Jump to content
  • entries
    9
  • comments
    5
  • views
    24,259

Atari 7800 Food Fight Review


-^CrossBow^-

2,463 views

This is considered to be one of the best games available for the 7800. I do agree that the game is an excellent arcade port, but I still feel that this game doesn't show any justice to what the 7800 could really do. As such while many of the comments in this old review seem negative I actually score the game pretty highly. Review is posted below as it appears on Jose Q's Emuviews site.

 

Title = Food Fight

Platform = Atari 7800 ProSystem

Genre = Platform? (Run 'n Splat more like it)

Released = 1987

Players = 1 - 2

---------------------

So it is a hot day outside and your visiting the local carnival. How do you spend the time? Why trying to cool off of course, and what better way to do that than to enter a huge food fight contest where the prize is an ice cream cone! You have to give Atari some real credit in the originality department on a lot of their games. Food Fight certainly ranks in as one of Atari's strangest ideas that is also very entertaining to play. Here I take a look at the Atari 7800 conversion of this arcade classic. So how well does Atari do on this port over? Well, let's see...

 

The story is the weakest aspect of this game. Basically you play a boy named Charley Chuck (wonder how long it took them to come up with that...) who is visiting his local carnival on a hot summer day. Charley as it turns out loves to eat and so it only seems natural that he should enter a Food Fight contest where the prize to be won is a huge ice cream cone. Yeah sure that is how I would prefer to cool off?! Wouldn't you? As I stated the plot is very thin indeed. Thankfully there is a lot more to the game that more than makes up for this.

 

The graphics in the 7800 version are very accurate to the arcade in that all the food items seem present and the layout of the playfield matches. The game on either the arcade or the 7800 really doesn't have much in the graphics area, as they are both very simple and similar. The sprites are decent sized and proportional to the arcade. The animation on the 7800 version is very good as all the animation including the expanding mouth effect on Charley as he eats his prize are complete and fun to watch. There are a few things on the graphics that I think Atari could have done more with. For one the chefs while appearing different could have had a little more detail added to them. Also the food looks as it should but some items like the pies and bananas I know could have been done better graphically. The pies look like 2600 graphics and the bananas look like jack knives (ever notice all bananas in Atari games look like that?).

 

The sound is standard 7800/2600 TIA sound chip fanfare. In other words there isn't much in the sound to this game. There is an opening tune which plays before the start of each round. This tune however never changes and does get very monotonous. Also the sounds aren't varied. It sounds the same whether I smack a chef in the face with a banana or a chunk of watermelon. Also the sound of the actual throwing of the item sounds the same. Somehow I would think that a hard object would sound different upon the throw and impact to that of a soft object such as the pies or spinach. No real high marks here either I am afraid.

 

The game is played on a very simple idea with simple control and this is the strong point of the game. The game basically has you as Charley running around the chefs clocking them with food, which is scattered randomly on the playfield. To add to the challenge not only must you dodge the chefs but they chefs can also throw food back. Another Old Man Murphy thrown into the mix is the fact that the chefs appear from manholes, which are also randomly scattered. Charley has to be careful while he runs around the screen that he doesn't fall into an open manhole, otherwise a life is lost. At the end of the playfield will always be the ice cream cone prize waiting for you. Atari figured the chefs, manholes, and the throwing of food wasn't enough because all the while your doing this, the ice cream is slowly melting away. Yes there is a time limit to each wave. If you spend too much time tossing the salad at the chefs an alarm will sound to indicate the ice cream cone is almost melted. You will also see the ice cream slowly drip away from the cone and grow smaller (nice touch). You then have only a few seconds to grab the ice cream and end the level to continue onto the next screen. As you progress the game will increase in difficulty in several ways. The chefs will become faster and throw food more often. Also the chefs get much smarter at where to throw the food and almost seem to be able to predict where you will go. On some levels food will not be as plentiful to fight off the chefs with. There is one other feature that was present on the arcade version that Atari did port over thankfully. It is the one feature that really makes this game fun to play. If you should really kick some serious chef hat in the wave you will be awarded with an Instant Replay, which shows the wave again while playing some fun slapstick comedy type music in the background. Very nice touch! There are a few gripes I have with the gameplay. For one all the food will travel the full length of the screen with the exception of the spinach and salads. While this is a valiant effort to vary challenge, I feel that Atari could have made each food type travel with a different distance depending on such factors as weight and consistency of the food. Perhaps that is asking too much from such a simple game but it would have been a nice touch.

 

Controls and challenge I shall group together in this paragraph. The controls couldn't be easier. You run Charley around using the joystick and throw the food by pressing the fire button. You can control the direction of the throw once again with the joystick. It feels natural as if I were in such a food fight as Charley I would be running in the direction of my throw also :). Only recommendation is to use a joystick your comfortable using for this game, as the play will get fast and more furious as your progress. The game bases the score on several factors which all depend on how you play the waves. You are awarded a bonus at the end of each wave for the leftovers. However, you get points in a progressive manner the more chefs you can smack with food in a wave. Also you get more points for tricking the chefs to walk back into the open manholes from which they appear. Overall there really is no right strategy for gaining the most points. For me I have more fun smacking the chefs around with the food than trying to leave food left over. Also the Instant Replay will never appear unless you really throw a lot of food around and make slick narrow escapes between thrown food or chefs. There is a nice feature in the game in that when you start a game you can select your starting level. There is also a two player option in this game but sadly it is the standard one player at a time approach where the next player doesn't start until your hit with food or fall into a manhole. Atari could have added a simultaneous mode to this game making it either co-operative or competitive where your thrown food either hurts the other player or passes through them. Even a two player slip screen where whoever got the ice cream first would win the points would have been possible. I think even a duel mode of just you and player two against each other would have been a cool touch.

FF_WaterM.gif

Food Fight is another of Atari's great arcade classics which was ported to almost 100% accuracy to the 7800 system. The graphics are adequate though simple, yet the gameplay is addictive and keeps you coming back for more. More obstacles in the playfield would have added to the challenge and variety but overall this version is a truly faithful converion. The faults that the game has are present on the arcade as well and really aren't any fault of the 7800 version itself. I have fun playing this game from time to time when I want simple throw something fun. I would recommend this game to anyone with a 7800 especially if you're a fan of the arcade original you cannot be disappointed here. Have fun!

---------------------

Graphics = 7 (Most stuff looks good with the chefs and some items needing more detail)

Sound = 6 (Standard 2600 TIA being used. Sound effects all the same just lack of variety)

Controls = 9 (Very intuitive control scheme)

Challenge = 8 (Game starts off easy enough, but ramps up pretty fast)

Replay = 7 (While it lacks any real story or any additional game screens. You always want to come back for because throwing food is fun!)

 

Overall -^CB^- grade = 7 (Not the 7800s best but worth owning and playing from time to time)

0 Comments


Recommended Comments

There are no comments to display.

Guest
Add a comment...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...