Laser Blast

Laser Blast

Developer(s) Activision
Publisher(s) Activision
Designer(s) David Crane
Platform(s) Atari 2600
Release date(s)
Genre(s) Shoot 'em up
Mode(s) Single player

Laser Blast is a single-player video game developed and published by Activision in March 1981 for the Atari 2600 video game system.[1] Designed by David Crane,[2] one of Activision's co-founders, Laser Blast places players in control of flying saucers attacking land targets.

Contents

Gameplay

The object of Laser Blast is to destroy a series of land-based enemies. The player controls a fleet of flying saucers, operating one at a time. On the planet surface below are a group of three mobile laser bases, guarded by an invisible force field that prevents the player's saucer from getting too close to the surface. Both the player and the enemy bases are armed with laser blasters, which may fire a single continuous beam at a time. The player must destroy all three bases before they are able to target the saucer and fire their own laser blasts in defense. If the player's saucer is hit, it will lose altitude and crash to the ground; however, the player may direct this fall, potentially into one of the bases, destroying it as well. Each succeeding wave of enemy bases moves faster and targets the player's saucers more quickly, while the force field becomes stronger and decreases the amount of space in which the saucer can move.

Players score points for each base destroyed, with points multiplying each wave up to a maximum of 90 points per base. Players earn extra flying saucers with each 1000 points scored and may keep a maximum of six extra saucers in reserve.

Ports

Activision re-released Laser Blast as part of its Activision Anthology video game, made available for a number of consoles at various times in the 2000s. The game was also re-released to Microsoft's Game Room download service for the Xbox 360 and Windows-based PCs in June 2010.

References

External links