Midnight Mutants
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Midnight Mutants | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Radioactive Software |
Publisher(s) | Atari Corporation |
Platform(s) | Atari 7800 |
Release date | 1990 |
Genre(s) | Adventure |
Mode(s) | Single player |
Media | Atari 7800 Cartridge |
This article does not cite any references or sources. (February 2008) Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
Contents |
[edit] Overview
Midnight Mutants is an adventure-based video game for the Atari 7800 prosystem, programmed by Radioactive Software and published by Atari Corporation in 1990. The game, along with Sentinel, was one of the last releases by Atari for the Atari 7800. Midnight Mutants maintains a small, but loyal cult following because of its quirky premise and because of its adventure style gameplay, which was more reflective of games on the competing Sega Master System and Nintendo Entertainment System than of the early 1980s arcade and computer ports that made up many of the titles in the Atari 7800's rather small library.
[edit] Premise
Midnight Mutants tells the story of the young boy named Jimmy Harkman, who, on Halloween night in 1992, learns that his grandfather has been turned into a pumpkin by a villain named Doctor Evil. On Halloween night in 1747, Doctor Evil had been burned at the stake as a witch by a Jonathan Harkman, an ancestor of Jimmy's. When Doctor Evil returns from the grave in 1992, he takes out his revenge on Jimmy's grandfather, by transforming Grandpa into a pumpkin.
With his grandfather now taken away from him, Jimmy heads on a Halloween quest to try and find a cure that will return his grandfather to human form. With Doctor Evil on the loose, Jimmy finds the countryside has become inhabited by scary creatures such as zombies and werewolves that can injure him physically and also make his blood impure. Fortunately, even though Grandpa is trapped in pumpkin form, he is available to give Jimmy advice on occasion with the click of a button. Along the way, Jimmy can collect weapons and items that will help him in his quest to defeat evil creatures, giants bosses, and, ultimately Doctor Evil himself.
[edit] Gameplay
MIDNIGHT MUTANTS is a side scrolling adventure game with a horror theme, similar to the side scrolling adventure games often found on the Nintendo Entertainment System or Sega Master System. In his quest to save Grandpa, Jimmy travels across the country side, exploring an old haunted mansion, a secret laboratory, underground caverns, a haunted forest, a pumpkin patch, a haunted graveyard, an old shipwreck, among other locations.
Initially, Jimmy is powerless to fight the evil that faces him and must rely on his wits and grandpa's advice in order to stay alive. Contact with the creatures roaming about will either cause him physical injury or make his blood lose its purity ... both of which will prove fatal if he's not careful. As the game progresses, he locates various weapons of increasing power, health power-ups and other useful items that make it possible to defeat the minions of evil. Key parts of the game culminate in battles against giant boss creatures that take up most of the screen.
Until 1989, most Atari 7800 titles had tended to be conversions of single-screen arcade games from the early 1980s or ports of early-to-mid 1980s computer titles that had been found on the Commodore 64 or Atari 800 XL computer. This placed the Atari 7800 at a disadvantage when its library was compared against detailed adventure games such as Super Mario Brothers, The Legend of Zelda or Alex Kidd In Miracle World. In 1989, Atari had finally recognized this gap in their software lineup and begun to release similarly themed Atari 7800 titles such as COMMANDO and SCRAPYARD DOG, ultimately concluding with Midnight Mutants.
As with similar games of that era, Midnight Mutants features a broad video game landscape with many locations, a background musical soundtrack, battles against boss creations and an animated introduction.
[edit] Reaction
The game was one of the last released for the Atari 7800 and its distribution was very limited. By 1991, the Atari 7800 had vanished from most store shelves as newer 16-bit consoles took over its place. Despite its limited distribution, the game remains popular among Atari 7800 fans. Critical reaction has been fairly positive with praise being paid to the game graphics, details quest and quirky sense of humor. Minor negative points have been raised over the odd vertical movement and the lack of a save game feature such as a password or battery backup. In addition, the game has an unusual "two health meter" system, which adds to the challenge experienced by some players.
[edit] Trivia
Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- Midnight Mutants is 128K or 1 megabit in size
- Midnight Mutants has an offbeat sense of humor, with lines like "I want my mutant TV" randomly appearing at the top of the screen as the player changes areas.
- Atari licensed the likeness of Al Lewis, who had portrayed Grandpa Munster in the 1960s comedy television series, The Munsters. However, the name "Munster" does not appear anywhere in the game, its instructions or box, with the character simply being referred to as "Grandpa".
- According to the game manual and copyright, MIDNIGHT MUTANTS was the property of SNK limited, though the game is exclusive to the Atari 7800.