Gotcha (arcade game)
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Gotcha | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Atari |
Publisher(s) | Atari |
Designer(s) | Nolan Bushnell |
Release date(s) | 1973 |
Genre(s) | Maze |
Mode(s) | Two player |
Platform(s) | Arcade |
Input | Joystick |
Arcade cabinet | Upright |
Arcade display | Raster, standard resolution |
Gotcha is a 1973 arcade game manufactured by Atari. It was Atari's fourth game after Pong, Space Race, and Pong Doubles. This was the first maze arcade game as well as the very first video game to cause a considerable amount of controversy, predating other early examples such as Death Race by several years. The object of the game is for two players to find their way through an on-screen maze, attempting to catch each other. The controversy stemmed from the perception that the game's controls, rather than joysticks, were pink rubber bulges meant to represent breasts. The bulges were squeezed in order to control the action. This was done because some members of Atari jokingly mentioned that joysticks curiously resembled a phallus as a result, it was decided to create a "female game" and this game was henceforth referred to game as "the boob game" by company staff. Later versions of the cabinet replaced the controls with standard joysticks. The game was not well received by the public.
[edit] References / External links
- Game Over by David Sheff, 1993, Random House.
- The Killer List of Video Games entry on Gotcha
- Icons episode titled "The ESRB", 2004.