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Arcade America

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Arcade America
Developer(s)7th Level
Publisher(s)7th Level
BMG Interactive (Germany)[1][2]
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows, Macintosh
Release1996
Genre(s)Platform

Arcade America is a 1996 platform game developed and published by 7th Level for Microsoft Windows and Macintosh.

Plot

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Joey's band "Joey and the Monsters" is offered a deal to perform at Woodstock. The next day, the monsters try to wake Joey up, but he's a heavy sleeper. They decide to try blowing up his house in order to get him up in time, causing California to get destroyed and sending the monsters flying across America. Now Joey must travel across the US to save his friends and eventually make it to Woodstock in time.

Gameplay

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The game stars Joey and his monsters. This is a side scrolling arcade platform game about traveling across America to find all of Joey's missing monsters.

Development

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In the German version of Arcade America, German singer & songwriter Nina Hagen voices Joey's mother as well as three other characters;[1] this was a selling point present in advertisements,[2] and is featured on the front cover of the German version of the game.[3]

Reception

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Next Generation reviewed the Windows version of the game, rating it three stars out of five, and stated that "It's an interesting platform puzzler, and some of the challenges will surprise even the most adept gamer. Still, if you're looking for a good action title, there are better ones out there."[6]

German gaming magazine PC Joker gave the Windows version of Arcade America an overall score of 56%, praising the game's "cute" graphics that are "animated with care", as well as the game's humor, but criticized the game's "limited" longevity and 'unoriginal' gameplay, summarizing the game as "getting the character from the bottom to the top of the screen without getting hurt". PC Joker praised Nina Hagen's "first-class" voiceover work and Arcade America's overall "witty" presentation, but expressed that while visually and aurally appealing, Arcade America is "boring".[1]

German gaming magazine PC Player gave the Windows version of Arcade America an overall score of three stars out of five,[5] and PC Games gave 82%.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Schnelle, Mick (April 1996). "Arcade America". PC Joker (in German). Joker Verlag. p. 38.
  2. ^ a b "Arcade America Advertisement". PC Player (in German). DMV-Verlag. April 1996. p. 119.
  3. ^ "Arcade America Box Art Front Cover" (in German). BMG Interactive. 1996.
  4. ^ a b Menne, Oliver (April 1996). "Arcade America: Cannonball Fever". PC Games. Computec Verlag. pp. 160-161.
  5. ^ a b Lenhardt, Heinrich (May 1996). "Arcade America". PC Player (in German). DMV-Verlag. p. 88.
  6. ^ a b "Finals: Arcade America". Next Generation. No. 17. Imagine Media. May 1996. pp. 94, 97.
  7. ^ Snyder, Frank; Chapman, Ted; Gehrs, Scott (April 1996). "Bump and Grind". Computer Game Review. Archived from the original on December 21, 1996.
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