Play 80s arcade games




















The basic layout for this puzzle game is to stack up different shapes and clear them by filling a line. Given its straightforward gameplay and streamlined design, this is no surprise to any veteran or newbie gamer. Not surprisingly, Tetris is available on most platforms, with the more recent Tetris 99 for nintendo Switch gaining a large following and competition-focused fanbase.

In Asteroids, players control a spaceship drifting through a sea of asteroids—not only do players have to avoid and destroy any incoming asteroids, but they also have to stave off saucers and dodge their counterattacks. With one of the more fantastical backgrounds, Centipede has you in the role of a garden gnome who must defend their forest with a magic wand from an invasive horde of arachnids and insects—spiders, scorpions, fleas, and of course, a centipede which winds down the screen near the end of every level.

Released in by Atari, Centipede would be one of the few games programmed with no specific gender-demographic target—it would go on to be one of the most played arcade games among women gamers with Pac-Man coming in second. The first racing game released in the s by Namco, Rally-X was also one of the first arcade games produced in Japan that Namco imported over to the US. Compared to your average racing game, rather than racing against other players or a CPU, Rally-X had players collect flags around a maze-like course.

The inaugural game to the Street Fighter franchise, Street Fighter would be the first competitive fighting game released by Capcom in In single-player mode, players take control of a young Japanese martial artist named Ryu against eight different CPU-controlled enemies, but in 2-player mode, players could play as either Ryu or his rival, Ken.

Even now diehard fans and newer players can enjoy the popular fighting series, as Street Fighter V was just released in for PlayStation 4 and Windows. Armed with only a lance and a flying ostrich, players focus on defeating hordes of buzzard-riding knights while avoiding an indestructible pterodactyl in Joust. The objective of each stage is to defeat all of the Galaga aliens, which will fly into formation from the top and sides of the screen.

Emulator instructions and keyboard controls towards bottom of page. Skip to content. I was a 9-year-old James Bond if only until my parents finished grocery shopping.

Sinistar Williams Electronics gave me anxiety like nothing else. Generally solid controls with the track ball although a bit of a learning curve if you weren't already initiated with arcade golf or something. Pretty chill I actually had to look this up to make sure I didn't make it up. I remember going to my local arcade down the street and gravitating to Star Trek Sega immediately. It actually wasn't very popular so I could always play although I never felt like I got to play enough.

You played as the captain of the Enterprise traveling from sector to sector dispatching Klingons at will, all the while managing the ship's power, weapons, and shields. If you got in trouble you could warp out of it, but that would eat up your ship's power.

To replenish, you would need to find the nearest Starbase and dock with it. It was all wireframe graphics but I liked how it used a variation of the Spock voice when it said "Welcome aboard Captain" every time the game started. Obviously, looking back, it seems pretty archaic. But I would still play it now if it was in the arcade. If there are even still arcades out there and no Dave and Busters is not the same. I spent many hours peering through the periscope of a simulated tank, working the control levers and firing at enemies in Battlezone Atari, Inc.

The arcade was on my way home from high school, so that meant a daily stopover, and I was entranced by the green vector graphics and the infinite world.

Amidst a flat landscape with mountains in the distance, all defined by electric green lines, enemy tanks appeared. I maneuvered so I could blast them out of the way in a battle that never relented.

In Galaxiga, you will be faced with a large amount of infinity galaxy enemies. Use your spaceship to shoot them down and clear all enemies in the galaxy. Features: - Gorgeous Pixel graphic reminds old school games - Super-easy control that tutorial is not needed - Strong and varying enemies - Tough and fierce Boss battle - Various ways for the power upgrade - True space battle experience - High-quality images optimized for tablets and large screens.

How to play: - Slide the screen to control your spaceship dodge enemy's bullets. They will help you complete easier. Download the outstanding arcade shooting game now! The game play is easy to pick up and you hardly run out of energy to play levels. The difficulty ramps up at a pretty normal pace, however the only issue with difficulty is bosses just get more health and have almost unavoidable moves. Going back and playing on hard mode gives tons of gems to level your ship up.

Only thing I have a common problem with is the gold currency. It serves almost zero purpose in the grand scheme of the game. However if you just want a good game with no ads to pass the time I recommend. This game is advertised through AMC movies I downloaded to play during a wait with friends to pass time.



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