Panic Park

Panic Park
Developer(s) Namco
Publisher(s) Namco
Platform(s) Arcade game
Release date(s) 1997
Genre(s) Party game
Mode(s) single-player, multi-player
Cabinet Upright
Arcade system Namco System 23
Display Raster

Panic Park is an arcade game developed and published by Namco in 1997, and released on the arcade system board Namco System 23.

Gameplay

The game has a primary mode, the "Interactive Story", which can be either for one or two players. There are 25 mini-games, randomly selected both for his type of game which for his levels of difficulty (Easy, Normal or Hard), and all respectively, with different time limits, lives and scores; five of the 25 mini-games are solely the final stage in Solo Play, but can be any stage in VS Play. In the game, officially, there are seven rounds (in the Solo Play) and five rounds (in the VS Play), and the objective of the game is to successfully complete all the rounds in order to win the trophy at the end, and also the completion of the game. In the VS Play mode wins the challenge, and with it the trophy, the player who completes more round than the other. The mini-games classified for levels are:

The other mini-games are instead: Volcano Panic, Cactus Panic, Missile Panic, Wall Panic, Buffalo Panic, UFO Panic, Chicken Panic, Mole Panic, Bridge Panic, Shark Panic, Chick Panic (similar to "Buffalo Panic"), Money Panic, Balloon Panic, Ice Panic, Vase Panic, Conveyor Panic, Ring Panic, Superball Panic, Fire Panic, and Bomb Panic.

In addition, the game has a special mode called "Panic King", for one player only. In it, the player can set a high score, by attempting to beat the old record of the players who previously played the mode. Compared to the "Interactive Story", the level of difficulty of the mini-games in this mode is much higher, and for the player has only chances for the player to try again; also the same mini-games (always in this mode) vary from month to month subdividing, in turn, depending on the month into six official games. They are:

Controls

The game's controllers are unique because there are two levers on the same row, which allows the players to push the avatars against each other, thus impeding the progress of the other player. This is reinforced by the message "Push One Another!" in the game. The two players, when they play, control two main characters, respectively the red girl for the first and the blue boy for the second.

Controversy

Around the same year the game was launched, the US government banned the game in some US arcades due to shoulder injury lawsuits.

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/15/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.