Chopper Hunt is a side-view shoot 'em up written by Tom Hudson and published by Imagic in 1984 for Atari 8-bit computers and Commodore 64. It was one of the last games from Imagic before the company went out of business.[2] Chopper Hunt is an enhanced version of the Atari 8-bit game Buried Bucks released by ANALOG Software in 1982. In both games, the player files a helicopter that uses bombs to unearth buried items. Contemporaneous reviews were mixed.

Chopper Hunt
Developer(s)ANALOG Software
Publisher(s)Imagic
Designer(s)Tom Hudson[1]
Platform(s)Atari 8-bit, Commodore 64
ReleaseBuried Bucks
1982: Atari 8-bit
Chopper Hunt
1984: Atari 8-bit, C64
Genre(s)Shoot 'em up
Mode(s)Single-player

Gameplay

edit

Development

edit

ANALOG Software, the game publishing label of Atari 8-bit magazine ANALOG Computing, published Buried Bucks in 1982 with the name stylized as Buried Buck$. Programmer Tom Hudson documented the expanding explosion effect used in the game as an article in ANALOG Computing, including the assembly language source code.[3] The same effect was used in another game for the magazine: Planetary Defense.[4] Hudson later told Atari Explorer that Buried Bucks was his first Atari 8-bit game and called it "pretty simplistic."[5]

The 1984 Imagic release changed the name to Chopper Hunt and made some alterations to the visuals.[6] A Commodore 64 port was published simultaneously.

Reception

edit

As part of a "Five Great Games for the Atari" article in 1983, John J. Anderson reviewed Buried Bucks: "once in a while a package appears that takes a unique premise and develops it into a new game that bears little resemblance to anything that has come before."[7] He commented, "The level of graphics and sound in the program is utterly professional."[7] Electronic Fun with Computers & Games also reviewed the original release, concluding, "This is a cute premise with no promise. My main complaint is that this game is boring. It goes too quickly from ridiculously easy to impossible, and along the way It completely fails to capture your attention or provide excitement for any prolonged gameplay".[8]

In a 1985 review of the Imagic version in Antic, Jack Powell wrote, "Chopper Hunt would make a very nice public domain game," and "If you plunk down your hard-earned money for this outdated arcade game, you are helping to prove that Barnum is right."[9]

References

edit
  1. ^ Hague, James. "The Giant List of Classic Game Programmers".
  2. ^ "Imagic". Retro Gamer. No. 161. p. 55.
  3. ^ Hudson, Tom (August 1982). "Graphic Violence!". ANALOG Computing. No. 8. p. 57. Archived from the original on 2018-08-31. Retrieved 2018-12-11.
  4. ^ Hudson, Tom. "Planetary Defense 2012!". klanky.org.
  5. ^ Jainschigg, John (December 1986). "Gradus ad Parnassum". Atari Explorer. 6 (3): 44.
  6. ^ "Buried Buck$, Chopper Hunt - gameplay, compare". YouTube. 29 December 2014.
  7. ^ a b Anderson, John J. (Fall 1983). "Five Great Games for the Atari". Creative Computing Video & Arcade Games. No. 2. p. 110.
  8. ^ Backer, Paul (October 1983). "Hits & Missiles: Buried Buck$". Electronic Fun with Computers & Games. Vol. 1, no. 12. pp. 70, 72.
  9. ^ Powell, Jack (November 1985). "Product Reviews: Chopper Hunt". Antic. 4 (7): 77.
edit