Vindicators (video game)

Vindicators is an arcade video game released by Atari Games in 1988. One or two players each control a tank in a multidirectional scrolling level. Home ports were by Tengen. Vindicators was not licensed by Nintendo and used an alternate chip to defeat the 10NES lockout system. Ports were planned for the Atari Lynx and Apple IIGS, with the latter even completed, but both were cancelled.[1] Vindicators was followed by the lesser known arcade sequel, Vindicators Part II.

Vindicators
NES Cover art by Marc Ericksen
Developer(s)Arcade
Atari Games
NES
Westwood Associates
Marco Herrera
Publisher(s)Atari Games (arcade)
Tengen (home)
Designer(s)Kelly Turner
Norm Avellar
Composer(s)Arcade
Brad Fuller
Hal Canon
NES
Paul S. Mudra
Dwight Okahara
Platform(s)Arcade, Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, NES, ZX Spectrum
Release1988
Genre(s)Multidirectional shooter
Mode(s)1-2 players simultaneously

Gameplay edit

 
Arcade screenshot

The game begins by asking the player(s) to choose a difficulty level, not only making the enemies more difficult and the players weaker, but higher difficulties start the players in a later set of levels (called "galaxies") and with some powerups. The easiest difficulty level starts the player(s) in the first level with no bonuses. The player controls a tank with constantly draining fuel, and must navigate through multiple levels (14 stations in the arcade version) from bottom to top, encountering obstacles and enemies. Along the way, a player may find powerups including tank fuel, stars (currency), shields, and two types of sub-weapons: smart shots (homing missiles) and bombs (powerful rockets). Each level has a key that will open a door at the top of the level, which will either take the player to the next level or to a special hub with multiple powerups that must be escaped in 10 seconds or less (15 for the NES version, though the timer stays stuck at 10 for five seconds before counting). If the player is unable to escape, the tank will lose half its fuel. After escaping the hub, the player(s) then proceeds to the next station.

Occasionally, the player(s) will face a boss that must be defeated to advance. Normal shots are ineffective however, and the player must decide/guess the appropriate time to buy sub-weapons to greatly raise the chance of victory. After destroying a boss, the player(s) can continue to the end of the level.

Between levels, the player is taken to a shop where items and upgrades to tank speed, power, etc. may be purchased with stars. Any damage caused to the player's tank will decrease the shield level. Purchasing a shield drastically reduces damage down to a mere pixel worth of the fuel gauge per hit. When the fuel depletes, the speed of the tank is reduced to a crawl and a countdown begins from 10. If no fuel is gained before the timer reaches zero, or if the player is shot during the countdown, the tank explodes and a life is lost.

The arcade version, in addition to having special two-joystick controls for each player, contained three special contest levels, with one contest star in each. With three contest stars and nine normal stars, the player(s) could compete in a special time-limited contest level in which the player could win a T-shirt. A later version of the game was released which eliminated the contest levels and stars.

Development edit

 
Vindicators arcade machine in the Computerspielemuseum Berlin.

Release edit

Reception edit

Legacy edit

 
Vindicators Part II

A sequel to the arcade version was released the same year as a conversion kit for Gauntlet titled Vindicators Part II. Only approximately 400 units were made. There are only a few minor differences as the gameplay is nearly identical to the first, even keeping 10 of the 14 original stations of the first Vindicators. It even keeps the old graphics, music and sound. Though the in-game voice was changed to a less robotic-sounding male, and several tank upgrades were added that are picked up as powerups and expire after a level is finished.

Vindicators Part II was included in the 2012 compilation Midway Arcade Origins for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ "Upcoming Games: Vindicators". Grey Matters. Vol. 3. Atari Corporation. 1992. p. 28.
  2. ^ Game review, Amstrad Action magazine, Future Publishing, issue 43, April 1989
  3. ^ "Midway Arcade Origins Review". 14 November 2012.

External links edit