Carnival (arcade game)

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Carnival
These ducks are about to eat the player's bullets.
Developer(s) Sega/Gremlin
Publisher(s) Sega/Gremlin
Platform(s) Arcade, Atari 2600, ColecoVision, Intellivision
Release date 1980
Genre(s) Fixed shooter
Mode(s) Up to 2 players, alternating turns
Input methods left and right directional buttons, fire button
Cabinet Standard and cocktail
Arcade system CPU: Z80 1.933560 MHz
Display Raster resolution 224 x 256 (Vertical) Palette Colors 64

Carnival is a fixed shooter arcade game created by Sega in 1980, and has the distinction of being the first video game with a bonus round. The goal is to shoot at targets, while carefully avoiding running out of bullets. The targets that scroll across the screen, in rows that alternate going from left-to-right and right-to-left. Targets include rabbits, ducks, owls, and bonus items. If the duck targets aren't shot, they eventually come to life and begin descending towards the bottom of the screen in a zig-zag pattern. If a duck reaches the bottom of the screen without being shot first, it will eat some of the player's bullets. Objects also periodically appear among the targets that will give the player extra bullets when shot. A spinning wheel with eight pipes sits above the rows of moving targets; all the pipes must be shot before the round can end.

At the end of each round, the player receives bonus points for all bullets remaining in his supply. He then plays a bonus round, where a large white bear with a target walks across the screen. Each time the bear is shot, it rears up for a second, then begins walking more quickly in the other direction. The object is to shoot the bear as many times as possible until it escapes off the screen. Following the bonus round, the next wave begins.

In higher levels, there are more duck targets and fewer extra bullet targets, putting a premium on accurate shooting. The game ends when the player runs out of bullets.

[edit] Technical details

The controls for the standard upright version of Carnival are left and right directional buttons, and a fire button. The cocktail version replaces the directional buttons with a two-way joystick. Carnival is also one of the few games that has two different PCBs, one for each version; normally a game only has one PCB with a dip switch that sets it to either upright or cocktail mode. The upright and cocktail cabinets each come in two varieties, one woodgrain and the other painted orange and white.

[edit] Legacy

Carnival was one of several successful collaborations between Sega and Gremlin from 1977 until the latter went out of business in 1984. Other notable Sega/Gremlin titles include Zaxxon, Frogger (licensed from Konami), and Moon Cresta (licensed from Nichibutsu). Carnival achieved enough popularity in the arcade that it was eventually ported to all three of the major home video game console systems of its time. There were also unofficial clones for home Microcomputers such as Acornsoft's Carousel.

[edit] External links