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Track & Field (video game)

Track & Field
Track & Field
European arcade flyer of Track & Field.
Developer(s) Konami
Publisher(s) Konami
Ocean Software (home computer versions)
Kemco (NES PAL version) Centuri (U.S. distribute)
Platform(s) Arcade (original)
Apple II, Atari 2600, Atari 8-bit, MSX, NES, PlayChoice-10, C64, Game Boy, Amstrad CPC, Sharp X1, ZX Spectrum, mobile, Nintendo DS
Release date(s) 1983 (arcade)
Genre(s) Sports
Mode(s) Single-player, two players simultaneously
Four players total
Cabinet Upright
Sound Mono
Display Raster, Horizontal orientation, 256 × 224 resolution

Track & Field, known in Japan as Hyper Olympic (ハイパーオリンピック Haipā Orinpikku?), is a 1983 Olympic-themed sports arcade game developed and published by Konami. The Japanese release sported an official license for the 1984 Summer Olympics.

The arcade version was released in 1983. The simple gameplay, based on quick repeating button presses, set the basics for sequels and similar games in the genre for the next decades. There were several home versions of the original; the ZX Spectrum and Amstrad CPC versions were only released as part of the Game, Set and Match II compilation in 1988, and are poorly regarded by fans. The NES version was especially well-received, and sold well.

In the original arcade game, the player uses two "run" buttons (or a trackball in later units that replaced buttons damaged from overuse) and one "action" button to control an athlete competing in the following six events:

In each event, there is a qualifying time or level that the player must achieve to advance to the next event; failing to qualify (in one heat for running events or three tries in the other events) will reduce the player's number of lives by one, but if none are present in his/her disposal, the game will end. Players earn extra lives per 100,000 points scored.

The game can accommodate up to four players, who compete in pairs for the running events, and individually for the others. If there are fewer than four players, the remaining slots are played by the computer (or player "CPU"). In all multiplayer heats, though, the relative performance of the players has no effect on the game, and advancing is based solely on qualifying times. While most multiplayer arcade games had each set of controls relative to the players going from left to right, this game (which has two sets of controls) had a somewhat different setup. The left set of controls were for players 2 and 4, while the right set was for players 1 and 3. This is one of the few classic arcade games where single player mode was played on the right set of controls rather than the left. If a player completes all six events after a brief medal ceremony, he or she is sent back to the field for another round, with higher qualifying levels, however the game can be configured to conclude after the final event.


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