Warlords (1980 video game)

Warlords

North American arcade flyer.
Developer(s) Atari, Inc.
Publisher(s) Atari
Platform(s) Arcade, Atari 2600, Xbox Live Arcade
Release

Arcade

Atari 2600

Mode(s) Multi-player
Cabinet Upright, cocktail
CPU M6502 clocked at 1.512MHz [1][2]
Sound POKEY clocked at 1.512MHz
Display Raster, 256x224, horizontal orientation

Warlords is an arcade game released by Atari, Inc. in 1980.[3] The game resembles a combination of Breakout and Quadrapong (an early Atari arcade game) in the sense that not only can up to 4 players play the game at the same time, but also the "castles" in the four corners of the screen are brick walls that could be broken with a flaming ball.

Warlords uses spinner controllers for player control, and came in both an upright 2 player version and a 4 player cocktail version. The upright version uses a black and white monitor, and reflects the game image onto a mirror, with a backdrop of castles, giving the game a 3D feel. The upright version only supports up to two simultaneous players, which move through the levels as a team. The cocktail version is in color, and supports 1-4 players. 3-4 player games are free-for-all's where the game ends as soon as one player wins. 1-2 player games play identical to the upright version.

According to the Atari video game production numbers, 1014 uprights were made, and 1253 cocktails were produced. The prototype version of Warlords was called "Castles and Kings" and was housed in a 4 player "Sprint 4 like" cabinet - it was huge. Only 2 versions of the prototype were made. The game was considered a success, although the large cabinet made it impossible to produce in large quantities nor was it feasible to install - hence the smaller cocktail design.

Gameplay

Warlords is a battle between four warlords, 1-4 of which can be controlled by the player(s). The objective is to destroy the three other castles while protecting ones own castle with a moving shield. Each castle is an L-shaped wall distinguished by a different color, each containing and protecting a Warlord icon (crown for player controlled Kings, a dark lord helmet for computer controlled Black Knights).

The weapons for accomplished this are spinning fireballs which bounce off anything they touch, but destroy chunks of a castle wall on contact. Fireballs can be caught and held by shields and thrown for greater hitting force via a "Power stone" button, but at the cost of slowly deteriorating the player's own walls. When an icon is destroyed it releases another fireball onto the playfield, traveling in the opposite direction of the killing shot. The first fireball is launched by a dragon, and always at a human player. Subsequent fireballs, up to a maximum of four at once, appear after timeouts or when a warlord icon is destroyed.

The last player with their icon intact will be awarded a point bonus. A game ends when all human players are eliminated.[4][5]

Development

The Atari 2600 version of the game was released in 1981 and was written by Carla Meninsky, one of the two female game designers to work for Atari in the early 1980s.[6] [7][8]

The coin-op group developed the arcade version from the same "Castles and Kings" concept, adding and changing features to make the game more suitable for coin-operated play.

In 2008, a 3D version was released for Xbox Live Arcade

Ports and clones

In 2002, a 3D remake of Warlords was included in the Atari Revival pack, which also included the previously released Missile Command and Combat 3D remakes.

A port of Warlords, including a "remix" version, is included in Retro Atari Classics for the Nintendo DS. It allows multiplayer play through wireless.[9] It was released on the Xbox 360 via Xbox Live Arcade on May 27, 2008, featuring a new special HD mode and Xbox Live Vision Camera support.[10]

The arcade and Atari 2600 versions of Warlords were made available on Microsoft's Game Room service for its Xbox 360 console and for Windows-based PCs in June 2010 and December 2010 respectively. A new version of Warlords was released on PlayStation Network on October 9, 2012, in North America and October 10, 2012, in Europe. It was also released on Xbox Live Arcade on November 14, 2012.[11]

In 2004, Bryan Edewaard developed and published an unlicensed homebrew version of Warlords for the Atari 5200 and Atari 8bit computers named Castle Crisis.[12] In 2006, Darrell Spice Jr. released, Medieval Mayhem, a homebrew Atari 2600 game inspired by Warlords.

In 2011, a Commodore 64 clone was released as Space Lords. It features a 4 player adapter.[13]

Reception

Its contemporaneous critical reception was quite positive. Warlords won an award for "Best 'Pong' Variant" and an honorable mention for "Best Competitive Game" at the 3rd annual Arkie Awards. Arkie Award judges characterized the game as "something really new and different in 'Pong'-style designs", and commented that Warlords "delivers plenty of on-screen excitement".[14]:76

In 2009 Game Informer ranked it the 25th best video game of all time. The staff called it the "original trash-talking four-player combat game" and felt that it held up years later.[15]

References

  1. "Warlords". The International Arcade Museum Library. Retrieved 2012-12-04.
  2. "Warlords Cocktail model". Arcade History. 2012-02-03. Retrieved 2012-12-04.
  3. "Warlords - Arcade / Atari 2600 / Gameboy Advance / Nintendo DS / Windows / Xbox 360 / PSP / Playstation / Dreamcast (1980)". hardcoregaming101. Retrieved 2012-12-04.
  4. Warlords Operation, Maintenance and Service Manual. Atari Inc. 1981. p. 12.
  5. "Warlords - Videogame by Atari". www.arcade-museum.com. Retrieved 2017-05-07.
  6. Yarusso, Albert. "Programmers: Carla Meninsky". AtariAge. Retrieved December 3, 2010.
  7. "A History of Syzygy/Atari/Atari Games/Atari Holdings". 2012-09-28. Retrieved 2012-12-04.
  8. Nicholes, Will (May 1, 2011). "A conversation with Carla Meninsky". Retrieved July 14, 2011.
  9. Archived June 1, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  10. "This week on Arcade: Buku Sudoku and Warlords - Xbox Lives Major Nelson". Majornelson.com. 2008-05-27. Retrieved 2012-11-16.
  11. Archived April 4, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  12. "Atari 5200 - Castle Crisis (Self-Published)". AtariAge. Retrieved 2012-11-16.
  13. Space Lords available, RGCD. Retrieved 2016-08-13
  14. Kunkel, Bill; Laney, Jr., Frank (January 1982). "Arcade Alley: The Third Annual Arcade Awards". Video. Reese Communications. 5 (10): 28, 76–77. ISSN 0147-8907.
  15. Cork, Jeff (2009-11-16). "Game Informer's Top 100 Games Of All Time (Circa Issue 100)". Game Informer. Retrieved 2013-12-10.
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