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Box artwork for Ms. Pac-Man.
Box artwork for Ms. Pac-Man.
Ms. Pac-Man
Developer(s)General Computer Corporation
Publisher(s)Midway Games, Namco
Year released1981
System(s)Arcade, Apple II, Atari 8-bit, Atari 2600, Atari 5200, Atari 7800, Atari Lynx, Commodore 64/128, Commodore VIC-20, Game Boy, Game Boy Color, NES, TI-99/4A, Sega Genesis, Sega Master System, SNES, Xbox 360, Mobile, iPod, iOS
Preceded byPac-Man
Followed byBaby Pac-Man
Jr. Pac-Man
SeriesPac-Man
Japanese titleミズパックマン
Genre(s)Action
Players1-2
ModesSingle player, multiplayer
LinksMs. Pac-Man at PCGamingWikiMs. Pac-Man ChannelSearchSearch
Ms. Pac-Man marquee

When Pac-Man was still hot in the arcades, a small company known as GCC, or General Computer Corp., was in the business of making arcade "enhancements" which were essentially small hacks designed to make certain games more appealing. GCC was known for an add on that they had sold for Atari's Missile Command when they sat down to design a hack for Pac-Man. They surprised themselves with the quality of their hack, which they had entitled "Crazy Otto", and pitched their idea to Midway Games.

Midway was hungry to cash in on the Pac-Man phenomenon that was occurring at the time, and Namco's own sequel to Pac-Man, Super Pac-Man, was still a few months out of development, so they bought the rights to "Crazy Otto", and renamed it Ms. Pac-Man in an effort to entice more females to play arcade games. Namco was made aware of the alteration, and after a number of years, the rights of Ms. Pac-Man were handed over to Namco. Ms. Pac-Man was not quite as acknowledged by Namco in Japan until very recently when it seems, in perhaps a nod to the newer game's popularity and quality, it began appearing in select Namco Museum compilations, for the Sony PlayStation.

Ms. Pac-Man expands on the original Pac-Man, in the following ways: instead of one static blue-on-black maze, there are now four multi-colored mazes to complete; instead of a bonus appearing stationary below the ghost regenerator, it now bounces in through a tunnel, takes a few laps around the regenerator, and eventually bounces back out through another tunnel if not eaten; instead of just one escape tunnel, there are (in all but one of the mazes) two sets of tunnels; lastly, Ms. Pac-Man introduces an element of randomness to the ghost behavior which eliminated the effectiveness of patterns that crippled the earning power of the original Pac-Man.

Ms. Pac-Man was considerably faster than Pac-Man as well, but some players felt that it wasn't fast enough. Hackers began to offer unofficial EPROM upgrades that sped the game up. Most of these mods sped up Ms. Pac-Man herself, but not the ghosts, which made the game easier and more attractive to novice players. As with the original Pac-Man, there really is no story element per se, but the intermissions that you are treated to tell the story of how Pac-Man and Ms. Pac-Man meet while being chased, fall in love, and have a child together (dropped off by a passing stork).

Gameplay[edit | edit source]

Title screen
  • You control Ms. Pac-Man through the maze with the joystick.
  • You must eat every regular pellet and power pellet to advance to the next stage.
  • You must avoid contact with the ghosts while they are their normal color.
  • If you eat a power pellet, the ghosts will turn blue, and you may eat them for bonus points until they turn back to their normal color.
  • Ghosts travel at half speed through the side escape tunnels. Use them to get away.
  • A bonus item will enter the maze from one of the escape tunnels twice per round and bounce around the ghost regenerators.

Table of Contents

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