Marble Madness Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
| Marble Madness | |
| Developer: | Atari Games |
| Publisher: | Atari Games |
| Game designer: | Mark Cerny |
| Release date: | 1984 |
| Genre: | Platform |
| Game modes: | Up to 2 players simultaneously |
| Cabinet: | Standard |
| Controls: | Trackball |
| Monitor | |
| Orientation: | Horizontal |
| Type: | Raster, standard resolution (Used: 336 x 240) |
| Size: | 19 inch |
| Notes | |
| The game can only make horizontal and vertical lines, so diagonal lines had to be rendered by hand. | |
After the first, training level, called "Practice," the player is given an amount of time to maneuver through five successively harder levels: "Beginner," "Intermediate," "Aerial," "Silly" and "Ultimate." Time from previous levels is carried over to the next, with modest additional awards granted at the start of each one.
A small assortment of enemies are scattered through the levels, but the player’s greatest foes are the levels themselves, which contain many sudden drops and treacherous passages, and the trackball controls, which are purposely imprecise and difficult to master.
This was the first Atari System I game; it was also the first video game with true stereo sound.
The game was ported to various home computers and video game consoles, including the Amiga, Commodore 64, NES, and Game Boy Color. An emulated version of the arcade game is also available on Midway Arcade Treasures for the PlayStation 2, GameCube, and Xbox. Despite the plethora of ports, few of these systems support trackball controllers, so an authentic Marble Madness experience is extremely rare these days.
This is an Article on Marble Madness. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Marble Madness Other versions
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