Two Tigers (video game)

Two Tigers
Developer(s) Bally Midway
Publisher(s) Bally Midway
Designer(s) Ron Haliburton, Tim Gilbert[1]
Platform(s) Arcade
Release date(s) 1984
Genre(s) Retro / Multi-directional shooter
Mode(s) 1 player, 2 player simultaneous cooperative, 2 player simultaneous competitive
Cabinet Standard
Arcade system Midway MCR II [2]
Display Raster, Horizontal

Two Tigers is an arcade game created by Bally Midway and released in 1984. It is themed around World War II-era planes attempting to sink military ships, but there are no references as to which countries are involved in the conflict.

Two Tigers offers the choice of two separate modes: one or two players working together to sink large enemy ships, or a dogfight mode where two players attempt to down each other's plane.

The game was not ported to home computers or game consoles.

Gameplay

In the primary mode, each player steers his or her always moving plane by rotating it clockwise and counter-clockwise. Enemy planes fly horizontally across the screen; shooting them causes them to crash into the warship along the bottom. Each crash damages the ship. Repeated damage to the same location causes a leak. When enough leaks have been created (based on the level), the ship explodes and, after a brief respite, a new one arrives.

Players can damage the ship directly by dropping bombs. Only one bomb per player can be in the air at once.

Lives are unlimited in Two Tigers. Flying into another plane spawns a replacement once the wreckage falls offscreen. Player-controlled planes are unable to collide with the ship at the bottom. After a certain amount of time the ship leaves—two more such departures ends the game.

Control variations

There are two variations of Two Tigers machines: one with a weighted spinner to rotate the plane (similar to that of Midway's Tron), and the other with a flight yoke for the same purpose.[3]

References

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