Akka Arrh (found prototype of unreleased Atari arcade game; 1982)

From The Lost Media Wiki
Revision as of 11:35, 20 May 2019 by Ryanskip (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search
Akka Arrh Title Screen.png

Akka Arrh Title Screen.

Status: Found

Date found: 24 Apr '19

Found by: Anonymous

Akka Arrh is an unreleased prototype arcade game made by Atari's Mike Hally and Dave Ralston. The name Akka Arrh is a play on words for Also Known As Another Ralston Hally production. The arcade game was shown in 1982 to a small test market. However, the test-market was unsuccessful as those that played Akka Arrh considered the game to be too difficult. This caused Atari to cancel Akka Arrh in support of other Atari arcade games at the time.

Story/Gameplay

For one thousand years, the galaxy lived in peace thanks to the Atarian Federation. However, that peace would come to a halt when the evil Jorzon and his forces attacked, leaving the galaxy in despair. A turret called the Sentinel must use an ancient star cannon called Akka Arrh which must be used to defeat Jorzon and restore peace to the galaxy.

In Akka Arrh, the player controls the Sentinel which is fixed in the center of the screen surrounded by a black octagonal field. The game uses a trackball to target enemies, similar to Missile Command. The player has to shoot all of the enemies outside of the octagonal field. If one or more of the enemies enter the octagonal field, the player can be able to zoom in the screen to shoot the enemies in the octagonal field and zoom back out to shoot at advancing enemies.

Availability

Because Akka Arrh was only released to a small test-market, only three arcade cabinets of Akka Arrh were known to exist. Since the arcade cabinets were rare and valuable, the people that owned each of the three arcade units respectively have refused to dump the Akka Arrh ROM online. This resulted in Akka Arrh to be unseen to the public for years ever since the game's test-market release. The only time that one of the three Akka Arrh cabinets was shown to the public in recent years was in a celebratory arcade game show called California Extreme at Hyatt Regency Santa Clara in 2012.

On April 15th, 2019, MAMEWorld Forums user Smitdogg, who is the CEO of an arcade preservation group called The Dumping Union, uploaded four images of Akka Arrh on the MAMEWorld Forums, saying that The Dumping Union has received a ROM dump of Akka Arrh. According to Smitdogg, the ROM was given to The Dumping Union by an anonymous dumper.

On April 24th, 2019, the MAME 0.209 update was released which allowed the arcade emulator MAME to play the Akka Arrh ROM online.

Controversy

With Akka Arrh now playable on MAME, people online started to wonder how the anonymous dumper got his/her hands on the Akka Arrh ROM in the first place. Considering the game's rarity and the owners of the three existing arcade cabinets refusing to dump Akka Arrh online, people started to believe that the Akka Arrh ROM was stolen from one of the existing Akka Arrh arcade cabinets.

One user on the MAMEWorld Forums named atariscott claimed to know an incident regarding Akka Arrh. In the MAMEWorld Forums, atariscott reports that a collector who owned one of the three Akka Arrh arcade cabinets had a technician fix some of the collector's games. The technician was then able to copy Akka Arrh into a ROM without the collector's permission. The Akka Arrh arcade cabinet was not broken and not one of the games the technician was told to fix. As a result, the collector had to look through months of security footage to see if he can catch the technician stealing the Akka Arrh ROM. However, some people online are skeptical about the story's validity.

The YouTube channel Hot Take uploaded a YouTube video with Shane from Rerez and Adam discussing the possibility of atariscott's story not being true, especially when considering the time and risk it would take for someone to extract a ROM file from an arcade machine without destroying it. It has not been verified as to whether the Akka Arrh ROM was stolen or just dumped online by one of the owners of the three existing arcade cabinets. Either way, the Akka Arrh ROM is now available to the public and can be played through MAME.

Videos

Gameplay footage of Akka Arrh being played through MAME.

Akka Arrh gameplay uploaded by John Akka.

Akka Arrh attract mode gameplay uploaded by Mylstar Electronics (a Google Drive link to download the Akka Arrh ROM can be found in the video's description on YouTube).

Akka Arrh arcade cabinet shown at California Extreme at Hyatt Regency Santa Clara in Santa Clara, California in 2012 (skip to 19:04).

Sources