Electrician (video game)
Electrician is a platform game written by David Bunch for the Atari 8-bit family and published by Synapse Software in 1984.[1] Synapse sold the game as a "Double Play," with the game New York City on one side of the floppy disk, and Electrician on the other.[2] Kemco adapted the game for the Family Computer Disk System, and republished it in 1986.
Electrician | |
---|---|
Famicom Disk System cover | |
Developer(s) | Synapse Software |
Publisher(s) | Synapse Software Kemco |
Designer(s) | David Bunch[1] |
Composer(s) | Hiroyuki Masuno (Famicom) |
Platform(s) | Atari 8-bit, Famicom Disk System |
Release | |
Genre(s) | Platform |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
David Bunch later co-designed the 1988 game Skate or Die!.[1]
Gameplay
The player character is an electrician named Richard Light. He must install electrical wiring in apartment buildings. In each building, Richard navigates service corridors to link the electrical wires between each room, As he does so, animals threaten to chew through the wires. When an electrical connection is complete, the live wires illuminate the connected rooms and electrocute the animals on contact. If Richard touches any of the rats, bats, or giant insects in the corridor, he loses a life. In the buildings, the player earns points by illuminating rooms and electrocuting any rats, bats, and insects. Occasionally, a burglar appears; intercepting him rewards the player with bonus points and an extra life.
After wiring all the rooms in an apartment building, the player exits and navigates a dark sewer to the next building. In the sewer, the player must avoid alligators. A flashlight reveals walls that block passages.
References
- Hague, James. "The Giant List of Classic Game Programmers".
- Powell, Jack (July 1985). "Eight New Synapse Games". Antic. 4 (3).
External links
- Electrician at Atari Mania