2020. 3. 25. 19:18ㆍ카테고리 없음
European / 1st alternate North American arcade flyer Data East (original), Release 1982 Mode(s) 1-2 players alternating Upright, cocktail Display, 19' monitor BurgerTime ( バーガータイム, Bāgātaimu) is a 1982 created by initially for its. The player is chef Peter Pepper, who must walk over hamburger ingredients located across a maze of platforms while avoiding pursuing characters.
In the United States, Data East USA licensed BurgerTime for distribution by as a standard dedicated arcade game. Data East also released its own version of BurgerTime in the United States through its DECO Cassette System. The Data East and Midway versions are distinguished by the manufacturer's name on the title screen and by the marquee and cabinet artworks, as the game itself is identical. The game's original Japanese title Hamburger ( ハンバーガー) was changed outside of Japan to BurgerTime, reportedly to avoid potential trademark issues.
In addition to all releases in the Western world, 'BurgerTime' was also the name used on the Japanese ports and sequels. When Data East went bankrupt in 2003, bought most of Data East's, including BurgerTime, BurgerTime Deluxe, Super BurgerTime, and Peter Pepper's Ice Cream Factory. Screenshot of 's arcade version of BurgerTime.
The object of the game is to complete a number of hamburgers while avoiding enemy foods. When the game's main protagonist, chef Peter Pepper, the player's character, walks the length of an ingredient (bun, meat patty, tomato, etc.), it falls one level and scores 50 points. If it lands atop another ingredient, the latter in turn falls one level. A burger is completed when all vertically aligned ingredients have been dropped out of the maze and onto a waiting plate. Once all burgers are completed, the is finished. While making burgers, the player must avoid the antagonists, consisting of three types of enemies: Mr., Mr., and Mr. Enemies can be dodged, stunned, crushed with a falling ingredient, or dropped by luring them onto an ingredient and then causing it to fall.
In this last case, the piece will fall two extra levels for every enemy caught on it. Enemies that have been crushed or dropped return to the maze after a few seconds. Dropped enemies award larger point values than crushed ones; therefore, to obtain a high score, the player must attract more than one enemy onto an ingredient just before dropping it.
Peter Pepper has pepper shots to shake on nearby enemies to stun and render them harmless for a few seconds. Extra shots are obtained by collecting bonus foods, such as coffee, an ice cream cone, or French fries, which appear in the center of the maze when a certain number of ingredients have dropped. There are six screens of increasing difficulty, with more burgers and enemies, burgers that have more parts, and/or layouts that make it easier for Peter Pepper to be cornered and harder for him to reach the ingredients. Completing all six screens takes the player back to the first one; and repeats thereafter.
Peter Pepper is lost if he runs into or gets trapped by at least one enemy. A game ends if the last life is lost.
Burger Time Deluxe Released For Machines
Extended plays may vary from one machine to another, but do not award additional lives after 1,000,000 points. Ports obtained the rights to BurgerTime from and released the version in 1983. That year they also released versions for the,. In 1984 Mattel produced the version, distributed. Produced a version for the in 1983, in 1985, in 1986, and in 1987. Reception BurgerTime received a Certificate of Merit in the category of '1984 Videogame of the Year (Less than 16K ROM)' at the 5th annual.: 40 The called BurgerTime 'one of the real surprises of 1983 for the Intellivision', and gave the ColecoVision version three and one half stars.
Legacy Sequels. Flyer for Super BurgerTime An arcade spin-off, Peter Pepper's Ice Cream Factory (1984) and an arcade sequel, Super BurgerTime ( スーパーバーガータイム) (1990), were not widely released. Super BurgerTime stars Peter Pepper Jr. And allows two players to play at once. It is fairly true to the original, but with many added features and greatly improved graphics. A console-only sequel, Diner, was created after the 1984 purchase of from Mattel by INTV Corp.

It was programmed by Ray Kaestner, the programmer of the Intellivision version of BurgerTime. In Diner, Peter Pepper must kick balls of food so that they roll off platforms and down ramps to land on a large plate at the bottom of the screen, while avoiding or crushing enemy food items that are trying to stop him. BurgerTime Deluxe was released for the in 1991. Namco released BurgerTime Delight for mobile devices in 2007. It includes 'new graphics, characters and power-ups'. There are six 'arcade levels' and eight enhanced mode levels with perils of falling ice and rising fire from the grill. Besides the pepper of the classic game, there is now a salt shaker, that when collected stuns all enemies on the screen.
A 3D update, BurgerTime World Tour, was released in 2011 for Xbox Live Arcade and PlayStation Network, and in 2012 for WiiWare. It was delisted from Xbox Live Arcade on April 30, 2014. Re-releases The arcade version BurgerTime has been included in various collections, including Arcade's Greatest Hits: Midway Collection 2 for the and for the. The NES version is available on the. BurgerTime Deluxe was released for the in 2011.
The NES version is also included in the 2017 compilation Data East All-Star Collection for the. Clones Clones for home systems include:, Burger Chase, Burger Time (Interceptor Micros), BurgerSpace, Chip Factory, Burger Boy!, Basic Burger, Barmy Burgers, Burger Builder, and Lunchtime. In popular culture Peter Pepper appeared in the movies.
Elements from BurgerTime were in the episode of 'GameBoy.' Scores In 1984, achieved a record score of 7,881,050. It was beaten on September 5, 2005 by Bryan L.
Wagner of with a score of 8,601,300 and improved to exactly 9,000,000 on June 2, 2006. According to, he improved it further to 11,512,500 points on September 19, 2008 at the Challenge Arcade in. The world record was verified by Twin Galaxies on December 2, 2016 as 7,837,750 by Roger Edwin Blair III of. References. Archived from on 2007-05-01. Retrieved 2012-11-16.
Intellivision Lives. Intellivision Productions. Retrieved 30 July 2018.
^ Holyoak, Craig (1984-05-30). Deseret News.

Retrieved 10 January 2015. Retrieved 30 July 2018. Retrieved 30 July 2018.; (January 1984). 'Arcade Alley: The Arcade Awards, Part 1'. Reese Communications. 7 (10): 40–42.
Church of BurgerTime. 2009-01-06 at the.
Burger Time World Tour. Archived from on 2012-11-07. Retrieved 2012-11-16. Boyle, Curtis L. Retrieved 2011-03-19. Archived from on 2010-05-27. Retrieved 2010-08-07.
Play Burgertime Deluxe Online
Retrieved 2016-09-08. Retrieved 2016-12-02. External links. at the. can be played for free in the browser at the.
Burgertime Video Game For Ipad
. Pocker Gamer - With a next-gen game from the classic BurgerTime franchise recently out for Xbox 360, the latest Virtual Console release for 3DS may well whet your appetite in anticipation. BurgerTime Deluxe, originally released for Game Boy, features all the same burger-dropping, ingredient-dodging action from the very first release, with that familiar monochrome glaze over the top. As with many of these old arcade titles, the game has lost a lot of its charm now. But for the hardcore among us, seeing it through to the end will take a good few bus journeys.