Dirt Fox

Dirt Fox

Arcade flyer
Developer(s) Namco
Publisher(s) Namco
Platform(s) Arcade
Release date(s)
  • JP June 1989
Genre(s) Racing
Mode(s) Up to 4 players simultaneously
Cabinet Upright
Arcade system Namco System 2
CPU 2x Motorola 68000 @ 12.288 MHz,
1x Motorola M6809 @ 3.072 MHz,
1x Hitachi HD63705 @ 2.048 MHz
Sound 1x Yamaha YM2151 @ 3.57958 MHz,
1x C140 @ 21.39 kHz
Display Vertical orientation, Raster, 224 x 288 resolution

Dirt Fox (ダートフォックス Dāto Fokkusu) is a racing arcade game, which had been released by Namco in 1989 only in Japan; it runs on Namco System 2 hardware, and allows up to four players to play simultaneously, when four cabinets are linked together (much like Namco's own Final Lap, which was released two years earlier, can allow up to eight players to play simultaneously, when four two-player cabinets are linked together). The gameplay can be considered similar to those for Data East's Burnin' Rubber, Konami's City Bomber, and Bally Midway's Spy Hunter - only without any of the jumping (except for when a player car drives over ramps) and shooting that all three of those driving games involve.

Gameplay

Each player must take control of a colour-coded car (red for 1P, green for 2P, blue for 3P and yellow for 4P)[1] which are competing in an off-road race; they are given a preset amount of time in which to complete each of the track's six sections and for each section of the track that is successfully completed, the players' time gets extended. However, if any one of the players do not manage to successfully complete the current section of the track before their time runs out, the game will like in other Namco multiplayer racing titles (such as the aforementioned Final Lap) instantly be over and the race will continue without them - and between four and seven purple CPU-controlled cars will also start the race with the players, but they may catch up with additional ones in preset positions on the track.

References

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