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'''''Baja Buggies''''' is a desert-themed [[racing video game]] written by Dan Ugrin for the [[Atari 8-bit family]].<ref name=mania/> It uses a third-person, [[2.5D]] perspective. The game was originally developed and sold as '''''Night Rally''''' by Arcade Plus before the company folded, then it was renamed, re-published, and more heavily advertised as the first release from Gamestar.<ref name=kunkel/> Gamestar went on to publish a series of sports games for the Atari 8-bit and [[Commodore 64]], such as ''Star League Baseball'', before becoming a label of [[Activision]].
'''''Baja Buggies''''' is a desert-themed [[racing video game]] written by Dan Ugrin for the [[Atari 8-bit family]].<ref name=mania/> It uses a third-person, [[2.5D]] perspective. The game was originally developed and sold as '''''Night Rally''''' by Arcade Plus before the company folded, then it was revamped and published as the first release from Gamestar.<ref name=kunkel/> Gamestar went on to publish a series of sports games for the Atari 8-bit and [[Commodore 64]], such as ''Star League Baseball'', before becoming a label of [[Activision]].


==Gameplay==
==Gameplay==

Revision as of 19:41, 13 July 2020

Baja Buggies
Developer(s)Arcade Plus
Gamestar
Publisher(s)Gamestar
Designer(s)Dan Ugrin[1]
Platform(s)Atari 8-bit
Release1982
Genre(s)Racing

Baja Buggies is a desert-themed racing video game written by Dan Ugrin for the Atari 8-bit family.[1] It uses a third-person, 2.5D perspective. The game was originally developed and sold as Night Rally by Arcade Plus before the company folded, then it was revamped and published as the first release from Gamestar.[2] Gamestar went on to publish a series of sports games for the Atari 8-bit and Commodore 64, such as Star League Baseball, before becoming a label of Activision.

Gameplay

Reception

Electronic Fun with Computers & Games favorably compared Baja Buggies to Sega's Turbo, but found the audio to be simplistic and disliked the lack of support for paddle controllers.[3] Marc Benioff, reviewing the game for Antic, wrote "It has some similarities to Turbo by Sega, but is not a copy."[4]

Page 6 liked the 3D visuals: "What makes Baja Buggies special is the unique 3-D perspective as you drive toward the distant mountains. When you turn a corner, you really do turn–the mountains and sky scroll across and you feel as if you are really in the car."[5]

Antic concluded, "Baja Buggies is an excellent product. Compared to driving games of the past, this is a programming masterpiece."[4] In a review for Electronic Games, Bill Kunkel wrote, "Put flat-out, this is the best racing contest, in terms of graphics and game play, ever designed for a computer system."[2] Several years after releaseAtari Explorer called it, "the first computer program to seriously court the favor of race car fans".[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Baja Buggies". Atari Mania.
  2. ^ a b Kunkel, Bill (April 1983). "Computer Gaming: Baja Buggies". Electronic Games. 1 (14): 62, 65.
  3. ^ Slon, Steven (May 1983). "Baja Buggies". Electronic Fun with Computers & Games. 1 (7): 66.
  4. ^ a b Benioff, Marc R. (February 1983). "Product Reviews: Baja Buggies". Antic. 1 (6): 91.
  5. ^ "Baja Buggies". Page 6. 1 (1): 15. December 1982.
  6. ^ "Start Your Electronic Engines". Atari Explorer: 8. June 1985.