Q-Zar

Q-ZAR (called Quasar in the UK, Ireland, and called LaserGame in Sweden) is a type of laser tag that was developed by Geoff Haselhurst and Omnitronics in Perth, Western Australia. The rights were later sold to Leisureplex Ltd, a company based in Ireland which in turn sold them to Q-ZAR International based in Dallas, Texas.

Basic rules

Green Q-ZAR Packs hanging in the Vesting Room

Like other lasertag games, Q-ZAR is played with a gun (or "phaser") that fires harmless beams of infrared light that are detected by equipment worn by the players. There is also a laser pulse on firing, though it is for visual effects only. The basic mechanism of the game revolves around shooting (called tagging) each other or stationary objects.

The standard game of Q-ZAR involves two teams: the red team and the green team (Quasar Elite involves a red and blue team). Each team has a Headquarters (aka "HQ" or "base") to defend from the other team. The goal of the game is to score the most points for the team. You can achieve this by either deactivating the opponents HQ or by tagging the opposing team's players. You may deactivate the opponents HQ by tagging it twice leaving a few seconds between. Whichever team has the most points at the end of the game wins.

Upon being tagged, the following happens: the pack vibrates, makes an explosion noise and the player who has been tagged has a window of around one second to fire off a "reflex" shot (providing no shot was fired in the previous second) before the penalty sequence kicks in. After the one second has passed, the six second penalty sequence starts. During the penalty sequence, the phaser says "Defense Shield, Active Active" for the first 3 seconds. For this period, the player may not be tagged and may not tag other people. For the final three seconds, the phaser says "Warning, Warning, Warning." For this period, a player may be tagged, but may not tag other people. If a player is tagged during Warning, the entire process starts over (including getting a 1-second reflex shot).

The back of the phaser has a simple LED display. When a pack is not energised, there is a number above a "U" showing. The number is the pack's ID number. The U means that the pack is "Un-energized." When a pack is on during normal play, the top number is the number of lives remaining, the bottom is the number of shots (when a player is out of shots, they lose a life, getting a "Good Shot" resets the shot counter). When a player re-energizes, the display shows how many times the player has energised. When a player is out of lives, the display flashes the amount of time left in the game. If a player holds the trigger down for three seconds, either display will show the time remaining or a "bomb" will be triggered that can deactivate all vests around the player, including those on the same team.

History

The game of Quasar was created by philosopher / inventor Geoff Haselhurst around 1987 in Perth, Australia. The original system was sold to Irish investors in 1991. The name Quasar is still in use today in the UK and Ireland, but due to trouble securing the name Quasar in other countries the company was renamed Q-ZAR for world-wide operations. As part of the international expansion of Q-ZAR the company relocated to the USA, however manufacturing operations remained in Ireland. In 1996 the company joined NASDAQ and rolled out a short lived child based expansion Q-KIDZ. Q-ZAR missed the first interest payment for a $30M+ bridge loan in October 1997 and was forced into bankruptcy by the lender.

In 1995 A company called Q-Support sprung up, ran by a past manager of several q-zar centers, Zac Adams, He offered support and parts to existing q-zar centers, greatly undercutting the q-zar corporate offices, despite threats from Q-zar corporate most centers started purchasing parts form q-support, leading to the closure of the corporate parts and service center shortly before they went bankrupt. q-support closed in 1999 due to dwindling numbers of centers still being operated and a narrow vertical market.

In 2000 Will Low purchased some of the assets of Q-ZAR calling it Q-ZAR World Wide. Will Low claimed ownership of the Q-ZAR trademark, but failed in a class-action lawsuit to force existing centers to pay a license fee to him. In 2002 Laser Light Entertainment, Inc. purchased the Q-ZAR Concord California location,Q-ZAR. In 2003, JR Robles purchased the Q-ZAR assets held by Jarvis Entertainment, and formed the company Q-ZAR USA. Laser Light Entertainment, Inc. successfully completed the registration of the Q-ZAR trademark in 2008. This registration gives them control of the Q-ZAR trademark from 1999–present. In 2008 Laser Light Entertainment, Inc. also purchased the Q-ZAR assets of Will Low. Laser Light Entertainment, Inc. has been selling Q-ZAR equipment, Q-ZAR System Sales since 2003. Quasar in the UK, Ireland, Europe and Asia remains supported by Quasar UK (now Quasar Manufacturing LTD http://www.quasarelite.com). In 2001 Quasar Manufacturing Ltd (once Quasar UK) took over Q-ZAR and Quasar Trade Marks for UK, Ireland and Europe and in 2005 released a new version named Quasar Elite (Q-Zar Mark VI version) with revised software and hardware. In 2009 Quasar Manufacturing started testing Mark VII Wireless Q-Zar equipment. Laser Light Entertainment and Quasar Manufacturing have recently made arrangements (2010) to distribute Quasar Elite Wireless in the United States (from the end of 2011 on), replacing previous equipment.

Hardware

Quasar vests have gone through a number of revisions (Mark I to VII). The original system used a strap based vest, metal housed front and back sensor areas and a hand-held pistol. The back sensor contained the battery, the front sensor contained the CPU and speaker. The pistol was small and contained few parts.

A major revision was the Mark IIIB system which moved most of the electronics into a larger (quite heavy) two handled gun. The speaker, battery, display and CPU were all moved to the gun, leaving the front and back as sensor only areas. The strap based vest was retained.

Prior to the international launch of Quasar as Q-ZAR the vests were redesigned again (Mark IV). The gun shape was retained, however it was remoulded in a lighter plastic greatly reducing the weight of the gun. In addition the strap based vest was dropped in favour of brightly coloured plastic body Armour style vests.

Two systems were developed for Q-ZAR as its next generation system. Neither of these systems made it to production, the first is believed to be due to Q-ZAR defaulting on a payment. The second system, IQ, was in development when the company collapsed, by all accounts it was bug-ridden.

In 1995 A company called Q-Support sprung up, ran by a past manager of several q-zar centers, Zac Adams, He offered support and parts to existing q-zar centers, greatly undercutting the q-zar corporate offices, despite threats from Q-zar corporate most centers started purchasing parts form q-support, leading to the closure of the corporate parts and service center shortly before they went bankrupt. q-support closed in 1999 due to dwindling numbers of centers still being operated and a narrow vertical market.

After the collapse of Q-Zar, Quasar Manufacturing withdraw remaining Q-Zar available stocks from United States market, keeping up basic components production, to give support to open European sites. In 2005 Quasar UK renamed themselves Quasar Manufacturing and launched Quasar Elite (Mark VI), which used a smaller gun and body armour to accommodate younger players. In addition Quasar Elite changed the green equipment to blue to assist those with color blindness. The new version even dropped the elasticated side straps in favor of seat-belt style straps with buckles as these were found to be more durable.

In 2009 Quasar Manufacturing started projecting Quasar Elite Wireless Equipment (Mark VII), ready at the end of 2011. The new system finally gave up infra-red Unit-Gun connection, adopting more advanced radio frequency linking.

Equipment Components

Game types

Many combinations of game types, game options and arena lighting and positioning can create themed games.

Game options

The Q-ZAR software has many built in options that can be used in combination with the main game types above to create many different types of games.

Tournaments

There are active tournament scenes in many countries across the world, including the USA, UK, Ireland, Italy, Russia, Sweden and Ecuador. Tournament formats are the same for USA, UK and Ireland, and always use one shot per second, reflex shot and defence shields, other settings may vary depending on the actual event, with most events being Supercharge with six lives. Other countries play with settings local to their tournament scene.

Events lasting two days or more are regularly held one to five times per year in the UK and Ireland. Italy runs a national tournament once per year, and have a Q-Zar season when teams travel to play each other home and away. The USA tournaments are infrequent as the number of centres have reduced and the player-base has dwindled.

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