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(Redirected from Pursuit (arcade game))
Pursuit
Developer(s) Kee Games
Platform(s) Arcade
ReleaseJanuary 31st, 1975 (NA)
Genre(s) Combat flight simulator

Pursuit is a single-player arcade video game by Kee Games, originally released in 1975. The player plays a World War I flying ace who tries to shoot down enemy planes. Gameplay is from a first person perspective. Pursuit marks the first time Atari Inc. publicly acknowledged its relationship with Kee. [1]

Gameplay

The player uses a flight stick to steer the plane up, down, right, and left to get the enemy in his or her sights. The top-mounted fire button is then used to shoot the enemy plane and gain points.

Release

The game is housed in a custom wide cabinet modeled to look like a World War I biplane cockpit. It includes a similarly modeled flight stick with top-mounted fire button. The game's PCB is composed of discrete technology and includes Atari/Kee's Durastress technology. [1] One overlay provides the onscreen crosshair. [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Atari: The Lost Years of the Coin-Op, 1971 – 1975, Part IV". Retrieved 2007-12-27.
  2. ^ Pursuit at the Killer List of Videogames
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Pursuit (arcade game))
Pursuit
Developer(s) Kee Games
Platform(s) Arcade
ReleaseJanuary 31st, 1975 (NA)
Genre(s) Combat flight simulator

Pursuit is a single-player arcade video game by Kee Games, originally released in 1975. The player plays a World War I flying ace who tries to shoot down enemy planes. Gameplay is from a first person perspective. Pursuit marks the first time Atari Inc. publicly acknowledged its relationship with Kee. [1]

Gameplay

The player uses a flight stick to steer the plane up, down, right, and left to get the enemy in his or her sights. The top-mounted fire button is then used to shoot the enemy plane and gain points.

Release

The game is housed in a custom wide cabinet modeled to look like a World War I biplane cockpit. It includes a similarly modeled flight stick with top-mounted fire button. The game's PCB is composed of discrete technology and includes Atari/Kee's Durastress technology. [1] One overlay provides the onscreen crosshair. [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Atari: The Lost Years of the Coin-Op, 1971 – 1975, Part IV". Retrieved 2007-12-27.
  2. ^ Pursuit at the Killer List of Videogames

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