M.A.C.H. 3

For other uses, see Mach3.
M.A.C.H. 3

North American Flyer
Developer(s) Gottlieb
Publisher(s) Mylstar/Taito
Platform(s) Arcade
Release date(s) 1983
Genre(s) Shooter
Mode(s) Single Player
Cabinet Upright, Cockpit
Arcade system Mylstar Video Disc Graphics System
CPU Intel 8088
Sound Stereo
Display 16 color, 256x240 over LaserDisc background

M.A.C.H. 3 was a laserdisc video game created by Gottlieb and released in the U.S. in 1983 under their Mylstar brand. The title refers both to the speed of sound, and is an acronym for "Military Air Command Hunter". It was released in Japan by Taito. The primary programmer and game designer was Warren Davis. The overlaid graphics of the fighter were by Gottlieb's video graphics artist, Jeff Lee. Hardware enabling the graphics overlay on top of the background video was designed by David Pfeiffer. Clay Lacy shot the jet footage. Ron Waxman, Bill Jacobs and Jun Yum were the engineering management at Mylstar at the time.

Gameplay

The player controls a high-speed fighter aircraft, the "Military Air Command Hunter", in one of two missions, either a "Fighter Raid" seen flying forward at low altitude, or the "Bombing Run" seen in a top-down mode at higher altitude. In both cases, video backgrounds on the laserdisc were overlaid by computer graphics generated by additional hardware in the machine. M.A.C.H. 3 was one of the few laser disc games that made its way to the number one position in RePlay Magazine's "Player's Choice", and Play Meter's "Equipment Poll". The Backgrounds on the laserdisc were made on Motion Picture Film.

See also

External links

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