in any position at any time. π Rollover: 1,000,000 π The original version was released by multiple companies: β Atari (1982) β Sears (1982) π§ Graphical Hack Tracks β Berzerk VE β Berzerk Arcade VE βοΈ Dan Hitchens ©οΈ Atari π 1982 F 10.20.24 |
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MarkMSH
YES! :)
I own a cart of this. Well two carts. One is a Voice Enhanced version from AtariAge. Fun fact. The arcade original was manufactured and released (along with Frenzy) by Stern Electronics. The pinball division was run by Gary Stern (I think the video game division was run by his father Sam Stern). After Stern ceased business Gary Stern ran Data East Pinball. When they were bought by SEGA Gary stayed on to run it. When SEGA ceased making Pinball machines in 1999 Gary bought it renaming it Stern Pinball.
What a lot of people don't know is that SEGA produced Pinball machines in Japan (1972 to 1979) and Spain between 1972 and 1986. They gave it the old college try as they say. I've seen some of the Japanese ones at Expos.
I own a cart of this. Well two carts. One is a Voice Enhanced version from AtariAge. Fun fact. The arcade original was manufactured and released (along with Frenzy) by Stern Electronics. The pinball division was run by Gary Stern (I think the video game division was run by his father Sam Stern). After Stern ceased business Gary Stern ran Data East Pinball. When they were bought by SEGA Gary stayed on to run it. When SEGA ceased making Pinball machines in 1999 Gary bought it renaming it Stern Pinball.
What a lot of people don't know is that SEGA produced Pinball machines in Japan (1972 to 1979) and Spain between 1972 and 1986. They gave it the old college try as they say. I've seen some of the Japanese ones at Expos.
4kizan
checked original hardware evidence : OK (on video)
checked settings : game 7 at start : ok
checked final score : OK @6:15
Voted yes.
checked settings : game 7 at start : ok
checked final score : OK @6:15
Voted yes.