Anteater (video game)
Anteater | |
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Screenshot of Anteater | |
Developer(s) | Stern Electronics |
Publisher(s) | Tago Electronics |
Designer(s) | Chris Oberth |
Platform(s) | Arcade |
Release date(s) | 1982 |
Genre(s) | Maze |
Mode(s) | Single player, Up to 2 players, alternating turns |
Cabinet | Vertical |
CPU | Z80 |
Sound |
Sound CPU : Z80 Sound Chips : AY8910 |
Display | Raster, 224 x 256 pixels, 99 colors |
Anteater ("The Anteater" in Britain; "Ameisenbaer" in Germany) is an arcade game designed by Chris Oberth and released in 1982 by Tago Electronics.[1]
Gameplay
The player controls an anteater that elongates his proboscis through maze-like anthills eating ants. The player can only eat ants with the tip of the anteater's proboscis. If an ant bites your proboscis at any other location you lose a life. Pressing the second button will quickly retract the anteater's proboscis. Worms will not harm you unless eaten head first, in which case you lose a life. Worms can be safely eaten from behind. Eating queen ants at the very bottom of the nest will temporarily clear all ants and worms from the screen. Once the sun has travelled across the screen and night falls, a spider will appear. The spider climbs down the anteater's proboscis, taking a life if it touches the tip. The object is to eat all of the larvae before time runs out, clearing the screen. Each larva is worth 10 points. Each ant is worth 100 points, while eating a worm is worth 200 and multiplies the score you receive from eating ants by 1x (Ex. eating 5 ants +2 worms = 500 x 2 = 1000). Queen ants are worth 1,000.
Music
Between levels, Anteater plays In the Hall of the Mountain King.
At the start of each level, the music played is a short fragment of Ranz des Vaches, the third movement of William Tell Overture.
Ports and clones
The game was ported to the Atari 2600 by Mattel in 1983 but never released.[2] No official ports were released but Datamost's Ardy The Aardvark (1983), which is almost identical, was written for the Apple II by Anteater's creator Chris Oberth.[3] That game was also converted to the Commodore 64 and Atari 8-bit by Jay Ford.
A similar game, Ant Eater (1983), was released by Romox[4] for the VIC-20, Texas Instruments TI-99/4A and Atari 8-bit family. The Atari 8-bit version was written by Ed Fries.[5]
Other games that more closely resemble Anteater, while changing the setting are Sierra's Oil's Well (1983; itself cloned as Oilmania for the Atari ST in 1991) and Blue Ribbon's Diamond Mine II (1985). A more straightforward clone is Bug-Byte's Aardvark (1986).
External links
References
- ↑ Anteater at Arcade History
- ↑ Anteater at Atari Protos
- ↑ Interview with Programmer Christian Oberth - part 2: The classic programming years, Alan Hewston, Retrogaming Times, Issue 24, May 2006 (cited 29-Oct-11)
- ↑ Ant Eater at AtariAge
- ↑ "The Giant List of Classic Game Programmers".