Incoming Transmission from Atari Mission Control circa 1982. Message as follows: "Your mission is to travel to alien planets, wipe out enemy bunkers, gather fuel units and make the solar systems safe for you and future generations of space pioneers." End Transmission.
I was a bit young to have played Gravitar at launch -- being just 3 years old at the time -- but I discovered it later in my life at a local arcade, pushed back in a corner, collecting dust. What attracted me to the machine was the awe-inspiring hand drawn artwork of the marquee and what I could see on the sides of the machine. Graphically, this game was highly outdated by then. It was a vector-based game (meaning it used a different monitor system) in a time of pixels and higher sprite counts (which is saying something since it was only about 1985).
Gravitar consists of you playing as a tiny blue space ship attempting to collect fuel and destroy enemy ships and bunkers. What made this task addicting was actually the difficult control panel. The game has a very similar feel to the earlier Lunar Lander by Atari. You have to focus on fuel and, more importantly, gravity, which will change based on worlds and levels. There's no joystick on the control panel; just 5 buttons, corresponding to the actions for left, right, shoot, and thrust, with the final button sharing two functions: force field and tractor beam. The physics involved in this game keep me coming back for more. While on my MAME cabinet I have to play with a joystick, at least I can still go for broke and see how much fuel I can save. The game is easier with a joystick, from what I remember. You are given a life system based on your fuel. Once you run out of fuel the game ends. The best strategy is to be stingy, get that momentum going, and never stop shooting!
Each of those star systems has its own gravitational pull, which drags your ship in towards them.
When you enter a star system, you are presented with a Lunar Lander-like screen such as this.
I learned over the years -- having neither seen this game nor known anyone who ever played it back in the day -- that the game failed. Most of the machines were converted to a game known as Black Widow, which used the same hardware. According to Wikipedia this game was initially ported to the Atari 2600 and offered only to those elite people in the Atari Fan Club, but later was released to the public. The only difference is some color in the labels for you collectors. Thanks to the good record keepers at The Arcade Flyer Archive you may view the sales flyers for the game (low-res sample pictured right). They are filled with outstanding hand drawn graphics, screens, and photos of the cabinet.
Also, I have no idea how to export and capture video on my MAME cabinet, so I found a good video of gameplay on an actual machine. Check it out and see what it was like to play vector games back in the day. (Skip to about 40 seconds in.)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gfC76dHogH4
This concludes yet another look at an oddball game most people probably haven't heard of by Pixelcade. I encourage you all to play the game and post some scores!
Did you ever get to play the arcade version of Gravitar? What's your favorite vector-graphics game? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.
If you are interested in writing or contributing to a future Retro Game of the Week, please see here, or declare you interest on the forums. If you would like to suggest a game for discussion, please post to this forum thread. You can see all previously published entries, and any confirmed as upcoming, by looking at this thread.