Defender Arcade Game Williams Pc Download

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Defender is Atari's excellent PC port of Williams' arcade hit - one of the most successful of all time designed by legendary Eugene Jarvis.

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If you haven't already noticed, from Midway is a compendium of seven old games found in the arcades back in the '80s and late '70s (if I remember correctly). These titles include, MoonPatrol, Splat and, all of which seem to be directly ported from the arcades, which is both a good and a bad thing. The pros of a direct, don't-change-anything port for classics is quite obvious. You know what you're getting, and you're getting something that probably can't be found anywhere. However, the cons are also there as well. For instance, these games still ask for a coin deposit, so instead of just jumping into Spy Hunter, I had to go through the help file looking for what button tells the computer to give me a credit. Once that's done, I get my credit, but then I receive a notice stating that if I want to start, I need to press one of the floor pedals.

So then I had to dig through the help files to find out what I had to do for that. As you can see, this could get very tedious. To top it off, the controls aren't even customizable, so that means you're stuck with whatever they give you, like it or not (and what they give you is sometimes downright stupid). Then there is the trivia mode.

This mode asks questions about games that were popular around the same time as these arcade classics, in a QuickTime format. Good idea, but only mediocre execution. The trivia mode has no randomization of the questions, so that means each time you play it, you get the same questions in the same order. However, if you do manage to get through the questions you do get some interesting info about the games, such as other names for it and things that didn't make the final release of the game. Judging from the overall quality of this mode, it feels like it was tacked on at the end of the production cycle. Pitfalls aside, this game is some great fun.

I get a kick out of playing these and realizing how fun games used to be before SVGA, force feedback and the Internet. If you're looking for something that the whole family would enjoy, this is definitely a buy. It can refresh older gamers' memories as to what games were like when they were young, and give the slacker kids that jeer at anything less than 3Dfx and 32 player TCP/IP compatibility a dose of what gaming was like a decade ago. Where can someone go to not only wheel around in a futuristic tank but also defend a city from alien invaders-not to mention destroy a giant? The answer is simple: Williams' Arcade's Greatest Hits Atari Collection I.