Elevator Action

Elevator Action

Arcade flyer featuring the cocktail table version of the game and in-game screenshots.
Developer(s)

Taito Corporation

Micronics (FC/NES)
Publisher(s) Taito Corporation
Composer(s) Yoshio Imamura
Platform(s) Arcade
Release date(s) 1983
Genre(s) Action, plaformer, puzzle, shooter
Mode(s) Up to 2 players
Cabinet Upright
Display Raster, standard resolution 256 x 224 (Horizontal), 64 colors

Elevator Action (エレベーターアクション Erebētā Akushon) is a 1983 arcade game by Taito Corporation.[1] It has a mix of the action, platformer, puzzle and shooter genres.[2]

The player assumes the role of a spy infiltrating a 30-story building filled with elevators. The player is pursued by enemy agents who appear from behind closed doors. These agents must be dealt with via force or evasion. Successful completion of a level involves collecting all the secret documents and traversing the building from top to bottom. In the lower floors of the building, the elevator systems can be complex enough that puzzle-solving skills are needed. The controls consist of a 4-way joystick and two buttons, one to shoot and the other for jumping and kicking.

Elevator Action was followed by the arcade game Elevator Action Returns in 1994 (released as Elevator Action II in North America) and Elevator Action EX for the Game Boy in 2000.

Gameplay

Screenshot of the first level of Elevator Action

The player assumes the role of Agent 17, codename: "Otto", a secret agent for an unspecified organization or government.[3] Otto enters a 30-story building at roof level and must work his way down to the basement, collecting secret documents whose locations are marked by red doors. Along the way, he must use the building's elevator and escalator systems to move from floor to floor and avoid or kill the enemy agents trying to stop him. After picking up all the documents, Otto can escape to the basement and drive away in a waiting car to end the level.

The player controls consist of a four-position joystick and separate buttons to control jumping and firing. Otto can move left and right, jump, duck, and fire up to three shots at a time from his pistol. While Otto is in an elevator, the player can push up or down to send him to a higher or lower floor; however, Otto cannot duck as long as he is inside. He can run or jump across an empty shaft as long as the elevator is above him, and can ride on its roof but not control its motion or cross to the other side. The player can push up or down to make Otto ride an escalator.

If Otto tries to leave the building without collecting all the documents, he will be transported to the highest floor that still has an unopened red door and must work his way back down. In addition, if he takes too long to clear a level, an alarm will sound; the enemy agents then become more aggressive, and the elevators will be slower to respond to the player's joystick movements.

Each building contains a section in which the lights are out, making it harder to see approaching enemies. On other floors, Otto can temporarily disable the lights by shooting one of the overhead fixtures. Otto can kill enemy agents by shooting them, jump-kicking them at close range, dropping a light fixture on their heads, or crushing them with an elevator. If he is shot or crushed, or if he falls down an open shaft, the player loses one life.

The background music is the same for all levels and only changes when the hidden time limit expires. And as Otto lands on the first building's rooftop at the start of the game, Chopin's Piano Sonata No. 2, popularly known as Funeral March, is briefly heard.

A port to the original Game Boy includes the ability to acquire different weapons, such as a machine gun that fires more rapidly.

Ports and re-releases

Elevator Action was ported to the ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC, MSX, Commodore 64, Nintendo Entertainment System, Game Boy, and Sega SG-1000. Sony published a mobile version of the game. On March 5, 2007, the NES port of Elevator Action was released on the Wii's Virtual Console.

A port was planned for the Atari 2600, but never released. However, a prototype of the game was illegally published by CGE Services Corp. and sold at Classic Gaming Expo 2001.[4]

A remake of the game by Square Enix, titled Elevator Action Deluxe, was released on PlayStation Network on August 31, 2011. The game contains single player and multiplayer modes, as well as the original arcade version.[5]

The original Elevator Action has been included in various compilations, including:

Legacy

Two games for Palm OS, Agent Z and its sequel, Agent Z 2 by Ellams Software, are based on Elevator Action.

Dexter's Laboratory: Robot Rampage! released for Game Boy Color in 2000, is based on Elevator Action EX.

Revealed at AOU 2009, Elevator Action: Death Parade is a lightgun shooter that uses elevator doors when changing scenarios.[7]

A game titled Elevator Action Episode-ZERO (エレベーターアクション Episode-ZERO) was released for mobile phones on 2009 in Japan.

Elevator Action's puzzle-shooter-platformer hybrid formula was later used by games such as Impossible Mission (1984) and Xenophobe (1987).[2]

Other media

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/24/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.