Double Dare (video game)

Double Dare is a video game published by GameTek[1] and based on the Nickelodeon game show Double Dare. The game was originally released by for IBM PC compatibles and the Commodore 64 in 1988. It was ported to the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) by Rare and re-released for the system in 1990.

Double Dare
NES cover art
Developer(s)Rare (NES version)
Publisher(s)GameTek
Programmer(s)Steve Patrick (NES)
Composer(s)David Wise (NES)
Platform(s)DOS, NES, Commodore 64
Release1988, 1990
Genre(s)Game show
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Gameplay edit

Double Dare can be played by one or two players; single players compete against the computer. Before the game starts, players enter their team names and select from four male and four female avatar. Whichever avatar the player picks, the teammate will be of the opposite gender. The game can also be set for one of three levels of difficulty with higher levels offering less time to answer questions and a more difficult computer opponent.

The game plays exactly like its television counterpart, with two rounds of 10-question trivia rounds and a third round featuring an obstacle course. The rules and scoring from the game show all apply. Toss-up challenges determine which team gets initial control of the trivia round. To complete a toss-up, each player determines the precise speed and angle of whatever object they are throwing to hit a target. Physical challenges are played the same way. Each player uses the up or down arrows on the controller to choose answers for trivia questions. The player with the most money at the end of round two proceeds to the obstacle course.

In order to move through an obstacle, the player needs to repeatedly alternate between pressing either the left and right or up and down arrows on the controller's D-pad. In order to grab the flag, the player needs to position the on-screen contestant in just the right spot and then press the A button to jump and retrieve. The obstacles are all based on real obstacles from the show (with one exception, a triangular jungle gym) and are randomized before a game.

Virtual prizes for beating the obstacle course include a BMX bicycle, television set, an NES console, and several other gifts, ending with an exotic vacation received for completing the last obstacle.

Reception edit

David & Robin Minnick reviewed Double Dare and Hollywood Squares for Compute!'s Gazette and said "Any fan of the TV games will enjoy these 64 versions. And even if you're not a fan, we think you'll get a kick out of these games anyway."[2]

References edit

  1. ^ Emery, Gene (February 24, 1989). "Miniature golf on microcircuits". Providence Journal. pp. D–14. Retrieved 18 March 2013. That's why Double Dare, the computer game by Game Tek, may perform a true public service.
  2. ^ "Compute! Gazette Issue 73". July 26, 1989 – via Internet Archive.

External links edit