Arcticfox

Articfox

Cover art
Developer(s) Dynamix
Publisher(s) Electronic Arts
Designer(s) Damon Slye
Platform(s) Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, MS-DOS, Apple IIe
Release date(s) 1986
Genre(s) Action
Vehicle simulation
FPS
Mode(s) Single player

Arcticfox is a computer game developed by Dynamix and published in 1986 by Electronic Arts. It was published in Europe by Ariolasoft.

It was first developed for the Amiga, but was quickly ported to other popular platforms of the era such as the Atari ST, Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, PC and Apple IIe. It was one of the first games rendered from a 3-D first-person perspective, and is often mentioned as a pioneer of the first person shooter genre. It is also one of the very first titles available for the Amiga home computer.

The game was a first person tank simulator and a sequel to Dynamix's earlier Stellar 7. A third game was released in the series in 1991 titled Nova 9: Return of Gir Draxon. The design team at Dynamix behind this game would eventually go on to produce The Incredible Machine, and Red Baron.

Gameplay

The game is set in 2005, where aliens have taken over the continent of Antarctica, with the aliens attempting to steal Earth's oxygen. The player is sent to eradicate the intruders. The player's weapon is a new super tank, the Slye-Hicks MX-100, codenamed Arcticfox. The player is thrust into battle, and has to pilot their tank over a series of levels in an attempt to destroy the aliens' ships and equipment. The player's goal is to knock out the main alien communication array, aided by the tank's abilities to jump, burrow into the snow, and fire oxygen-based mortars at their weather equipment.

The Arcticfox is equipped with a cannon, guided missiles and mines. It is also outfitted with fore and aft viewscreens, radar and a GPS device. The player goes up against a variety of enemy units, including planes, tanks, bunkers and communication towers.

The vantage point for the game is the cockpit of the Arcticfox. The player can see out the main viewscreen as well as his sundry features (such as the radar screen) and can see his character's hand on the joystick which steers the tank. When the player directs the tank to steer left, the hand of the character onscreen moves left as well. The same is true for all directions. Enemy targets are visible via the viewscreens and on radar.

One unusual feature of Arcticfox was the perspective of the player. As well as being able to see the character's hand on the controls (on the Amiga version only), the landscape perspective changes relative to the player's tank. That is, if the Arcticfox is driving along tilted on the side of a slope, the landscape tilts relative to the player's own tilted position. This type of vantage point was very unusual and groundbreaking for a game of the home computer era.

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